Quick Project Quote: 10 Hours at $150/Hour
Calculate a quote for a small 10-hour project at $150 per hour with minimal materials.
How to use this tool
- Enter your estimated hours and the hourly rate you apply to them.
- Add materials and pass-through costs the project will incur.
- Set a contingency buffer for scope creep and estimate error.
- Set your profit markup, then read the quoted price and breakdown.
For a short 10-hour engagement at a premium $150 rate, this calculator delivers a ready-to-send quote with markup and contingency included.
Frequently asked questions
- Why apply contingency before markup?
- So your margin is calculated on the risk-adjusted cost, not the raw estimate. If a project runs over, the contingency absorbs the overrun first and your profit is protected rather than eaten.
- How big should my contingency be?
- It depends on how well you know the work. For familiar, well-scoped projects 10% may be enough; for novel or vaguely-specified work, 20–30% is more realistic. The less certain the estimate, the larger the buffer.
- What is the difference between markup and margin?
- Markup is added to cost (price = cost × (1 + markup)). Margin is profit as a share of the final price. A 20% markup on cost produces a margin below 20% of price; use a margin-pricing calculator if you want to target a specific margin.