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Cost Planning2026/07/09

Concrete Footing Contractor Quote Checklist

Compare concrete footing contractor quotes by trenching, dimensions, rebar, inspection, access, soil changes, cleanup, and payment terms.

A concrete footing contractor quote should make excavation, footing dimensions, rebar, inspection timing, forms, access, concrete mix, cleanup, and change order rules visible before work starts.

Use this checklist with the Concrete Quote Reviewer. Contractors can convert the same scope into a client-facing estimate with the Concrete Proposal Kit.

Competitor pages such as ConcreteCalculator.pro's footing calculator and ConcreteCalculatorMax's footing concrete calculator serve footing quantity intent. The quote gap is inspection, rebar, trench, and soil-risk scope.

Quick answer

Compare footing contractor quotes with this formula:

footing contractor quote =
  layout, trenching, dimensions, forms, and soil assumptions
  + rebar, dowels, chairs, inspection, concrete, placement, and cleanup
  + access equipment, permits, change orders, warranty, and payment terms

Footings can be structural. Confirm design, code, soil, and inspection requirements with qualified local professionals.

Footing quote inputs

InputWhy it mattersWhat to ask
Total run lengthSets linear-foot price checks.What footing length is included?
Width and depthChanges concrete volume and code requirements.What dimensions are priced?
Trench workSoil conditions can change labor.What excavation and trench cleanup are included?
RebarStructural scope should be written.What bar size, spacing, laps, and dowels are included?
InspectionFailed or missed inspections delay pours.Who schedules inspection before concrete?
FormsSome footings need formed sections or steps.What forming is included?
Placement accessConcrete may need pump, buggy, or chute.How will concrete reach the trench?
Change ordersSoil, water, roots, or rock can change scope.How are changed conditions approved?

For quantity checks, use the Concrete Footing Calculator Guide and Concrete Footing Cost per Linear Foot Guide.

Footing contractor quote worksheet

Quote lineBid ABid BNotes
Layout and dimensionsWidth, depth, total run.
Excavation and trench cleanupSoil, spoil, water, roots, rock.
Forms and stepped sectionsFormed sides, steps, corners.
Rebar and dowelsSize, spacing, laps, chairs.
Inspection responsibilitySchedule, corrections, delays.
Concrete yards and mixPSI, slump, waste, delivery.
Placement accessChute, pump, buggy, wheelbarrow.
Spoil and cleanupHaul-off, grading, site restoration.
ExclusionsEngineering, permits, soil repairs.
Payment and change ordersDeposit, progress, written approvals.

Footing red flags

Red flagWhat to ask
No dimensionsWhat width, depth, and total run are included?
No rebar scheduleWhat reinforcement is priced and who verifies it?
No inspection noteWho schedules inspection before concrete placement?
No soil allowanceWhat happens if rock, water, roots, or soft soil appears?
No access planCan a truck chute reach, or is pump/buggy access included?
No change order processHow is added excavation or rebar approved?

Use the Concrete Pump Cost Calculator Guide and Concrete Truck Chute Reach Guide when access is not obvious.

FAQ

What should a concrete footing contractor quote include?

It should include layout, footing dimensions, trenching, forms, rebar, dowels, inspection responsibility, concrete mix, delivery, access, cleanup, exclusions, payment terms, and change order rules.

Should rebar be written in the footing quote?

Yes. Bar size, spacing, laps, dowels, chairs, and inspection responsibility should be clear before concrete is ordered.

Who schedules footing inspection?

The quote should say who schedules inspection and who pays for delays or corrections if the footing is not ready.

Why can footing quotes change after excavation?

Rock, water, roots, soft soil, deeper excavation, extra spoil, or changed rebar requirements can create change orders.

Does this replace engineering advice?

No. Footings can affect structural performance. Confirm design, soil, code, permit, inspection, and engineering requirements with qualified professionals.

Next step

Compare bids in the Concrete Quote Reviewer and keep footing dimensions, rebar, inspection, access, and soil-change terms in writing before approving the job.

Quote planning next step

Turn this guide into a concrete buying check

Run the matching calculator, then compare ready-mix, bagged concrete, delivery fees, access needs, and quote gaps before you buy materials or approve a contractor number.

Open calculator