Blog→How to Quote a Handyman Job: Australian Handyman Pricing Guide
How to Quote a Handyman Job: Australian Handyman Pricing Guide
How to price handyman quotes in Australia — hourly rates, call-out fees, fixed-price small jobs, and a reusable handyman quote template that wins more work.
PUBLISHED BY INSTA QUOTES
Most Australian handymen charge $60–$110 per hour, or a call-out fee of $50–$90 plus an hourly rate, with a one to two hour minimum. Half-day work runs about $250–$400 and a full day $450–$700. The hard part of quoting handyman work is not the rate, it's that every job is different, so the tradies who win are the ones who send a clear, itemised price fast.
How much do handymen charge in Australia?
- Hourly rate: $60–$110/hr depending on skill and location
- Call-out fee: $50–$90 (sometimes waived if the job goes ahead)
- Minimum charge: 1–2 hours on most small jobs
- Half day (up to 4 hrs): $250–$400
- Full day: $450–$700
Rates sit at the higher end in metro areas and for licensed work. Anything requiring a licence (electrical, plumbing, gas) has to go to the relevant trade, so a handyman quote should stick to general-maintenance and odd-job work.
Hourly vs fixed price: how to quote a handyman job
Two ways to price handyman work, and the right one depends on the job:
- Hourly suits open-ended or unknown jobs ("fix a list of small things around the house"). Quote your rate, the call-out, and a realistic time estimate so there are no surprises.
- Fixed price suits defined jobs (hang a door, assemble flat-pack, mount a TV, install a handrail). Clients prefer a fixed number because they know exactly what they're paying. Base it on your hourly rate plus materials, then round to a clean figure.
For a list of jobs, itemise each one with its own price. It reads as more professional than a single lump sum and lets the client pick and choose.
What to include in a handyman quote
- Your details: business name, ABN, phone and email.
- The job list: each task as its own line so the client sees what they're paying for.
- Labour: hourly rate and estimated hours, or the fixed price per task.
- Materials: priced at cost plus 15–25% markup, listed separately from labour.
- Call-out / minimum charge: state it up front so it's never a shock on the invoice.
- GST: shown as a separate line if you're registered.
- Exclusions: anything licensed (electrical, plumbing, gas) that the client will need a specialist for.
A handyman quote structure you can reuse
Every handyman quote can follow the same skeleton: business details → itemised task list (each with labour + materials) → subtotal → GST → total → call-out terms → exclusions. Set that up once and every future quote is a fill-in-the-blanks job. On a job with five small tasks, the handyman who hands over a tidy, itemised quote on the spot almost always beats the one who says "I'll email you a number tonight".
Related guides
- How to Price a Job as a Tradie
- How to Write a Trade Quote in Australia
- Why Tradies Who Quote Fast Win More Work
Are you a handyman? See how Insta Quotes prices handyman jobs in 30 seconds.
Frequently asked questions
How much should a handyman charge per hour in Australia?
Most handymen charge $60–$110 per hour, higher in metro areas and for skilled work. Many also charge a call-out fee of $50–$90 and set a minimum of one to two hours, so a quick job still covers the trip.
Do handymen charge a call-out fee?
Many do, usually $50–$90, to cover travel and the first part of the visit. Some waive it if the job goes ahead or roll it into a minimum charge of one to two hours. Always state the call-out and minimum in the quote so it isn't a surprise on the invoice.
Should a handyman quote hourly or fixed price?
Use hourly for open-ended or unknown jobs and fixed price for well-defined tasks like hanging a door, mounting a TV or assembling flat-pack. For a list of jobs, itemise each task with its own price rather than quoting one lump sum.
What work can a handyman legally do?
General maintenance and odd jobs: assembly, minor repairs, hanging, patching, mounting, basic carpentry and the like. Licensed work (electrical, plumbing and gas) must be done by a licensed tradesperson, so list that as an exclusion and refer it on.
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