Before you call the rental yard, know the number. Minivan rental rates vary widely, and the daily rate quoted is rarely the actual daily cost once fuel, delivery, damage waivers and attachment fees are added. This guide breaks down what you’ll actually pay and helps you decide whether renting or buying makes more sense for your situation.
Minicar rental price ranges: 2026
Current market rates at major rental chains and independent yards:
- Diary: $200 to $400 (compact/standard wheel machines)
- weekly: $700 to $1,200 (7-day rate, same machine class)
- Monthly: $1,800 to $3,500 (30-day rate; larger or specialized machines are higher)
- Compact Track Loaders (CTL): 10 to 20% more than comparable wheeled machines
- High flow machines: $50-$100 extra per day over standard streaming equivalents
Note: Please check current local rates before posting. Regional variation is significant. Mountain West and Pacific Northwest markets are typically 15-25% above Midwest average rates.
What makes the price go up (or down).
Machine size and class
Minicarts are classified according to their rated operating capacity (ROC), the maximum load they are certified to carry at 50% of the tipper load. Smaller machines (ROC of less than 1,500 pounds) are rented at the low end of the range. Medium-sized machines (1,500 to 2,500 ROC pounds) are the most rented class and have the rates mentioned above. Larger machines (2,500+ pounds ROC) push toward the top of the range.
Attachments
Base rental rates usually include the machine and a standard bucket, nothing else. Accessories are rented separately:
If you rent a machine and an accessory every time you use it, the total daily cost adds up quickly.
Delivery and collection
Most rental yards charge between $100 and $300 for delivery and return, depending on the distance. A weekly rental with a round trip delivery of $200 adds $400 to the effective cost. This is 30 to 50% of the base weekly rate. Keep this in mind before comparing daily rates to weekly rates.
Exemption from damage and insurance
Standard rental agreements require proof of insurance that covers the equipment rental or purchase of the yard damage waiver, typically 10-15% of the daily rate. On a $300/day rental, that’s a $30-$45 daily cover charge.
The real daily cost: a worked example
5-day rental of a standard skid steer with an auger attachment, delivery and damage waiver:
- Machine: $300/day × 5 = $1,500
- Auger attachment: $100/day × 5 = $500
- Delivery and collection: $200
- Damage waiver (12%): $180
Total: $2,380 for 5 days of use. That’s $476 a day all-inclusive, more than double the quoted base rate.
Rent vs. Purchase: The Mathematics of the Break-Even Point
If you rent the same attachment more than 10-25 times a year, owning it almost certainly makes more financial sense. Here’s the math on a common scenario:
- Auger rental: $100/day
- Purchase price of quality miniature auger: $1,800 to $2,500
- Breakeven point: 18 to 25 days of rent
For a contractor who periodically drills holes, fences, deck bases, landscaping installations, they can spend 25 days of rent in a single peak season. The second year is pure savings.
The same logic applies to box blades, brooms and power rakes – check out the collection of miniature box blades or auger accessories at Skid Steers Direct. Both pages are in the top organic results for their respective keywords, which means real buyers have validated this content.
When renting still makes sense
Renting is not always the wrong call. It makes sense when:
- You have a unique project without any recurring use cases.
- The job requires a special attachment that you will never use again (large diameter tree shovel, cold planer).
- You don’t have a machine and you’re not ready to buy one. Renting allows you to assess whether you will use it enough to justify ownership.
The mistake most people make is treating rent as a default instead of doing the math. Once you’ve rented the same attachment 15 times, you’ve bought it twice.
Financing of the annex that you continue to rent
If the break-even math makes sense but the upfront cost doesn’t, Skid Steers Direct offers attachment financing. Spreading out an $1,800 auger purchase over 12 months at a reasonable price costs less per month than four or five days of rental, and after month 12, that cost drops to zero. Rent never does.
Browse the full library of attachments and explore financing options at Skid Steers Direct.
