Found this interesting article, would love to hear others views on trade rates in general, my mechanic charged me €55.00 per hour have to say he is good, but main dealer charges €75.00 and one wanted €150.00 told him he would need good eye sight as he would be looking for a long time.
Any way here is the article;
Why plumbers won't get out of bed for less than €120 an hour
IF you're a plumber, then the chances are you won't get out of bed for less than €120 an hour. That's the minimum call-out charge we found on doing a quick ring-around of various tradespeople yesterday.
Perhaps led by our terror of leaking water, plumbing emergencies led the way in commanding a premium price for getting someone in your door to sort out a problem.
We got three quotes for a visit to repair a leaking pipe -- they were all remarkably close at €120, €136.20 and €130 for the visit (including VAT) and up to an hour's labour, with any spare parts costing extra.
Two of the three plumbers contacted said they would be able to arrive within an hour and a half of the call-out, and the other said a next-day visit was the earliest they could manage.
Electrical problems won't hit you quite as hard in the wallet -- our quotes for a visit to fix a broken immersion started at €85 for the labour to fix a simple problem, parts extra. though if you had a broken element you could quadruple that.
Other starting quotes for the same electrical job ranged from €113.50 and €120, but again you'd be looking at a much higher figure for more serious problems.
When it came to fixing a broken boiler the quotes started at around €60 for a call-out charge, with parts extra, while the starting quote for carrying out an annual service along with the repair was €80.
Bord Gais charges €80 plus VAT for their call-out fee, which includes the first half an hour's labour, while every extra 15 minutes will cost you €25.
For a service the semi-state charges €99 plus VAT, while a repair and service together is €125.
All these prices suggest tradespeople can earn sizable sums for their time.
However in the public sector wages are a lot lower than some of those quote, for example craftworkers in the ESB earn between €30,626 and €39,955, although overtime and allowances would bump this up considerably.
Industrial workers in the public service -- mainly in the Office of Public Works and Department of Environment earn an average of €37,000, according to CSO figures, but the figures are not broken down by trade and include other areas such as cooking.
Any way here is the article;
Why plumbers won't get out of bed for less than €120 an hour
IF you're a plumber, then the chances are you won't get out of bed for less than €120 an hour. That's the minimum call-out charge we found on doing a quick ring-around of various tradespeople yesterday.
Perhaps led by our terror of leaking water, plumbing emergencies led the way in commanding a premium price for getting someone in your door to sort out a problem.
We got three quotes for a visit to repair a leaking pipe -- they were all remarkably close at €120, €136.20 and €130 for the visit (including VAT) and up to an hour's labour, with any spare parts costing extra.
Two of the three plumbers contacted said they would be able to arrive within an hour and a half of the call-out, and the other said a next-day visit was the earliest they could manage.
Electrical problems won't hit you quite as hard in the wallet -- our quotes for a visit to fix a broken immersion started at €85 for the labour to fix a simple problem, parts extra. though if you had a broken element you could quadruple that.
Other starting quotes for the same electrical job ranged from €113.50 and €120, but again you'd be looking at a much higher figure for more serious problems.
When it came to fixing a broken boiler the quotes started at around €60 for a call-out charge, with parts extra, while the starting quote for carrying out an annual service along with the repair was €80.
Bord Gais charges €80 plus VAT for their call-out fee, which includes the first half an hour's labour, while every extra 15 minutes will cost you €25.
For a service the semi-state charges €99 plus VAT, while a repair and service together is €125.
All these prices suggest tradespeople can earn sizable sums for their time.
However in the public sector wages are a lot lower than some of those quote, for example craftworkers in the ESB earn between €30,626 and €39,955, although overtime and allowances would bump this up considerably.
Industrial workers in the public service -- mainly in the Office of Public Works and Department of Environment earn an average of €37,000, according to CSO figures, but the figures are not broken down by trade and include other areas such as cooking.