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Leasing equipment for construction phase.

Alexi889

Hello,

My firm design and builds houses for the customers. I fetched the contract for a huge warehouse construction. This will be my first big project. I usually do houses and small garages. For the new project, I need to upgrade the tools and equipment. I need an additional concrete mixer and a crane. Should I lease or buy? I read in this blog that leasing equipment would benefit from Tax. http://www.truckloancenter.com/blog/buying-vs-leasing/buying-vs-leasing-cost-effective/ . Also, I wouldn't be getting projects like these regularly. So do you think leasing the equipment would be the right thing to do?    

 
Aug 8, 16 2:42 am
Non Sequitur
Can the mixer double up as a margarita maker when not used for concrete?
Aug 8, 16 4:17 am  · 
 · 
awaiting_deletion

or just sub it out...

Aug 8, 16 7:39 am  · 
 · 
awaiting_deletion

of course if it is a margarita mixer as well you can make some good extra money on weekends.

Aug 8, 16 7:40 am  · 
 · 
shellarchitect

you can afford to buy a cement mixer and crane?

Aug 8, 16 9:09 am  · 
 · 
LITS4FormZ

This is a serious question??

 

Always rent....

Aug 8, 16 9:21 am  · 
 · 
Non Sequitur

A large contractor client of ours was getting tired of always renting the equipment needed for a job so he started a side business for equipment rental. Let's say he's doing rather well with that investment as I currently coordinate his custom multi-million dollar house drawings.

Aug 8, 16 9:25 am  · 
 · 
curtkram

if you're a residential contractor building an industrial building, you're probably outside of your core competence and there would be a significant benefit in subbing concrete work out to someone more experienced with that specific construction type.

Aug 8, 16 9:31 am  · 
 · 
proto

[edit] like nonsequitur's comment above[/edit]

my understanding of the larger GC's practices is that they "own" the equipment via a brother company and rent it back to themselves (the GC company) and make money on it both ways

this goes for hand tools all the way up to large equipment

i believe it also divorces the GC's corporate equipment costs from the company making it more of a true services type operation

 

i'm only seeing this from the outside, so caveats & warnings about truthiness, YMMV

Aug 8, 16 12:39 pm  · 
 · 
shellarchitect

in similar fashion, the contract may allow a markup to sub-contractors work, so every trade becomes a subcontractor, and the gc gets an extra 10% or whatever is allowed.

maybe not applicable to homes and private commercial work.  More applicable for architects is the idea of one company owning a building and all equipment (computers, chairs, etc) and renting it to the architecture firm.  

I don't know how common this is, but that is what one of my former firms did and how I got interested in the business stuff in the first place.

Aug 8, 16 12:54 pm  · 
 · 
Alexi889

I'm serious here. The firm doesn't have enough capital. My idea was to buy on loan. I had considered renting too. I have contacted some rentals. But, I had the thought to have equipment for the firm as we are having a storage space.

Aug 9, 16 12:23 am  · 
 · 
Non Sequitur
We are serious too.

Have you considered consulting an astrologer?
Aug 9, 16 12:48 am  · 
 · 
shellarchitect

sorry, question seems a little crazy so hard to take seriously... why not wait until you've done a couple large projects before buying expensive equipment?  

You don't want this stuff sitting around unused.

Aug 9, 16 12:53 pm  · 
 · 
curtkram

how do you pay the loan off if you don't have enough capital?

Aug 9, 16 2:17 pm  · 
 · 
poop876

No wonder you have no capital...you are clueless in your own industry!
 

Aug 9, 16 3:49 pm  · 
 · 

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