Deck Extender Rental Rates in Denver (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
Head of Marketing

Deck Extender Rental Rates Denver 2026

In the Denver metro, a “deck extender” request for scissor lift rental almost always means the lift’s roll-out extension deck / power deck rather than a stand-alone accessory you rent separately. For 2026 planning, budget deck extender equipment hire in one of two ways: (1) bundled (most common) where the extension deck is included at $0–$25/day incremental, or (2) itemized/premium where a longer or powered extension deck is billed as a class-up at roughly $10–$40/day, $30–$120/week, and $90–$280 per 4-week month. Your actual adder depends on whether you’re taking a standard slab scissor with a manual roll-out deck (common for interior work) or a rough-terrain unit with a longer extension deck. In Denver, national providers (United Rentals, Sunbelt, Herc) and local yards (including Arvada-area branches and Denver-based providers) can supply scissor lifts with deck extenders, but published rates are usually tied to the lift class rather than the deck extender line item.

Vendor Daily Rate Weekly Rate Review Score Website
United Rentals ([reviews.birdeye.com](https://reviews.birdeye.com/united-rentals-173503062704057?utm_source=openai)) $182 $327 9 Visit
Sunbelt Rentals ([reviews.birdeye.com](https://reviews.birdeye.com/sunbelt-rentals-173503018670938?utm_source=openai)) $150 $305 9 Visit
Herc Rentals ([dms.myflorida.com](https://www.dms.myflorida.com/content/download/144324/963904/State%20of%20Florida%20Renewal%20Pricing%20%204.1.24%20-%203.31.25.xlsx)) $274 $470 9 Visit
Bighorn Rentals ([bighornrents.com](https://bighornrents.com/product/19ft-scissor-lift/)) $200 $400 10 Visit
EquipmentShare ([leegov.com](https://www.leegov.com/procurement/Project%20Documents/Equipment%20Rental%20-%20Annual%20B220065LLP/B220065LLP%20EquipmentShare%20Executed%20Contract%20OCR.pdf)) $155 $295 9 Visit

What A “Deck Extender” Means in Scissor Lift Equipment Hire

On most modern slab scissors, the deck extender is a manual roll-out platform extension that slides out 3–4 feet to bridge over obstructions, reach duct/pipe racks, or work closer to curtainwall and rafter lines without repositioning the chassis. For example, a common 19 ft class electric scissor lift spec in the Denver area shows a 3 ft (0.91 m) roll-out extension deck, and it also notes that the extension deck has its own distributed capacity (often ~250 lb on many models), which matters when you stage materials on the extension.

Some rental catalogs use “power deck” to describe a larger or powered extension deck configuration (often on wider slabs or certain rough-terrain models). In practical rental coordination terms, that can trigger either (a) a different equipment class, or (b) the same class but different availability and a different rate depending on the yard. A key cost-control step is to define the deck extender need in measurable terms: extension length (3 ft vs 5–6 ft), manual vs powered, and required remaining platform capacity once the deck is extended.

2026 Planning Ranges: Bundled vs Class-Up Pricing

Bundled (common): Many scissor lift rentals in Denver already include a standard roll-out deck extender. In that case, the “deck extender equipment hire cost” is effectively $0 as a separate line item—your cost is embedded in the base lift rate. As a real local reference point for budgeting, one Denver-metro rental listing for a 19 ft electric scissor lift shows $225/day, $514/week, and $880 per 4 weeks, with the extension deck called out in the features.

Itemized / class-up (happens when you specify “power deck” or need more reach): When your crew requires a longer extension or a “power deck” configuration, some pricing schedules treat that as a distinct lift class. As an example of published schedule pricing, one public price list includes a “20–21 ft electric power deck” at $182/day, $327/week, and $590/month.

How to turn this into a Denver 2026 budget: Instead of assuming you’ll rent a deck extender as a separate attachment, treat the deck extender as a spec that may change the lift class. For 2026 Denver budgeting, a workable estimator rule is:

  • Standard 3 ft manual roll-out deck extender on a slab scissor: $0–$25/day incremental (often bundled).
  • Longer / powered deck extender (commonly described as “power deck”): $10–$40/day incremental (or expect a different class rate for the whole lift).
  • Rough-terrain scissor with 5 ft extension deck: treat as a separate class with a higher base rate, and don’t expect the deck extender to be detachable or discounted on its own.

Assumptions behind these planning ranges: (1) you are renting through a contractor-focused yard with trade billing, (2) the deck extender is part of the lift configuration, (3) you are not incurring specialty compliance add-ons (spark arrestor packages, clean-room containment) beyond normal indoor dust control, and (4) you are using a standard 4-week billing month (many rental systems bill “monthly” as 28 days).

What Drives Deck Extender Hire Cost on a Denver Scissor Lift Rental

Deck extender pricing (or the class-up that comes with it) moves mainly with operational constraints that affect fleet utilization and damage risk:

  • Extension length and deck capacity: A basic 3 ft roll-out deck is common; longer extensions (5–6 ft) typically appear on wider slab units or RT units and can shift you into a higher rate class because it’s not just “more deck”—it’s often a different chassis. A public pricing schedule explicitly lists “20 ft electric w/6 ft power deck” as its own line item, reinforcing that many providers treat the deck extender configuration as a separate class.
  • Indoor finish protection: In Denver TI work (LoDo, RiNo, DTC office parks), the cost impact is often not the deck extender—it’s the requirements that come with indoor use: non-marking tires, floor protection, and dust control, which can increase cleaning and turnaround charges.
  • Downtown access logistics: If your delivery has a tight receiving window, expect a higher transport cost or re-delivery charges. (Details in the hidden-fee section below.)
  • Duration: Deck extender “premiums” are easiest to negotiate away on multi-week rentals. On single-day rentals, providers are less flexible because prep/deprep time is the same whether the unit is out 1 day or 7 days.
  • Availability in peak season: During Denver’s summer construction peak, you may pay more (or accept a different make/model) to lock in a power deck configuration—especially for 26 ft+ slab units and for RT scissors used on exterior envelope work.

Hidden-Fee Breakdown (Where the Real Deck Extender Costs Hide)

Even when the deck extender itself is “included,” the total equipment hire cost can move substantially based on the charges below. For Denver budgeting, build your estimate with explicit allowances so the deck extender requirement doesn’t surprise the final invoice:

  • Delivery / pickup: A Denver-based rental provider advertises $125 one-way flat-rate equipment transport within 25 miles. On other schedules, transport may price as a base + mileage; one public price list shows $125 loading/unloading plus $2.50 per mile transportation charges.
  • After-hours / timed delivery: Budget $150 for a “must-deliver-by” or after-hours dispatch (common when GC receiving closes at 3:00–4:00 PM).
  • Standby time: If the truck waits because the site isn’t ready to offload, budget $75/hour standby.
  • Damage waiver (DW) vs COI: If you don’t provide a COI naming the rental house as additional insured, many yards push DW in the 10%–17% range of rental charges. (Confirm whether DW applies to transport and fuel surcharges.)
  • Environmental / admin fees: Common add-ons run 3%–7% of rent, especially on short-term hires.
  • Cleaning fees (especially around the extension deck): The deck extender collects overspray, drywall mud, and sealant. A realistic allowance is $75–$250 per event depending on material and how much gets into the slide rails.
  • Paint-related return condition: Local listings explicitly warn that paint work requires a clean return to avoid extra charges—this is where deck extenders get expensive because paint builds up in the extension mechanism and increases refurb labor.
  • Battery recharge fees (electric slabs): Budget $45–$125 if the unit returns below the agreed charge threshold or if the on-board charger is missing/damaged.
  • Replacement of missing components: If the extension deck’s pins, chains, or rail components go missing, small parts can be rebilled at $35–$180 per item depending on the provider’s parts schedule.

Operational Rules That Change Your Final Hire Invoice

These rules are consistent across many yards and are especially important on deck extender rentals because crews tend to treat the extension deck like a “workbench” (which increases damage/cleaning):

  • Off-rent cutoffs: Many rental systems require off-rent by late morning (often around 10:00 AM) to avoid being billed another day. If your superintendent calls off-rent at 2:30 PM, expect another day of rent even if pickup is scheduled next morning.
  • Weekend billing: Friday delivery with Monday pickup commonly bills 3–4 days unless you have a negotiated “weekend rate” or a true 7-day weekly tariff.
  • Return condition documentation: Require a time-stamped photo set at pickup and at return (platform, extension deck slid out, rails, tires, charger, hour meter). This is the single best practice to control deck extender damage disputes.
  • Indoor dust-control requirements: If you’re working in occupied space, budget for plasticing and negative air, and confirm whether the rental house requires a poly-wrapped return to prevent contaminating their shop (some will bill cleaning if not).
  • Recharge/refuel expectations: Electric units are usually expected to return at a similar battery state-of-charge; RT units are often expected to return at the same fuel level. If your deck extender work is on exterior envelope in winter, battery performance drops and you may need mid-shift charging logistics.

Example: Deck Extender Equipment Hire for a Denver Interior TI (Numbers You Can Actually Use)

Scenario: 3-night interior TI in LoDo. Crew needs a 26 ft slab scissor lift with a roll-out deck extender to reach above a corridor soffit without constantly repositioning. Work is 6:00 PM–2:00 AM, freight-elevator access only, building requires deliveries before 3:00 PM.

  • Base scissor lift rental (26 ft class): budget $260–$350/day depending on class and season (Denver metro can be higher than non-metro schedules).
  • Deck extender / power deck class-up: budget $15/day (often bundled; carry as a contingency if you must specify power deck).
  • Damage waiver: assume 14% of rental if COI is not accepted.
  • Delivery: $125 one-way within 25 miles (budget $250 round-trip).
  • Timed-delivery premium: $150 (because the building won’t receive after 3:00 PM).
  • Cleaning allowance: $150 (drywall dust + sealant on the extension deck slide rails).
  • Battery recharge allowance: $75 if the unit comes back under charge due to overnight usage without access to 120V charging.

What this means: even when the deck extender is “included,” the deck extender requirement can still swing the total scissor lift rental cost by $400–$700 on a short-duration job once delivery, timed receiving, and cleaning are included. Your estimator should carry those as explicit allowances, not hope they get waived at invoicing.

Budget Worksheet

  • Scissor lift rental (slab, with deck extender): $260–$350/day × ____ days
  • Deck extender / power deck class-up allowance: $15–$35/day × ____ days
  • Delivery + pickup allowance (local): $250 round-trip (or $125 each way)
  • Mileage allowance beyond “local radius”: $3–$6 per loaded mile × ____ miles
  • Timed delivery / after-hours dispatch allowance: $150 per event
  • Damage waiver allowance (if no COI): 10%–17% of rental line items
  • Environmental/admin fees allowance: 3%–7% of rent
  • Cleaning allowance (extension deck + rails): $75–$250 per return
  • Battery recharge/refuel allowance: $45–$125 electric recharge or $35–$90 refuel/service
  • Downtime/standby allowance (truck waiting): $75/hour × ____ hours

Rental Order Checklist

  • PO scope: specify “scissor lift rental with roll-out extension deck (deck extender)” and required extension length (e.g., 3 ft vs 6 ft power deck).
  • Jobsite constraints: doorway width, slab loading, freight elevator limits, and turning radius; confirm if the deck extender must be used in a partially extended position in tight corridors.
  • Delivery plan: delivery address, contact, on-site receiving hours, dock height, and whether a liftgate is required.
  • Off-rent rules: confirm cutoff time (ask explicitly), weekend billing approach, and whether “call-off” must be emailed vs phoned.
  • Return condition: require pre-return cleaning; prohibit storing wet material buckets on the extension deck; document extension deck rails/slide rails before pickup.
  • Accessories: confirm charger included, platform gate function, toe-board requirement, and whether lanyard points are present.
  • Compliance: operator familiarization responsibility, site MEWP policy, and indoor floor protection requirements.

When It’s Cheaper to Change the Access Plan

If the only reason you’re specifying a deck extender is to reach over a fixed obstacle (casework, storefront, conveyor) and you anticipate frequent repositioning, compare the total cost of a longer-deck slab scissor vs a compact boom or mast lift. The deck extender itself is rarely expensive; the costs that matter are (a) transport/logistics, and (b) getting the wrong machine and paying for lost time. If you are burning 2 labor-hours/night repositioning because the deck extender is too short, your “cheap” rental can become the most expensive line on the job.

Our AI app can generate costed estimates in seconds.

deck and extender in construction work

How Rental Coordinators Keep Deck Extender Equipment Hire Predictable

In Denver scissor lift rental planning, the deck extender is best controlled through spec discipline and billing discipline:

  • Spec discipline: Write the requirement as “roll-out extension deck (deck extender), minimum 36 in” or “6 ft power deck” rather than just “deck extender.” That wording prevents the yard from swapping in a unit without an extension deck during peak demand.
  • Billing discipline: Confirm whether the rental system bills “month” as 28 days and whether partial months convert to weekly + daily tiers. If you keep a lift for 16 extra days after a long-term run, you can sometimes pay more than a prorated month if the contract doesn’t allow proration—so confirm the off-rent and billing conversion rules at the time you open the contract.
  • Standardize accessories: If your crews frequently damage deck extender components, consider standardizing a “return kit” process: scraper, rags, mild solvent, and a pre-return photo checklist. A $150 cleaning avoidance repeated monthly pays for the process quickly.

Insurance, Damage Waiver, and Deposits (Cost Items to Pre-Approve)

Deck extender usage increases the chance of rail, gate, and slide-mechanism damage because crews push against structure while extended. That risk shows up in insurance/DW requirements and deposit policies:

  • COI vs DW: If you can provide a COI naming the rental provider as additional insured, you may avoid DW entirely. If not, budget DW at 10%–17% of rental charges (confirm if it applies to transport and fuel/service).
  • Security deposit (cash accounts): Some yards require $300–$1,000 depending on machine class and rental term. Plan this cash flow item if you’re opening a new account for a one-off project.
  • Loss/damage admin: If there’s a damage event on the extension deck, budget a potential $75–$125 administrative processing fee in addition to parts/labor (varies by provider).

Denver-Specific Logistics That Commonly Add Real Cost

Denver has cost drivers that aren’t obvious if you’re estimating from a national average:

  • Delivery radius norms: Local flat-rate delivery offers often assume ~25 miles before mileage or zone pricing changes. If your job is Boulder, Castle Rock, or mountain-adjacent, pre-negotiate the zone or mileage rate to avoid a surprise transport invoice.
  • Downtown receiving constraints: LoDo/Union Station area projects frequently have dock scheduling, alley access, or street occupancy limitations. A failed delivery attempt can trigger a “dry run” charge—carry $125–$250 for a re-delivery contingency on tight sites.
  • Weather and battery performance: Winter overnight work can reduce electric slab run time, which can force mid-shift charging and increase the risk of a $75 recharge fee or an unplanned swap.
  • Elevation impacts on engine-driven units: If you move from Denver to higher-elevation sites, RT scissor performance can change; the cost impact is often indirect (extra day(s) of rent because production slows). Include a productivity contingency if the deck extender is needed to avoid repositioning on uneven grades.

Return-Condition Standards That Prevent Deck Extender Rebill

Most disputes aren’t about the base rental rate—they’re about condition and completeness on return. For deck extenders, focus on the parts that get damaged or lost:

  • Extension slide rails and rollers: Remove mud, drywall compound, and tape glue before retracting fully for return. Budget $150–$300 for rail/roller service if the deck extender is jammed by cured material.
  • Gate, chains, and pins: Missing pin/clip sets can rebill at $35–$120 depending on parts markup and whether a safety inspection is required.
  • Charger and cord set: If an on-board charger cord is cut or the charger is missing, replacement can run $250–$450 on many electric slabs (and can delay off-rent acceptance if the yard must verify charging function).
  • Tire and floor-damage claims: If a unit is used indoors without protection, you may get rebilled for non-marking tire replacement or floor remediation. Carry a $200 “interior surface protection” contingency on high-finish projects.

Quick Cost Q&A for Deck Extender Hire (Denver Scissor Lift Rental)

  • Is the deck extender rented separately? Usually no—treat it as part of the scissor lift configuration and confirm the extension length in the PO.
  • Do “power deck” models always cost more? Not always; some published schedules price certain power deck classes similarly to non-power-deck classes, but availability can be tighter and transport/cleaning can still raise the total cost.
  • What’s the single biggest avoidable cost? Cleaning and damage on the extension deck mechanism. A $150 cleaning charge is common enough that it should be treated as an estimator allowance unless you have a documented return process.
  • What’s the single biggest controllable cost? Transport. If you can self-haul (where permitted) or combine deliveries for multiple pieces of access equipment, you can often eliminate $250–$500 of round-trip logistics on short jobs.
  • What should I put in the scope notes? “Scissor lift rental with roll-out extension deck (deck extender), minimum 36 in extension; indoor non-marking; charger included; off-rent cutoff confirmed; return photos required.”

If you want, share the platform height (19 ft, 26 ft, 32 ft), whether you need manual or power deck, and your approximate delivery ZIP. I can tighten the 2026 planning range and the transport/fee allowances for that specific deck extender equipment hire scenario in Denver.