Crack Injection Pump Rental Rates in Boston (Daily/Weekly) — 2026 Costs

Price source: Costs shown are derived from our proprietary U.S. construction cost database (updated continuously from contractor/bid/pricing inputs and normalization rules).
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Eva Steinmetzer-Shaw
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Crack Injection Pump Rental Rates Boston 2026

For Boston basement waterproofing teams planning 2026 work, a practical budgeting range for crack injection pump equipment hire is $150–$300/day, $600–$1,100/week (typical 5-day billing week), and $1,800–$3,200/4-week for a low-viscosity epoxy or polyurethane crack injection pump package (pump + basic hose set). These are planning ranges—not guaranteed vendor pricing—and assume single-shift use, return in clean/flushable condition, and standard pickup/delivery windows. For sourcing, Boston coordinators typically start with national rental networks (for the supporting small tools) and then use specialty waterproofing/coatings suppliers for the injection pump itself, because injection rigs are less “stocked” than general pumps. Published benchmark rate sheets for epoxy injection/plural pump equipment show day/week/month pricing in the same order of magnitude, supporting the planning bands above.

Vendor Daily Rate Weekly Rate Review Score Website
The Chas. E. Phipps Company $70 $630 8 Visit
Sunbelt Rentals (Boston, MA) $250 $1 000 6 Visit
United Rentals (Boston, MA) $300 $1 200 8 Visit
Pro Equipment Rental (Waltham/Brockton MA service area) $225 $900 9 Visit

Anchor rates (useful for estimator sanity-checking): one published equipment rate sheet lists an LV epoxy injection & plural pump at $135/day, $540/week, $1,620/month (noted as 8-hour day / 5-day week), with optional technical help billed separately. Another published “grout pump” rental rate book shows $145/day, $565/week, $1,700/month. In Boston, it’s common to carry an uplift for urban logistics (parking, tight access, delivery windows) and for “specialty” availability; budgeting +10% to +35% over an out-of-market published sheet is a defensible 2026 estimating assumption when you don’t have a firm quote yet.

What Drives Crack Injection Pump Equipment Hire Costs for Basement Waterproofing in Boston?

Boston waterproofing basements create cost drivers that don’t show up on a simple day-rate quote. The real crack injection pump hire cost is typically a combination of the base rental, logistics, risk adders, and the supporting equipment required to keep production moving (especially in older housing stock with tight access and strict dust/cleanup expectations).

  • Pump class and material compatibility: low-viscosity epoxy vs polyurethane (chemical grout) vs higher-output piston/plural rigs. Plural-component and higher-pressure systems often rent at a higher tier (and may require trained operators).
  • Power and mobility constraints: many Boston basements are 120V/15A or 120V/20A only; if the injection pump or accessories need 240V or higher, add generator or power-distribution hire. A published rate book shows a 5kW generator at $150/day and $400/week as a reference point for small power support.
  • Access and “inside carry”: stair carries, bulkhead entries, and tight brownstone corridors can trigger an inside-delivery labor line item. In 2026 budgeting, carry $75–$200 for “basement carry” if a liftgate drop at curb is not sufficient.
  • Production window pressure: if the GC only gives a 6:00–10:00 AM load-in window or requires same-day demob, coordinators often pay for after-hours pickup or a weekend hold (see weekend billing rules below).
  • Dust-control and occupant protection: if you are chasing cracks, grinding, or drilling in occupied buildings, HEPA filtration/negative air can become a contractual requirement and materially affects hire totals.

Typical Hire Packages: Pump Only vs Full Crack Injection Rig

When estimators say “crack injection pump rental,” vendors may quote very different scopes. For Boston basement waterproofing, define your package in the PO line description so you don’t buy surprises:

  • Pump-only hire (lower tier): pump + basic whip hose + fittings. Budget $150–$225/day when you’re handling packers, ports, and most consumables yourself.
  • Job-ready injection package (mid tier): pump + hose set + gun/valve + basic spares kit. Budget $200–$300/day, particularly when the vendor includes a “start-up kit” and expects you to return flushed/clean.
  • Plural-component / higher-output rig (upper tier): pump + controls + upgraded hose + training/hand-off. Budget $250–$450/day depending on pressure/flow and whether the rental includes jobsite support. Published rate sheets show plural/epoxy pump day rates in the $135–$180/day range depending on pump type, which is a useful baseline before Boston logistics and adders.

Hidden-Fee Breakdown

To keep your basement waterproofing equipment hire estimate accurate, treat the items below as “expected” rather than “maybe.” These are typical 2026 planning allowances; confirm the vendor’s actual policy and include it in the PO notes.

  • Delivery and pickup (metro Boston): budget $95–$175 each way for a standard weekday window within an approximate 10–15 mile radius. Beyond that, carry a mileage adder of $4–$7/mile.
  • Minimum mobilization: many yards enforce a minimum trip charge; carry $150 minimum when delivery is required even for “small” equipment.
  • After-hours / constrained window service: if you need delivery or pickup outside normal dock hours, carry $125–$250 for a “special handling” dispatch.
  • Damage waiver / rental protection: common planning allowance is 10%–18% of the base rental (varies by provider and coverage level). Clarify whether it excludes theft from unsecured sites.
  • Deposit / credit hold: depending on account status and pump value, budget $250–$1,500 as a refundable deposit or card hold.
  • Cleaning / decontamination: crack injection pumps can come back with cured resin or grout in the fluid path. Budget $85–$250 for cleaning if the return condition isn’t “flush-ready,” and carry a worst-case rebuild exposure as “T&M plus parts.”
  • Late return / off-rent cutoff: if you miss the cutoff, you may buy an extra full day. For planning, treat a missed off-rent call as +1 day and carry a $50–$150 processing/restocking line if the vendor applies one.
  • Training / technical support: at least one published rate sheet prices certified technical help at $80/hour. Carry this if the crew is new to the pump class or if commissioning is a deliverable.

Accessories and Supporting Equipment That Change the Total

Boston basement waterproofing crack injection rarely succeeds with “pump-only” scope. Coordinators should budget the support package that protects production and reduces cleaning/damage exposure.

  • Crack chaser / slotting grinder hire: one New England rental page lists a 5" crack chaser at $40/day, $160/week, $480/month—useful when the spec calls for routed cracks prior to injection.
  • HEPA air scrubber / negative air: the same rate page shows an air scrubber at $50/day, $200/week, $550/month. This is a common add in occupied buildings and tight basements where odor and dust control is mandated.
  • Extension cords / power tails: if you’re running vacs or grinders from distant panels, carry $25/day for specialty cords/pigtails where required by the vendor’s rate card (and budget replacement liability if cords are damaged).
  • Small generator (when house power is not usable): carry $150/day and $400/week for a 5kW-class diesel generator as an estimating reference, plus refuel time/handling.
  • Flush pump separation: polyurethane crack injection workflows often require a dedicated pre-flush pump; at least one manufacturer notes not to use the same pump for water flush and grout injection. For budgeting, carry an additional $35–$75/day if you must rent a separate flush/transfer pump.
  • Packers/ports and consumables (usually non-rental): treat these as job consumables rather than hire. Carry $3–$6 each for mechanical packers/ports; a 30-port day is $90–$180. Add $25–$60 for a “spares kit” (o-rings, seals, check balls) even if you don’t use it.
  • Containment and floor protection: older Boston basements often have finished areas or shared egress. Carry $40–$120 for poly, zipper doors, and absorbent socks to avoid chargebacks and to keep the equipment return condition clean.

Example: Boston Basement Waterproofing Crack Injection Mobilization (3-Day Window)

Example: A crew is assigned a 3-day basement waterproofing window in a South Boston rowhouse with a strict weekday load-in window (no double-parking after 7:00 AM), narrow stairs, and an occupied first floor. The estimator chooses to book a 1-week crack injection pump equipment hire term (to protect schedule risk) rather than three day-rates. A realistic 2026 budget might look like: pump package $700–$950/week (mid-tier), delivery + pickup $240 total (two trips at $120), damage waiver 12% of base rental (carry $85–$115), basement carry labor $150, crack chaser $160/week, HEPA air scrubber $200/week, ports/packers $120 (30 @ $4), and contingency cleaning exposure $150. That puts “equipment + predictable fees” in the $1,925–$2,195 band before materials (epoxy/urethane), taxes, or disposal—while materially reducing the risk of buying an extra day because a crack won’t take refusal until the third mobilization.

Budget Worksheet (Equipment Hire Allowances)

  • Crack injection pump equipment hire (Boston 2026): $150–$300/day; $600–$1,100/week; $1,800–$3,200/4-week
  • Delivery + pickup: $190–$350 total (two trips)
  • Basement carry / inside placement: $75–$200
  • Damage waiver: 10%–18% of base rental
  • Refundable deposit / hold: $250–$1,500
  • HEPA air scrubber hire (if occupied/finished): $50/day or $200/week
  • Crack chaser hire (if routed cracks required): $40/day or $160/week
  • Generator hire (if power uncertain): $150/day or $400/week
  • Consumables allowance (packers/ports/spares): $150–$350 per mobilization
  • Cleaning / decontamination exposure: $85–$250
  • After-hours logistics exposure: $125–$250
  • Tech support (if required): $80/hour (carry 2–4 hours if commissioning is likely)

Rental Order Checklist (PO, Delivery, Return)

  • PO scope clarity: specify “crack injection pump for basement waterproofing,” material type (epoxy vs polyurethane), max pressure requirement, and what’s included (hose length, gun/valve, fittings, spare seals).
  • Billing terms: confirm what defines a “day” (8-hour vs 24-hour), the weekly construct, weekend/holiday billing, and whether off-rent requires a call-in.
  • Delivery requirements: confirm Boston site access constraints (stair carry, curbside only, liftgate needed), parking/permit needs, and any delivery cutoff times.
  • Site readiness: confirm available power (120V/20A vs 240V), water source for flushing, containment/protection for finished areas, and designated staging to prevent theft.
  • Return condition documentation: require photos of pump condition at pickup and before return; document flush process, residual material, and any damage before it becomes a backcharge dispute.
  • End-of-rental procedure: confirm off-rent call time, pickup window, and who signs the return ticket; keep a copy of the final ticket showing “returned” status and date/time.

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How Billing Rules and Off-Rent Timing Affect Crack Injection Pump Hire

Two projects with the same day-rate can land at very different totals depending on billing rules. At least one published epoxy injection/plural pump rate sheet explicitly ties pricing to an 8-hour day and 5-day week, and notes that additional usage is charged again at the daily rate. In practical terms, if your Boston basement crew runs long (e.g., refusal takes longer than planned, or crack chasing expands), you can unintentionally “buy” more days even without extending the calendar. Also, weekend treatment varies by provider; one New England equipment rate page states a weekend rate (Sat & Sun) billed as 1.5 days, which matters if you hold the pump over a weekend to protect schedule.

  • Off-rent cutoffs: plan around a typical same-day cutoff like 2:00–4:00 PM. If you off-rent after cutoff, carry +1 day exposure.
  • Weekend holding strategy: if access is uncertain (Boston parking enforcement, building access, GC sequencing), compare “return Friday + redeliver Monday” versus “hold through weekend at 1.5-day charge.” The cheaper path depends on your delivery fees and whether the pump is readily available on Monday morning.
  • Holiday weeks: for 2026 planning, carry at least +0.5 to +1.0 day in schedule float when you’re injecting around major holidays, because pickup/delivery calendars compress and off-rent windows tighten.
  • Shift work: if you anticipate double-shift injection (rare in residential, but possible on commercial waterproofing), require a written multiplier in the quote. As a planning allowance, many rental agreements apply a 1.5x factor for double shift and 2.0x for triple shift on metered equipment—verify before the PO is issued.

Reducing Cleaning, Damage, and Downtime Charges in Injection Pump Rentals

With crack injection pumps, the most expensive surprises are usually post-job. Cleaning and repair charges tend to be triggered by cured product in the pump head, hoses, or valves, or by cross-contamination between products (epoxy vs polyurethane). In Boston basements, the “mess” risk is higher because crews often stage in tight, finished, or shared spaces.

  • Flush discipline: budget 20–45 minutes at end-of-shift for flush/relieve/secure; it’s cheaper than a $150–$250 cleaning charge and avoids a lost day waiting for a replacement pump.
  • Dedicated containment: carry $40–$120 for floor protection and absorbents; this reduces both building claims and equipment return contamination.
  • End-of-rental photo set: require a minimum of 8 photos (pump exterior, serial tag, hose ends, fittings, power cord, and the inside of any tote/hopper). This is one of the simplest controls against disputed damage charges.
  • Spare parts allowance: carry $25–$60 for seals/o-rings/check-balls as a proactive spare kit, even if the vendor also stocks parts. The cost is minor compared with a missed refusal window that extends hire by a day.

When to Step Up from a Basic Injection Pump to a Plural-Component System

If your Boston waterproofing scope includes high-volume injection, multiple crack types, or rapid set products, a higher-capability pump can reduce labor hours even if the hire rate increases. A published rate sheet lists multiple pump types: for example, a paste epoxy piston plural pump at $180/day and a flowable epoxy gear plural pump at $160/day (with month rates also shown). For 2026 Boston estimating, treat these published day rates as a baseline and carry additional cost for jobsite support, upgraded hose packages, and urban logistics—often pushing the “all-in per day” closer to the mid- or upper-tier planning bands once delivery, waiver, and accessories are included.

  • Indicator you need to step up: spec requires controlled mixing ratio, higher sustained pressure, or you’re injecting enough lineal footage that a smaller pump becomes the production bottleneck.
  • Indicator you should stay basic: sporadic injections, short mobilizations, or mixed-access basements where setup/cleanup time dominates and the higher-output rig doesn’t earn back its hire premium.

Buy Versus Equipment Hire for Crack Injection Pumps (Estimator View)

For rental coordinators, the buy-vs-hire decision is typically driven by utilization and the risk cost of downtime. As a rule of thumb for Boston basement waterproofing programs, consider ownership when (a) you expect 20–35 rental days/year of the same pump class, (b) you can standardize consumables and flushing procedures across crews, and (c) you have a backup plan (spares or a second pump) to avoid schedule slips. Otherwise, equipment hire often remains the lowest-risk option because it shifts rebuild/maintenance burden to the supplier—provided you actively manage cleaning/return condition to avoid backcharges.

Boston-Specific Cost Notes for Basement Waterproofing Logistics

Boston adds practical constraints that should be explicitly priced into crack injection pump equipment hire planning:

  • Urban delivery friction: dense neighborhoods (Back Bay, South End, Beacon Hill) can convert a “standard delivery” into a timed delivery. If you can’t guarantee a legal curb space, budget a $125 re-dispatch risk (or plan to pick up with your own vehicle and crew).
  • Older building access: narrow stairwells and low headroom increase damage risk to both equipment and finished surfaces; carry the 10%–18% damage waiver and a $150 protection/containment allowance even on small jobs.
  • Seasonality impacts: winter and shoulder-season basement conditions can slow cure and extend the calendar time you need the pump onsite. If you expect slower refusal, consider booking the weekly rate up front rather than stacking day rates—especially when missing the off-rent cutoff can trigger another full day.

If you want, share (1) epoxy vs polyurethane, (2) expected lineal feet and port count, and (3) whether power is confirmed at 120V/20A or you need a generator—then the same budgeting framework above can be tightened into a PO-ready equipment hire estimate for Boston with fewer contingencies.