Crack Injection Pump Rental Rates in San Francisco (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 San Francisco 2026

For San Francisco basement waterproofing scopes in 2026, plan crack injection pump equipment hire in these working ranges (dry-hire, pump only): compact 1:1 injection pumps at $90–$160/day, $270–$480/week, and $810–$1,440/month; 2:1 injection pumps at $110–$200/day, $330–$600/week, and $990–$1,800/month; and heavier plural-component / LV epoxy injection pump packages at $175–$325/day, $700–$1,200/week, and $2,100–$3,600/month when specified for epoxy or specialty resins. These planning ranges are anchored to published rental line-items for injection pumps (for example, $60/day for a Seal-Boss 1:1 injection pump and $80/day for a Seal-Boss 2:1 injection pump in a rental catalog, and $70/day shown for a drill-operated P2002-class injection pump), then adjusted upward for typical Bay Area logistics, delivery constraints, and branch overhead.

Vendor Daily Rate Weekly Rate Review Score Website
United Rentals (San Francisco – Branch 606) $300 $1 200 9 Visit
Sunbelt Rentals (South San Francisco) $275 $1 100 10 Visit
Herc Rentals (Oakland – ProSolutions CRC) $290 $1 150 8 Visit
Muller Construction Supply (San Francisco) $120 $450 10 Visit

Assumptions for estimating: (1) “day” is commonly treated as an 8-hour usage day and “week” as a 5-day week for specialty pump rentals, with additional usage potentially billed at additional daily increments; (2) resins/foams, ports/packers, and most disposable mixing components are usually separate line items; and (3) San Francisco delivery/collection and access constraints can swing the total hire cost more than the base pump rate on short-duration basement work. Published rate sheets for related injection/plural-component equipment often state 8-hour days and 5-day weeks explicitly.

What Drives Crack Injection Pump Hire Pricing In San Francisco?

“Crack injection pump” can mean very different rental packages. Your hire price will move primarily with (a) the resin system (single-component PU vs. dual-component epoxy vs. plural-component), (b) required output pressure (many basement crack specs want high pressure for tight cracks; P2002-class pumps are listed at >5,000 psi capability), and (c) whether the pump is truly portable enough for San Francisco’s typical below-grade access (narrow stairwells, limited landing zones, and older basements with tight mechanical rooms).

For cost planning, treat these as the main cost drivers:

  • Pump type and ratio: 1:1 vs 2:1 injection pumps, drill-operated vs electric motor vs air-driven. Published rental catalogs show separate rate tiers for 1:1 and 2:1 injection pumps, and for higher-complexity dual-component units.
  • “Pump only” vs “pump kit”: Many branches quote the pump as one line, then add hose kits, whip hoses, packer-setting tools, and cleaning/flush equipment separately.
  • Time-on-rent and rate structure: A weekly rate can be 3–5x the daily rate in published schedules (meaning day-3 to day-5 is often where weekly becomes cheaper).
  • Delivery complexity in San Francisco: Downtown curb restrictions, limited loading docks, and steep streets frequently force smaller trucks, timed windows, or two-person delivery—driving delivery/pick-up charges higher than the base pump rate.
  • Environmental controls for basements: If your spec requires dry substrate and controlled humidity, you may end up hiring HEPA dust control and drying equipment alongside the injection pump (often a bigger cost than the pump itself on 1–2 day scopes).

Selecting The Right Injection Pump Package For Basement Waterproofing

From an estimator or rental coordinator perspective, the cheapest daily pump is rarely the cheapest equipment hire outcome. The goal is to match pump capability to the resin, access, and production plan so you avoid (1) change-outs mid-shift, (2) avoidable cleaning charges, and (3) extra delivery runs. Use these practical tiers when you scope crack injection pump hire for basement waterproofing in San Francisco:

  • Portable 1:1 injection pump (baseline waterproofing package): Best for common polyurethane injection resins and many epoxy products within viscosity limits. Published catalog pricing for this tier can be as low as $60/day before any regional adjustments.
  • 2:1 injection pump (dual-component resin flexibility): Useful when your epoxy system is specified at 2:1 ratio. Published catalog pricing shows this tier around $80/day in at least one schedule, again before regional uplift and logistics.
  • Drill-operated P2002-class pump (high-pressure, high-mobility): Often a strong fit for San Francisco basements because it’s easy to carry and set up. One published rental listing shows a $70/day figure with a higher weekly tier displayed on the same page.
  • Plural-component / LV epoxy injection pumps (higher complexity): Used when you need controlled metering, higher output, or a specific injection regimen. A published rate sheet shows an LV epoxy injection & plural pump at $135/day, $540/week, and $1,620/month (before taxes and any field support).

San Francisco-specific note: When basement access is by stairs only (no ramp, no freight elevator), the “lighter pump” choice can reduce not only handling risk but also the likelihood of incurring a second delivery attempt (a common hidden cost when a larger rig arrives and cannot be safely moved to the injection point).

Hidden-Fee Breakdown For Injection Pump Equipment Hire

Basement waterproofing injection work is notorious for “small” adders that become real money. When you’re building a 2026 estimate for crack injection pump hire in San Francisco, include allowances for these common non-rate charges (amounts below are planning ranges; confirm with the issuing branch):

  • Delivery and pick-up: $125–$220 each way within a typical 10-mile service radius; $4–$6 per mile beyond that radius; and a common minimum delivery charge around $175 even if mileage is short.
  • Timed delivery windows / downtown constraints: $75–$150 same-day dispatch surcharge; $150–$300 after-hours or weekend delivery premium when standard receiving hours are missed.
  • Damage waiver / rental protection plan: commonly 10%–15% of the base rental (pump and rented accessories), unless you provide a COI that the lessor accepts.
  • Deposits and credit holds: $500–$2,000 is a realistic planning range for specialty pump hire if you do not have established credit terms.
  • Cleaning and decontamination: $95–$250 if the pump returns with cured resin/foam in wetted parts or in the case/vehicle. (Injection equipment often has stricter return-condition rules than general tool rentals.)
  • Missing small parts: $15–$60 per coupler, check valve, or whip-hose fitting; $25–$90 per gauge depending on type—these add up fast if the kit is not checked on receipt and return.
  • Late return penalties: a common structure is a 1/2-day charge after a cut-off time plus a full-day charge after 24 hours; plan $40–$120/day in “avoidable” late fees on small kits, and higher on plural-component packages.
  • Off-rent cutoffs: many branches require off-rent notice before roughly 2:00 p.m. for next-business-day off-rent; miss it and you effectively buy another day.
  • Accessory adders: extra hose sections often price at $15–$35/day; a packer-setting tool (if rented) can be $25–$45/day; SDS-Plus rotary hammer hire frequently lands $45–$85/day if you’re not supplying a company-owned drill.
  • Dust-control bundle: HEPA vacuum $65–$125/day plus a negative-air machine $120–$200/day is a realistic allowance when indoor dust migration is a contract requirement (especially for occupied buildings).

Budget Worksheet

Use this as a no-table, estimator-friendly worksheet for a typical San Francisco basement waterproofing crack injection pump rental package (adjust quantities to suit):

  • Crack injection pump equipment hire: allow $450–$900 for a 3-day window (or $480–$1,200 if you’ll tip into a weekly rate).
  • Accessory kit allowance (hoses, whip hose, gauges, fittings): $60–$175/week equivalent, plus $15–$35/day per additional hose section if you need extra reach to a back-of-building basement.
  • Drill/rotary hammer (if not company-owned): $45–$85/day; add a $18–$35 allowance for one extra carbide bit due to wear on older concrete.
  • HEPA vacuum (when required): $65–$125/day.
  • Negative air / scrubber (when required): $120–$200/day.
  • Dehumidifier (common in fog-belt basements): $45–$95/day to help maintain dry injection conditions and predictable cure.
  • Delivery + pick-up: $250–$440 round trip baseline; add $75–$150 if you need a timed AM window.
  • Damage waiver: 10%–15% of the rental subtotal if not waived by insurance.
  • Cleaning contingency: $95–$250 (only if return condition is compromised, but budget it to avoid margin surprises).
  • Deposit/credit hold (cash-flow planning): $500–$2,000 (not a “cost,” but impacts mobilization readiness).

Rental Order Checklist

Rental coordinators can reduce cost leakage by treating injection pumps like precision equipment (not like a trash pump). Use this checklist to prevent re-bills and extra days:

  • PO and commercial terms: confirm daily vs weekly trigger (day-3/day-4); confirm weekend billing (Friday pick-up to Monday return is often billed as 3 days); confirm damage waiver % and whether it applies to accessories.
  • Delivery requirements (San Francisco): provide a receiving contact with a live cell number; specify curbside vs inside delivery; include any loading dock reservation and the exact dock height/clearance; note steep-slope street access if a lift gate is required.
  • Access and power: confirm if the basement has reliable 120V/15A circuits; plan for a $90–$160/day generator hire if power is uncertain or panels are locked.
  • On-receipt inspection: photograph serial numbers; verify hoses/couplers/gauges quantity; flag missing parts immediately (avoid end-of-rent backcharges).
  • Use and maintenance rules: confirm approved flush/cleaning procedure; confirm what “normal wear” means on seals and check valves.
  • Off-rent process: record off-rent cut-off time (often around 2:00 p.m.); confirm whether off-rent is effective on call-in or on physical pick-up.
  • Return condition documentation: take return photos; document that cured resin was not left in wetted parts; include a brief note of the material used (PU vs epoxy) if requested.

Example: 3-Day Basement Leak Stop In The Mission District

Scenario constraints: occupied multi-unit building; basement access is a narrow stairwell; receiving window is 9:00–11:00 a.m. only; dust migration must be controlled; off-rent must be called in before 2:00 p.m. for next-business-day pick-up.

Hire plan and cost outcome (planning numbers): choose a portable P2002-class or 1:1 pump package to avoid a heavier rig. Budget the pump at $150/day for 3 days = $450 (or switch to a weekly tier if quoted closer to $480–$600). Add delivery/pick-up at $180 each way = $360 because a timed window is required, plus a $100 timed-delivery premium. Add HEPA vacuum at $95/day = $285 and negative air at $160/day = $480. Add hoses/whip hose adders at $25/day = $75. Add damage waiver at 12% of the rental subtotal (for example, ~$200 on a ~$1,650 subtotal). Plan a $1,000 deposit/credit hold if you don’t have terms, and carry a $150 cleaning contingency if the crew returns the kit with resin in the fittings. The operational takeaway is that the pump itself can be <30% of the total equipment hire cost once indoor controls and San Francisco delivery realities are included.

Ownership Versus Hire: When The Numbers Flip

If you are repeatedly renting for short, scheduled basement waterproofing jobs, hire is usually correct because it externalizes maintenance risk and avoids holding seldom-used accessories. However, once you routinely exceed roughly 8–12 rental weeks per year for the same pump class (especially 1:1 and P2002-class portable pumps), ownership plus occasional accessory hire often becomes more economical—provided you can keep seals, hoses, and cleaning discipline consistent. The key is to compare your actual “all-in” hire spend (including $250–$440 round-trip deliveries, damage waiver at 10%–15%, and cleaning/late fees) against your in-house maintenance capacity.

Operational Rules That Affect Off-Rent And Billing

  • Weekend/holiday billing: in San Francisco, many branches treat Friday delivery to Monday return as multiple chargeable days; confirm whether Saturday/Sunday are billed even if the pump is idle.
  • Off-rent is not always pick-up: some lessors stop billing on off-rent notice; others stop billing only when the asset is scanned back at the yard. Build a 1-day buffer if your job is schedule-critical.
  • Refuel/recharge expectations: if you hire a generator or battery accessories, plan a $25–$75 recharge/refuel service fee if returned below the agreed threshold.
  • Indoor dust-control requirements: if you must core/drill in finished or occupied areas, the dust-control hire (HEPA + negative air) is frequently the controlling cost—avoid under-scoping it.

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crack and injection in construction work

San Francisco Logistics And Compliance Notes For Basement Waterproofing Equipment Hire

San Francisco’s practical constraints change how you should structure crack injection pump equipment hire. First, plan for delivery radius and access friction: many branches will quote an attractive base day rate, then recover margin through delivery once the driver hits congested corridors (SoMa, Financial District) or needs multiple attempts due to curb restrictions. Second, parking and receiving are not free—if your GC requires a certificate of insurance for delivery vehicles or a scheduled loading dock, missed windows can create a second trip charge (often another $125–$220 each way). Third, humidity and marine-layer basements can force you to hire drying equipment to meet substrate condition requirements; budgeting $45–$95/day for a dehumidifier is often cheaper than losing a day to slow cure and staying on rent longer.

Consumables And Accessories That Commonly Sit Outside The Pump Hire Line

Even though this guide is focused on equipment hire costs, your total “rental order” in real operations often includes rentable accessories plus purchased consumables that can be mistaken as part of the pump price. To avoid scope gaps, separate these explicitly in your estimate and PO notes:

  • Rented accessories: extra hose sections ($15–$35/day each), extension cords / GFCI leads ($8–$15/day), generator ($90–$160/day), HEPA vac ($65–$125/day), negative air ($120–$200/day), dehumidifier ($45–$95/day).
  • Purchased consumables (not usually rentable): ports/packers (often priced per piece), surface paste, disposable static mixers, gloves/coveralls, and patch materials. Treat these as separate procurement so they don’t get mixed into the hire “rate” when you compare quotes.

Managing Risk: Damage Waiver, Insurance, And Deposits

Specialty injection equipment is high-risk for rental houses because cured material can destroy wetted components. That’s why damage waiver is commonly offered at 10%–15% of rental, and why deposits/credit holds of $500–$2,000 are typical planning figures on first-time accounts. If your firm can provide a COI that the lessor accepts, you may reduce or remove the damage waiver line, but note that many waivers also cover theft from a jobsite (subject to conditions). If you’re in an area with frequent vehicle break-ins, treat secure storage as a cost control measure—losing the pump can blow the job budget far beyond the weekly rate.

Cost Control Moves That Actually Work On Injection Pump Hire

  • Use the weekly trigger intentionally: published schedules commonly price week at ~3–5x day and month at ~3x week; plan your mobilization so day-3 doesn’t accidentally become day-6 due to missed off-rent cutoffs.
  • Bundle delivery: one combined drop of pump + dust control + power can save $125–$220 in an extra trip, which is meaningful on small waterproofing scopes.
  • Write a return-condition protocol: a 15-minute end-of-shift flush/clean can prevent a $95–$250 cleaning fee and reduce the likelihood of being billed for “damaged” hoses or stuck check valves.
  • Choose portability over capacity in SF basements: the lighter pump that can be carried down stairs reduces handling risk and the chance of a second delivery attempt (which can cost more than the day rate).
  • Confirm the receiving window in writing: if the building can only receive 9:00–11:00 a.m., put it on the PO so a missed window doesn’t become your cost.

When A Higher-End Rig Is Justified

Most basement waterproofing crack injection scopes in San Francisco can be executed with compact injection pumps. However, if the specification calls for higher production or different chemistry (for example, foam injection equipment used in slab/void stabilization rather than typical wall crack injection), some sources cite specialized injection rigs renting in the $300–$800/day band. Treat that as a different equipment class than a portable basement crack injection pump, and only carry it when the scope truly requires it. (g

2026 Planning Allowances Summary For San Francisco Equipment Hire

For 2026 San Francisco estimating, a defensible baseline is to carry (1) the pump at $90–$325/day depending on type, (2) delivery/pick-up at $250–$440 round trip (plus $75–$150 for timed windows when applicable), (3) damage waiver at 10%–15% unless insured, and (4) indoor dust control and drying equipment whenever the building is occupied or the contract requires containment. The operational reality is that billing rules (weekend charges, off-rent cutoffs, and return condition) and logistics friction often change the final hire cost more than the sticker day rate—so those should be written into your estimate assumptions and your rental PO notes.