RecurveBolt27
New member
- Jan 14, 2015
- 17
- 0
Ive got my first customer. He wants a onr wash and spray wax. Wipe down interior and vacuum and shine tires. He has a two door scion and a f150. What would you guys charge for each or those?
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What are others in your geographic location charging for a Basic Wash?
For the scion I would charge between 20-30 for the wash it self including the tire shine. Spray wax is generally quick but however is a bit expensive if not ordered in large quantities. I would charge around 10$ for that. A quick interior wipe down/vac I would charge around 30.
For the scion I would charge between 20-30 for the wash it self including the tire shine. Spray wax is generally quick but however is a bit expensive if not ordered in large quantities. I would charge around 10$ for that. A quick interior wipe down/vac I would charge around 30.
Ive got my first customer. He wants a onr wash and spray wax. Wipe down interior and vacuum and shine tires. He has a two door scion and a f150. What would you guys charge for each or those?
So what you're saying is the customer wants a rinseless wash, right? Today.... being as it's 62° in Atlanta, I'd give him a real wash.It's actually supposed to be great weather all week (for a FREAKING CHANGE).
Been raining so much lately I've been studying plans for arc building, the author was Noah, Arc Building 101. :laughing:
Considering how much rain we've had lately, and how dirty those cars likely are, I'd start by going to the local car wash and spraying the snot out of them. That alone could take $10 worth of quarters. Only when they start to get somewhat clean do you want to do a rinseless on them.
Speaking of rinseless, I take it you have a LOT of microfiber towels to use for that? On the Scion it'll take somewhere between 18~24 towels, only using each one once (for the wash) and almost as many for the drying. And on that F150 it'll easily take 24 towels (just for the wet part).
Might check with Mike's site up there in Buford (Mirror Detailing) to see what he charges. He's not updated his site since 2013, but back then he was charging $80~$100 for a basic wash. I'll start at $65 but that doesn't include the interior. That does include spray wax, wheel wells, tire shine, etc.
The last F150 I did was $120 and it was a basic exterior for a friend/neighbor. I threw in a Nanoskin treatment, and honestly... the truck wasn't really dirty.
The only thing that's going to help you determine what your prices are, will be what your cost is, and what your time is worth. I'll put more time, more effort (and sometimes more product) into jobs than anyone else I know. (I know I put better product into it, hands down.)But I like doing it, work when I want, and on what I want, and don't get into production work.
If your neighbor thinks that he's going to get something done for cheap, you need to look elsewhere. Picking up $45~$50 for an interior exterior job that cost you $12~$15 and half a day's work isn't doing you any favors. At the end of the day, sure... you can base your prices off what others are doing, (hopefully others in your area) but you want to price your services based on what YOU are worth, not what others charging. I'd surely not price lower, always price higher, always do better work, always under promise and always over deliver. If one guy is doing something like Hyper Dressing on the tires, then use a Tire Gel or coating on yours and if they are offering a cheap "spray wax", or no spray wax... then step yours up to a "spray sealant" and use one. (FWIW, most spray waxes are actually sealants of some sort anyhow.) Duragloss Aquawax is certainly an excellent choice BTW! :dblthumb2: If they vacuum the interior and that's it, then offer to spot treat the mats for free. Not the carpets, that's a WHOLE DIFFERENT matter!![]()
How in the World are you using so many towels?
"Speaking of rinseless, I take it you have a LOT of microfiber towels to use for that? On the Scion it'll take somewhere between 18~24 towels, only using each one once (for the wash) and almost as many for the drying. And on that F150 it'll easily take 24 towels (just for the wet part)."
Im not. I thought from what i read starting out doing onr was a good way to start on a budget
Um im doing rise less wash because im starting my business on a tight budget and cant afford a full on detailing rig
I suppose i will rethink the onr
You do not need to rethink the ONR. The ONR is great for strarting out as a mobile detailer. I'm not sure on the price on the interior, but on the exterior I feel $25 to $30 is a fair price for an ONR wash and spray wax. You could save money on towels and laundry time by using a two bucket method with a Lowes Grout Sponge instead of washing with towels. Just pre soak the panels and wash the car with the Grout Sponge and dry with a waffle weave towel.
:iagree: I just finished an ONR wash on my van this afternoon. There's many variations on the rinseless method. You don't have to use so many towels as cardaddy said - I believe he's referring to what many call GDWM (I don't believe GD invented it, but that's a topic for another thread!)You do not need to rethink the ONR. The ONR is great for the mobile detailer. I'm not sure on the price on the interior, but for the exterior I feel $25 to $30 is a fair price for an ONR wash and spray wax. You could save money on towels and laundry by using a two bucket method with a Lowes Grout Sponge. Just pre soak the panels and wash the car with the Grout Sponge and dry with a waffle weave towel. It's that easy.