Smart pricing is the backbone of every successful equipment rental business. Your equipment rental pricing strategy determines how fast you break even, how healthy your cash flow is, and whether your business can scale sustainably.
But pricing rental equipment isn’t guesswork — it’s a data-backed strategy. To stay profitable in a competitive rental market, you need to account for costs, customer value, and market demand while keeping an eye on your margins. Here’s how to build an optimal pricing strategy from the ground up.
Before setting a rental fee, calculate the full cost of owning and operating each rental asset. This means looking beyond the initial investment or purchase price.
These are costs that are directly tied to acquiring and preparing an item for rental. These are capitalized or one-time expenses allocated across the asset’s useful life.
To allocate the acquisition cost of each asset to its estimated rental life, divide the total acquisition cost by the estimated number of rentals during the life. For example, if you rent electric bikes, they will serve your business for at least two years, depending on the utilization rate of the products. With a 50% utilization rate, this would mean 365 rental days.
Based on the above example, the allocated cost per rental would therefore be $3,100 ÷ 365 = $8.49.
Costs that increase with each rental or fluctuate based on utilization volume. These must be included in the per-rental pricing model.
Operating costs cover the resources needed to run or prepare the equipment for each rental. This category is particularly important for fuel-powered or battery-operated tools and machines.
Consider:
Even small equipment can eat into your margins if prep time or consumables aren’t properly priced into the rental fee. Estimate these as part of your per-use or per-day equipment rental cost.
Every piece of equipment — whether it’s power tools, trailers, or sports equipment — requires routine upkeep. These maintenance costs ensure your rental items remain safe, functional, and appealing to customers.
To accurately calculate equipment rental rates, maintenance costs must be included in your OPEX estimates. These costs vary based on the equipment type, rental frequency, and operating conditions, but you can estimate a total maintenance budget using realistic assumptions.
Break it down into:
Neglecting this line item leads to breakdowns and costly downtime. Incorporating a fixed maintenance budget per rental day or cycle helps stabilize your pricing strategy and keeps your gear reliable.
Your rental items take up space. Whether you store them in a warehouse, garage, or yard, storage carries real monthly overhead, especially for larger or seasonal fleets like heavy construction equipment or outdoor gear.
Storage isn’t just about where your gear sits — it’s about how much space it consumes, how long it stays idle, and how that space is paid for. Depending on your rental business’s size and complexity, there are two valid ways to approach storage costs when calculating rental pricing.
If you want to keep your pricing model lean and easy to manage, you can include storage costs as part of your monthly space rental in the fixed overheads. This means you treat rent, security, and warehousing utilities as general business expenses, just like software licenses or insurance, and absorb them across your fleet as part of your overhead allocation.
This approach works well when most of your gear is regularly in use and doesn’t sit idle for long periods.
Pros:
If your business rents out bulky or seasonal equipment (e.g., kayaks, trailers, scaffolding) with high idle time or uneven utilization, a more accurate approach is to separate storage costs from fixed overhead and allocate them based on actual idle usage per item.
This means you calculate:
This way, items with higher idle time take on more storage burden, and you don’t overcharge fast-moving items that barely touch the shelf.
The example provided in the table offers a simplified framework to help rental business owners estimate storage costs per order, but it should not be taken as a one-size-fits-all solution. In reality, storage costs can vary significantly between product types. For example, e-bikes, scaffolding, and power tools all have very different space requirements and turnover rates. These differences, along with your cost basis, utilization rate, and storage conditions, mean that storage should be calculated separately for each product type in your inventory.
This model is intended as a practical guide to help you build your own cost estimation logic based on your specific business circumstances. Factors like your location, storage facility setup, and fleet composition all influence actual costs. Evaluating the true storage space needs for a rental business is a complex topic in itself, worthy of a dedicated article, as it involves layout design, inventory rotation planning, and logistics considerations.
That said, optimizing storage capacity in relation to fleet size and product type is essential for maximizing profitability in any rental business. The better you understand and allocate these hidden costs, the more confidently you can set prices that sustain and grow your business.
If your rental company offers delivery or pick-up, you must include transportation costs in your pricing structure, whether baked into the rate or charged as a separate fee.
If you manage deliveries internally, your transportation-related costs typically include:
If you use a third-party delivery partner, your cost evaluation becomes more straightforward. Most logistics services offer fixed pricing per delivery or pick-up, making it easier to calculate and add to customer invoices. This predictability simplifies budgeting and eliminates the burden of managing fleet logistics internally, especially useful for small rental businesses.
Expenses required to keep the business running, regardless of how many rentals you process. These need to be absorbed into your pricing model, but are best calculated at the business level and allocated proportionally.
Let's continue with our e-bike rental example:
To calculate the overhead cost per order, divide the total monthly fixed overhead by the average number of rental orders per month. In the example above:
$10,516.67 monthly overhead ÷ 750 orders = $14.29 per order
This means each rental order must contribute at least $14.29 toward covering fixed overheads to keep your business sustainable. When added on top of the COGS, and variable costs, you get your breakeven price point.
Every time a customer rents a piece of equipment, it loses a little value. Depreciation accounts for the gradual wear-and-tear and decline in resale value over time.
Track:
For example, if a $3,000 piece of equipment (the same e-bike we have used as an example) has a resale value of $1,000 after 365 rental days (over the 2-year period), you’re losing $2,000 across those days. This means $5.48 in depreciation per order.
Rental management systems like TWICE can automate depreciation calculations and resale value, helping you price rental items based on lifecycle stage, usage, and condition.
Based on the e-bike example breakdown provided in the previous sections, the total cost per rental order comes to approximately $47.84. This figure is calculated across an estimated 365 rental orders over the lifecycle of one unit, incorporating all relevant cost classes.
Here’s how it breaks down:
Depending on your desired profit margin, this total cost forms your pricing baseline. From here, you can build a final rental fee that supports your rental business’s profitability, market conditions, and growth ambitions.
Once you understand your costs, it's time to set your rental price.
Following the example laid in the previous sections, next it's time to add a profit margin on top of the total costs per order based on your financial goals and market conditions.
Let’s break down the rental pricing for an e-bike.
Pricing rental equipment in isolation from the market is risky. Aim to offer competitive rental rates while differentiating with service, availability, or value-added perks. To set appropriate rental prices, perform market research to understand:
When analyzing competitor pricing, ask:
Your estimated rental rate should fall within a competitive band. Differentiation and potential competitive advantage are achieved through product range, service level (digital and physical), and brand.
Your customers come with different needs. Some want a quick one-day tool rental; others need equipment for a week or more. If your rental price per day is flat, you’re missing an opportunity to optimize rental income and encourage longer bookings.
This is where tiered pricing and dynamic pricing models come in — both of which can be implemented easily with modern rental management software like TWICE.
A tiered pricing model charges different daily rates depending on the length of the rental. This encourages customers to rent for longer periods by offering better value as duration increases.
Example:
Encouraging customers to book longer durations:
Dynamic pricing means adjusting your rental rates based on real-time or forecasted changes in market demand, seasonality, customer segments, or inventory availability.
You might charge:
Example:
Dynamic pricing ensures you're capturing maximum value during high-demand periods and staying attractive during slow seasons.
With TWICE, you can:
Combining both models is where pricing becomes a strategic advantage:
Example:
Combined approach:
Manual pricing adjustments are time-consuming and error-prone. Use a rental software like TWICE to automate:
By doing so, your rental company stays competitive regardless of the season or customer mix.
Every piece of equipment has a lifecycle, and pricing should reflect both its rental performance and eventual resale value.
If an item performs well in rentals, you may delay resale. But once repair costs increase or demand drops, it’s often more profitable to sell it at a depreciated value than to continue renting.
TWICE helps you to:
This creates a feedback loop where each rental unit contributes to long-term profit, first through bookings, then through resale.
Your pricing strategy isn’t static. As your rental industry evolves, your business must too.
Use rental analytics dashboards to stay agile. Adjust pricing, retire poor performers, and double down on popular inventory.
Customers love simplicity. Create package deals that group items (e.g., “Bike Touring Kit” or “Camera Body + Lens”) to increase average booking value while simplifying decision-making.
Offering value-added services is also a great way to increase the average order value and profit margin. Consider things like:
These can justify higher rental fees while improving customer satisfaction.
Pricing rental equipment isn’t about following the crowd — it’s about building a model that reflects your costs, your market, and the value your service provides.
Whether you rent out construction tools, bikes, event gear, or anything in between, a well-calculated pricing strategy gives you control over cash flow, utilization, and profitability. It’s one of the most effective levers you have to increase margins without adding complexity.
Don’t treat pricing as an afterthought. It’s a core part of your business model — and one of the easiest ways to make a good rental business great.