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Pricing & Gross Margin

Pricing in field services has to cover more than labor and materials. It must cover labor burden, travel time, dispatch, callbacks, equipment, fleet, insurance, overhead, taxes, and target profit.

Pricing inputs

InputWhy It Matters
Direct LaborTechnician or crew wage cost.
Labor BurdenPayroll taxes, benefits, workers comp, insurance, and related costs.
MaterialsParts, supplies, inventory, disposal, permits, and job-specific materials.
Travel TimeUnbilled drive time that consumes technician capacity.
Truck CostFuel, maintenance, insurance, lease/payment, and depreciation.
Callback AllowanceExpected rework and warranty leakage.
Overhead AllocationDispatch, office, management, rent, software, marketing, and admin.
Target ProfitOwner return and reinvestment capacity.

Simple pricing formula

Direct Labor
+ Labor Burden
+ Materials
+ Truck / Equipment Cost
+ Travel Time Cost
+ Callback Allowance
+ Overhead Allocation
+ Target Profit
= Required Price

Pricing red flags

Price from cost and margin, not guesswork.

Use the pricing and margin calculator to understand your required job price before work is sold.

Open pricing calculator
Heather Engler, Esq.

By Heather Engler, Esq.

Founder & Principal, Capital Advisors

Heather blends legal training with deep expertise in bookkeeping and tax compliance, giving her a unique perspective on financial strategy, risk management, and operations. Under her leadership, Capital Advisors serves hundreds of clients across bookkeeping, tax, payroll, and financial advisory. More about the team →

Frequently asked

How should a field services business price its jobs?

Price from cost and target margin, not guesswork: start with fully loaded labor, materials, and overhead, then apply the markup needed to hit your gross-margin target. Pricing off competitors or instinct is how crew-based businesses quietly erode profitability.

What inputs go into a field services pricing formula?

Direct labor and labor burden, materials, subcontractor costs, and allocated overhead, plus the gross-margin target the business needs to be sustainable. Leaving any of these out — especially labor burden and overhead — produces prices that look profitable but aren't.

What are the warning signs of a pricing or margin problem?

Winning nearly every bid, margins that vary widely by job with no clear reason, busy crews but thin profit, and prices that haven't moved as labor and material costs rose. Each suggests pricing isn't tied to real cost and margin.