Crack Injection Pump Rental Rates in Philadelphia (Daily/Weekly) — 2026 Costs
Philadelphia Construction Cost Hub
Price source: Costs shown are derived from our proprietary U.S. construction cost database (updated continuously from contractor/bid/pricing inputs and normalization rules).
Eva Steinmetzer-Shaw
Head of Marketing
Crack Injection Pump Rental Rates Philadelphia 2026
For Philadelphia basement waterproofing crews planning 2026 work, a practical crack injection pump equipment hire budget typically lands in three tiers: (1) a basic single-component (1:1) drill-operated polyurethane/epoxy crack injection pump at roughly $90–$175/day, $300–$650/week, or $900–$1,950/month; (2) a higher-output or dual-component (e.g., 2:1) injection pump package at roughly $120–$250/day, $450–$950/week, or $1,350–$3,650/month; and (3) “ready-to-inject” bundles that include hoses/manifolds/packers and jobsite support, commonly $225–$425/day and $750–$1,450/week depending on what’s included. Specialty waterproofing suppliers publish reference rates such as $70/day and $630/week for a SealBoss-style P2002 rental and $100/day and $900/week for a P3003 2:1 rental, which helps anchor 2026 planning even if your Philadelphia logistics, taxes, and add-ons push the all-in cost higher.
| Vendor |
Daily Rate |
Weekly Rate |
Review Score |
Website |
| The Chas. E. Phipps Company |
$70 |
$210 |
8 |
Visit |
| Sunbelt Rentals (Philadelphia, PA) |
$350 |
$1 450 |
9 |
Visit |
| United Rentals (Philadelphia, PA) |
$400 |
$1 600 |
9 |
Visit |
| Grand Rental Station (Grand True Value Rental of Easton, MD) |
$78 |
$312 |
4 |
Visit |
Assumptions for the Philadelphia market ranges above: rates reflect professional-grade electric/drill-driven pumps suitable for polyurethane foam grout or epoxy resin injection; a standard rental “week” is commonly 5–7 billed days depending on supplier policy; and month pricing usually assumes a 4-week billing cycle with an off-rent cut-off time that can add an extra day if missed.
What You’re Actually Hiring: Injection Pump Types That Change The Rate
When a PM or rental coordinator requests a “crack injection pump rental” for basement waterproofing, it can mean several distinct pump classes. Getting the class right is the fastest way to control equipment hire cost and avoid change orders on accessories.
- Single-component / 1:1 pump (common for hydro-active polyurethane): lighter, faster mobilization, typically lower day rate. Published catalog pricing for a SealBoss-style 1:1 injection pump shows $60/day, $180/week, $540/month as a reference point (market and freight will vary).
- 2:1 (or other ratio) dual-component pump (epoxy or specialty polyurethane): more setup and cleanup, higher risk of cure-in-place if not flushed, and typically a higher weekly rate. A published reference for a SealBoss 2:1 injection pump shows $80/day, $240/week, $720/month in a rental catalog; another specialty supplier listing shows a P3003 2:1 rental with pricing displayed as $100–$900 across terms.
- “Pump only” vs. “pump + injection kit”: many shops rent the pump body but require separate charges (or purchases) for the hose whip, injection manifold, quick couplers, packers, static mixers, and flushing solvent. If the job is water-bearing and you need continuous injection, the kit often costs more than the pump day rate once you add consumables and cleanup exposure.
Also watch the power source requirement. Some pumps are “electric drill operated”; published product descriptions explicitly note the drill may be sold separately, which can translate to an extra rental line or a field-mobilization problem if your crew shows up without the correct drill/drive.
What Drives Crack Injection Pump Hire Costs On Philadelphia Basement Work?
Philadelphia basement waterproofing has a few cost drivers that show up repeatedly in equipment hire tickets—especially in rowhome basements and tight access sites where your labor plan depends on quick in/out and reliable cleanup.
- Access and material handling: narrow stairs, low headroom, and finished basements push crews to lighter, modular pumps. That can reduce the pump rate, but it can increase trip count and therefore delivery/pick fees if you’re not picking up from the branch.
- Parking and curb space: Center City and dense neighborhoods can force paid parking/permits or paid attendants. As a planning allowance, carry $25–$40/day for jobsite parking/curb management when the supplier delivers and needs a legal unload window (this is not a pump charge, but it becomes part of the equipment hire total on urban basements).
- Moisture and active flow: active leakage increases resin consumption, extends injection time, and increases the chance you get billed an extra day because you can’t off-rent before the cut-off. In winter cold snaps, a basement at <45°F can slow cure and keep the pump on rent longer, even if the day rate looks cheap on paper.
- Return condition risk: injection pumps are extremely sensitive to improper flushing. Cure-in-pump events are the #1 driver of “surprise” charges (cleaning, parts, downtime) after return.
Typical Add-On Costs For A Complete Crack Injection Pump Hire Package
For professional basement waterproofing equipment hire, budget the pump plus the accessories that make the system productive and returnable. The numbers below are 2026 planning allowances commonly seen on injection pump rental orders (your supplier may treat some of these as rentals and some as billable consumables):
- High-pressure injection hose add-on: $15–$35/day (or $60–$140/week) if not included.
- Injection packers (mechanical) consumable: $1.75–$4.50 each depending on diameter and quantity. (Rowhome basements with rubble/stone walls often run higher quantities due to irregular drilling and rework.)
- Static mixers / mixing nozzles (epoxy): $3–$9 each as a consumable line.
- Manifold/valve kit: $10–$25/day if rented as a separate kit.
- Rotary hammer / SDS drill (if not owned): $35–$85/day based on class and whether bits are included.
- HEPA vac or dust-control vacuum (often required indoors): $75–$160/day, plus $35–$95 per damaged/clogged filter element if billed.
- GFCI extension and cord management: $10–$25/day when rented as part of an “indoor safe power” bundle.
- Moisture meter / IR thermometer rental: $20–$45/day if your QC process requires documented pre/post conditions.
Material is not “equipment hire,” but it drives rental duration and cleanup exposure. As a reality check, specialty injection resin commonly prices by the 5-gallon pail; one published example lists a 5-gallon polyurethane injection resin at $536.75. Carrying the correct resin and flush is often what keeps a pump returnable and prevents a chargeback.
Hidden-Fee Breakdown (What Makes The Invoice Higher Than The Day Rate)
To keep your crack injection pump hire cost predictable in Philadelphia, call out these “invoice multipliers” on the PO and in the crew brief:
- Delivery and pick-up: budget $95–$175 each way inside an in-metro radius, then $3–$6 per mile beyond the base zone. If you require a time-certain window (e.g., “arrive 7:00–8:00 AM”), carry a scheduling premium of $50–$125.
- Minimum charge: many specialty suppliers enforce a 1-day minimum even if the pump is returned same day; some enforce a “weekend minimum” if picked up late Friday.
- Weekend/holiday billing rules: common policies include “Saturday counts as a billed day,” and a Friday delivery with Monday return may bill 2–3 days even if the pump isn’t used continuously. Get the billing calendar in writing.
- Off-rent cut-off: plan around a 2:00–3:00 PM off-rent notification deadline; miss it and you may pay an extra day even if the truck is loaded.
- Damage waiver / rental protection: carry 10%–18% of the base rental for waiver coverage unless your MSA requires you to decline it and provide COI. (Confirm whether waiver applies to resin contamination.)
- Deposit or card hold: common for specialty pumps—budget a $250–$1,000 authorization if you’re not on account terms.
- Cleaning / decontamination: if resin cures in the pump, budget $85–$150 for basic cleaning; severe cure-in-place teardown can be $250–$600+ plus parts.
- Late return penalties: plan for $25–$75 per hour after the return deadline, or a full additional day if returned after close.
- Missing documentation: some suppliers charge $25–$50 admin fees for missing serial sign-off, missing return condition photos, or incomplete decon forms (varies widely, but it’s a real preventable cost).
Bottom line: on Philadelphia basement waterproofing scopes, the pump “sticker rate” is usually not the cost driver. The cost driver is time on rent (weekend/off-rent rules) and return condition (flushing/cleanliness), with delivery windows and dust control adding predictable surcharges.
Budget Worksheet (Line-Item Allowances)
Use the following no-table worksheet to build a realistic 2026 budget for crack injection pump equipment hire in Philadelphia. Adjust quantities by crack footage, number of injection ports, and expected water conditions.
- Injection pump rental (single-component): allow $90–$175/day or $300–$650/week (pick-up rate assumption).
- OR injection pump rental (2:1 dual-component): allow $120–$250/day or $450–$950/week (more setup/cleanup risk).
- Accessory kit (hose/manifold/couplers): allow $25–$60/day if not bundled.
- Packer allowance: 35–80 packers at $1.75–$4.50 each (include a waste factor for mis-drills in stone/brick basements).
- Static mixers / nozzles (epoxy jobs): 6–20 units at $3–$9 each.
- Rotary hammer (if needed): $35–$85/day; SDS bits wear-out allowance $15–$40.
- HEPA vac / dust control: $75–$160/day plus filters $35–$95 (carry 1 extra filter on finished basements).
- Delivery + pick-up: $190–$350 round trip typical planning allowance, plus $3–$6/mile beyond base radius.
- Time-certain delivery premium: $50–$125 if the site only allows unloading during a narrow window.
- Damage waiver: 10%–18% of base rental lines (or provide COI per MSA).
- Cleaning/decon reserve: $100 per mobilization for routine cleaning risk; add a contingency of $300 if the scope has active flow and high cure risk.
- Parking/curb management (Philadelphia dense areas): $25–$40/day allowance where unloading/return is constrained.
Rental Order Checklist (PO To Return Requirements)
- PO scope clarity: specify “crack injection pump rental for basement waterproofing,” pump type (single vs 2:1), maximum pressure requirement, and whether drill/drive is included.
- Accessories list: confirm hose length (e.g., 25–50 ft), manifold/valve kit, quick couplers, and any specialty fittings for your resin brand.
- Delivery window: write a firm window and site contact; note Philadelphia access constraints (alley access, basement walkout vs front steps).
- Off-rent rules: obtain the supplier’s off-rent cut-off time (often 2:00–3:00 PM) and return deadline in writing.
- Weekend billing: confirm whether Friday delivery/Monday return bills 2 days or 3 days.
- Condition at return: require crew to flush and cap lines; photograph the pump, hoses, and fittings at pickup and at return (serial visible).
- Indoor dust-control requirements: confirm whether the client requires HEPA filtration and how filters are billed if clogged/damaged.
- Consumables plan: confirm who supplies packers, mixers, flush, and spill materials so the pump does not sit idle on rent waiting for parts.
- Closeout packet: keep signed delivery ticket, signed return ticket, and return-condition photos tied to the job number to defend against cleaning/damage chargebacks.
Example: Philadelphia Rowhome Basement Waterproofing Crack Injection Over A Weekend
Scenario: A two-tech crew is scheduled to inject an actively seeping wall crack in a narrow Philadelphia rowhome basement. The owner only allows work Saturday 8:00 AM–4:00 PM and Sunday 10:00 AM–2:00 PM. The basement is finished, so you must run HEPA dust control while drilling ports.
- Pump hire (single-component): assume $145/day and a billing rule where a Friday pickup and Monday return bills 3 days due to weekend policy → $435 base rental (planning example; confirm your supplier’s weekend rules).
- Damage waiver: assume 15% of base rental → $65 (rounded).
- Delivery/pick-up: time-certain drop Friday 7:00–8:00 AM and pickup Monday 8:00–10:00 AM → $150 each way = $300.
- Parking/curb management: congested block; allow $35/day for 2 days on-site activity → $70.
- HEPA vac rental: $125/day for 2 days → $250, plus $55 filter allowance → $305.
- Injection packers: 48 packers at $2.75 each → $132.
- Hose/manifold adders: $30/day for 3 billed days → $90.
- Cleaning/decon contingency: carry $100 (returned flushed, but still plan for inspection/cleaning exposure).
Planning total (equipment hire + predictable fees only): approximately $1,797. The key operational constraint is the weekend billing and off-rent timing—if you could instead pick up Saturday morning and return Sunday to a staffed yard (rare), the pump cost exposure could drop by $145–$290 in this example.
How To Reduce Crack Injection Pump Equipment Hire Cost Without Slowing Production
- Align the rental term to your schedule: if you know you’ll be in and out in 1–2 days, avoid a Friday delivery that triggers weekend billing. Conversely, if you’re uncertain, a negotiated weekly rate can be cheaper than paying 3–4 day rates.
- Pre-stage consumables: packers, flush, mixers, spare fittings, and spill control should be on the truck before the pump arrives. Idle pump time is the most expensive “hidden” cost.
- Standardize your return process: require a documented flush step and return photos. Preventing one $250–$600+ teardown event pays for a lot of planning time.
- Bundle dust control intentionally: if the basement is occupied/finished, the HEPA vac and containment often become the rate driver (e.g., $75–$160/day). Confirm whether your client’s indoor air requirements can be met with your owned equipment.
- Write the off-rent process into the field plan: if your supplier’s off-rent cut-off is mid-afternoon, schedule demob to meet it or accept that you’re likely paying an extra day.
When Buying Beats Hiring For Basement Waterproofing Crews
If you run crack injection weekly, purchasing may beat equipment hire—especially for single-component pumps that are relatively affordable. One published purchase example shows a high-pressure single component crack injection pump priced at $1,088 (purchase, not rental). A simple break-even rule-of-thumb for a single-component pump is:
- If your all-in hire cost averages $175/day and you use it 8–10 days per year, rental can stay economical.
- If you’re routinely at 20+ rental days per year (or repeatedly paying weekend/cleaning premiums), buying plus carrying seals/flush and a documented maintenance process often wins—provided you have trained techs to avoid cure-in-pump failures.
Even when you buy, keep a relationship with a specialty supplier for surge capacity (dual-component pumps, backup units, hoses/manifolds) so you don’t lose production when a pump is down for rebuild.