Excavators, telehandlers, dumpers, access platforms, scaffolding, and specialist plant for UK construction businesses. Plant hire bought reactively on day rates is consistently 15–25% more expensive than contracted volume rates. This pool aggregates hire demand from the forward programme to create the contracted position that individual businesses cannot justify alone.
Plant hire is the procurement category in construction most characterised by reactive buying. A machine is needed, the site manager calls a hire company, and the first available plant at an acceptable rate is booked. The rate reflects market availability and demand on that day — not contracted volume, not relationship pricing, not competitive tender. It is retail price for a wholesale-volume requirement.
The plant hire market offers significantly better pricing for committed volume. A construction business that can present its forward programme — three months of excavator requirements, telehandler needs across five live projects, access platform bookings for the next quarter — creates a contracted hire relationship that hire companies price very differently from day-by-day reactive bookings. The difference between day-hire rates and contracted forward-programme rates is typically 15–25%.
Excavators (1.5T–30T), tracked dumpers and site dumpers, telehandlers, scissor lifts and boom access platforms, mini diggers, rollers and compactors, generators, lighting towers, welfare units, and specialist plant specific to individual members. Scaffolding tube and fittings supply is included as a related category for scaffolding contractors. Participants forecast their hire requirements across a 6-month forward window — this creates the contracted position that justifies tendered rates.