A carpenter charged me £180 to fit 3 x UPVC windows - does that sound reasonable?

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A carpenter fitted 3 downstairs UPVC windows where the window spaces were already prepared meaning he didn't have to take the old windows out.
The carpenter told me what he wanted and I agreed - does it sound reasonable?
 
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Well I'm not entirely sure because I wasn't there but it was done in a day. My guess as to how long it would take based on what other trades have told me is about 2 - 3 hours so I'd say a morning or afternoon at a guestimate
 
Well if he works out of his van I'd guess his day rate is between £200 & £250 a day, with a work shop I'd add at least £50 to those rates.
Time wise I'd plan on 2 hours a window to fit + materials ( frame fixings, sealer, cleaner, adhesives, tooling costs). With traveling time there isn't going to be much time left out of a working day.
 
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Well if he works out of his van I'd guess his day rate is between £200 & £250 a day, with a work shop I'd add at least £50 to those rates.
Time wise I'd plan on 2 hours a window to fit + materials ( frame fixings, sealer, cleaner, adhesives, tooling costs). With traveling time there isn't going to be much time left out of a working day.
Thanks wgt52 - Ok well the carpenter has a full time job and works weekends and evenings on his own additional work. It sounds like it was a very fair price then
 
Something Something fensa certificate or building control notification for new windows?
 
Something Something fensa certificate or building control notification for new windows?
The job was notified to a private company who issue building control certificates and they're fine with just a photograph although there's other opened files on notifiable work they will need to sign off on
 
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Well if he works out of his van I'd guess his day rate is between £200 & £250 a day, with a work shop I'd add at least £50 to those rates.
Time wise I'd plan on 2 hours a window to fit + materials ( frame fixings, sealer, cleaner, adhesives, tooling costs). With traveling time there isn't going to be much time left out of a working day.
It actually took them around 5 hours to fit them - cost was higher than the £180 I'd thought it was going to cost as well - They're in and the building is watertight now so I'm happy with that
£180 for 3 windows is a bargain.
Yeah the actual price in the end was in the region of £400 which included someone else onsite and some extra materials - although the main window installer still got the £180
I'd be happy.
How long did he take?
So he took around 5 hours in the end and he got paid £180 but there was someone else helping instead of me who was paid and some additional materials needed so it came in at around £400 in the end - so not as good value as I'd initially thought
 
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The job was notified to a private company who issue building control certificates and they're fine with just a photograph

Surely it needs inspecting , as the fitter isn't part of a competent persons scheme? Which privat e company issued it?
 

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