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RENT VS BUY

Should You Buy a Trailer? Probably Not.

If you use a trailer fewer than 30 times a year, the math says rent. Here’s how the numbers actually shake out in Texas.

What This Promise Covers

Cost Item
5-Year Total
Annual Avg
Trailer purchase (used 6×12 utility)
$3,000
$600
Texas trailer registration × 5
$259
$52
Storage ($60/mo if you need it)
$0 – $3,600
$0 – $720
Trailer insurance
$600
$120
Tires (replacement at year 4–5)
$500
$100
Maintenance & repairs
$700
$140
TOTAL without paid storage
$5,597
$1,119/yr

The per-use cost reality

4 uses/year (most homeowners)
per use after 5 years
$ 0
12 uses/year (avid DIYer)
per use after 5 years
$ 0
30+ uses/year (contractor)
per use — buying makes sense
$ 0

Renting Costs

Texas Pro Trailers’ typical rental rates:

  • 16′ utility trailer: starts at $75/day, drops to ~$45/day at day 7+
  • 14′ dump trailer: starts at $150/day, drops to ~$90/day at day 7+
  • 20′ enclosed trailer: starts at $150/day, drops to ~$90/day at day 7+
  • Car hauler: starts at $100/day, drops to ~$60/day at day 7+

Most weekend projects: 1-day rental. Most week-long projects: 7 days. Pricing scales linearly with no surprise fees.

The Hidden Costs of Ownership

Beyond the spreadsheet, owning a trailer has these costs people forget:

  • Storage space — that 6×12 takes up an actual chunk of your driveway, side yard, or garage
  • Maintenance time — bearing repacks, light replacements, tire inflation checks, registration renewals, inspection trips
  • Tow vehicle wear — your truck is towing the dead weight of an empty trailer back and forth even when you don’t need to be using it
  • Theft risk — trailers are stolen at high rates in Texas (one of the most-stolen vehicle categories in the state); trailer-only insurance is a separate policy
  • Selling it later — depreciation typically runs 25-35% over 5 years for utility trailers
compact excavator loaded on equipment trailer for contractor hauling in Austin

When Buying Makes Sense

Honest answer — buying makes sense if all of these are true:

  1. You use a trailer 30+ times per year
  2. You have free storage space (no paid storage fees)
  3. You’re willing to maintain it (or pay someone to)
  4. You’re using a specific specialized trailer that rentals don’t offer
  5. You’re a full-time contractor or landscaper for whom uptime is critical


For everyone else — homeowners, weekend DIYers, occasional movers, one-time haulers — renting is genuinely cheaper, easier, and lower-risk.

The Time Math

Money aside, here’s what owning a trailer costs in time over 5 years:

  • Registration renewals: ~30 min/year × 5 = 2.5 hours
  • Inspections: ~1 hour/year × 5 = 5 hours
  • Maintenance + repairs: ~6 hours/year × 5 = 30 hours
  • Shopping for / buying / selling the trailer: ~15 hours total
  • Storage hassle (moving it around your property): ~2 hours/year × 5 = 10 hours


Total: roughly 60 hours over 5 years. Plus the mental overhead of knowing you own a depreciating asset in your driveway.

Renting from us: book online (90 seconds), drive to the yard (10-20 min), pick up (5 min). Done.

compact excavator loaded on equipment trailer for contractor hauling in Austin

If you use a trailer less than 30 times per year, you'll save thousands of dollars and dozens of hours by renting instead of buying.