Your question I a little vague. If you are referring to a contractor who is is working on your home, then you should not charge him anything for electricity. If you are asking about a contractor who is perhaps building a house next to yours, and the property does not yet have electricity than the common arrangement is that he would pay your entire bill for the entire month or months until the home he is working on has electricity. If the project is short term, a couple of days or so, don't be a cheapskate and allow the guy to use the electricity. He would likely buy you a nice bottle of wine or something at the end of it all and you would surely come out ahead
no less than $75/hr
110
500.00 total per job.
A general Contractor does not typically charge by the hour. They usually charge by the job or by percentage. A G.C.'s job is to hire and coordinate not to "work" so hours would be a pore measure of his worth. Perhaps you are confusing a GC with a Home Improvement Contractor?
anywhere from $15 to $30 (double if legitimate contractor) an hour, and the walls of a 10 x 10 room can be rolled in an hour
It varies per contractor. They usually charge for their labor and disposal fee.
I should charge 5%
$60,000,000 a day
uhh. how much did he charge you when you were growin' up?
They charge by the linear foot.Some handymen just charge by the job.Paint is always extra outside of labor.It just depends on the company or the person how much they charge.A contractor always charges you more.Just compromise with the painter if you think they'recharging you too much.
If they are very good friend of you, you should not charge. Otherwise charge according to how much you work.
Every General Contractor operates differently. Our business charges an hourly rate of $35/hr. However, for a home build we let the home owner negotiate what is best for them. We may charge a percentage on top of materials for labour or we charge a rate per square foot, or keep the hourly rate...typically whatever works out to be cheaper for the customer