How Much Horizontal Directional Drilling Owners Make: $49K–$22M

Horizontal Directional Drilling Owner Makes
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Description

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Higher crew utilization spreads fixed costs across more billable work.
  • Price jobs for soil, depth, access, and real risk.
  • Faster production reduces idle labor, rework, and billing delays.
  • Tight estimating and cost control protect cash and margin.


Owner income iconOwner income$5.5M–$27.1M
Net margin iconNet margin58%–69%
Revenue for target pay iconRevenue for target pay$9.6M
Business difficulty iconBusiness difficultyHard

Want to test your own HDD owner income?

Owner income calculator

Estimate owner take-home and the gap to target pay from revenue, gross margin, labor, overhead, marketing, reserves, and target pay.

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73%
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24%
10%
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Planning note: Research-based planning estimate only, not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice. It excludes taxes, loan terms, claims, utility strikes, and unusual restoration costs.



Want to check owner income in the model?

Dashboard tabs cover revenue, job mix, pricing, CAC, payroll, fixed overhead, capex, job costs, reserves, and owner income; charts span $16M-$58M revenue, $49K-$22M operating profit, 300%-244% variable cost load, and $820K capex, so it’s for pricing, utilization, loans, payroll timing, and owner pay—not an earnings promise. See the Horizontal Directional Drilling Service Financial Model Template.

Owner-income model highlights

  • $16M to $58M revenue
  • $49K to $22M profit
  • 300% to 244% load
  • $820K equipment and setup
  • Pricing and pay scenarios
Horizontal Directional Drilling Service Financial Model dashboard summarizing key KPIs, runway/cash position and performance in a dynamic dashboard, investor-ready view to spot cash-flow blind spots.

Does adding another HDD crew increase owner income?


Yes, adding another HDD crew can raise owner income in the Horizontal Directional Drilling Service model, but only if backlog, estimating, supervision, and cash control keep rigs busy. In the model, the team grows from 2 to 6 lead drill operators, revenue rises from $16M to $58M, and operating profit rises from $49K to $22M before taxes, debt service, and reserves. If utilization slips, the extra crew becomes fixed-cost drag instead of profit.

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Owner-operated

  • Lowest overhead, simplest control.
  • Best when work is steady.
  • $742K payroll is the light base.
  • Income stays tight if rigs idle.
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Multi-crew scale

  • Works only with strong utilization.
  • Revenue can reach $58M.
  • Operating profit can hit $22M.
  • Payroll also jumps to $1,803M as stated.

What affects profit margin in a horizontal directional drilling business?


If you’re pricing a Horizontal Directional Drilling Service, profit margin moves first when direct job costs move, and How Much To Start Horizontal Directional Drilling Service? shows why upfront cost control matters. Here’s the quick math: first-year materials and conduits run 140% of revenue, drilling fluids and fuel 80%, maintenance and parts 50%, and permitting and locating 30%, so the owner take-home gets squeezed fast by job-level cost creep. Every 1 point of margin on $16M revenue is about $16K.

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Direct margin drivers

  • 140% materials and conduits
  • 80% drilling fluids and fuel
  • 50% maintenance and parts
  • 30% permitting and locating
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Margin shrinkage risks

  • Tooling wear cuts take-home
  • Idle labor adds dead cost
  • Potholing and traffic control hurt
  • Rework and rig downtime bite

How much revenue does an HDD business need to pay the owner?


For a Horizontal Directional Drilling Service, the owner needs about $174M in revenue to take home $145K, using a 7% contribution after job costs and $1,070,200 of listed payroll, fixed overhead, and marketing. Here’s the quick math: ($1,070,200 + $145,000) / 0.07. If the owner replaces the General Manager seat, the math changes, but taxes, payroll structure, financing, and reserves stay out of scope.

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Target pay math

  • $145K owner pay target
  • 7% contribution margin used
  • $1,070,200 listed costs
  • ~$174M required revenue
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What shifts the result

  • GM replacement changes the math
  • Taxes stay out of scope
  • Payroll structure stays out of scope
  • Financing and reserves stay out of scope



What drives HDD owner income most?

1

Pricing Mix

$375-$750/hr

At $9.6M year 1 revenue, higher HDD and emergency rates push more money to EBITDA.

2

Crew Utilization

120-140h

More billable hours per active customer spread $742K payroll and $2.832M fixed overhead across more revenue.

3

Job Costs

24%-30%

Materials, fluids, permits, and maintenance sit near 24% to 30% of sales, so small waste cuts matter.

4

Production Efficiency

160-180h

HDD output of 160 to 180 hours per month per active customer raises throughput without the same headcount jump.

5

Backlog Discipline

3-6mo

A fuller pipeline keeps the business near month 3 breakeven and reduces dead time between jobs.

6

Equipment Uptime

$835K

The $835K rig and support fleet has to stay productive, or downtime slows payback and squeezes cash.


Horizontal Directional Drilling Service Core Six Income Drivers



Crew Utilization


Crew Utilization

Crew utilization is the share of working time that turns into billable HDD work, not waiting, fixing gear, or chasing permits. With $2.832M in first-year fixed overhead before payroll, idle days hit owner take-home fast because yard, insurance, software, trucks, and management costs keep running while revenue stalls.

Here’s the quick math: more billable hours and completed bores spread the same fixed cost over more work, so revenue can rise without adding the same overhead twice. The key risk is lost time from weather delays, maintenance downtime, permitting waits, and job gaps, since empty calendar days are profit leaks.

Protect Billable Time

Measure utilization as billable hours ÷ available working hours by crew, rig, and month. Track the inputs that actually move income: working days, billable hours, completed bores, weather delays, maintenance downtime, permitting waits, and job gaps. If a crew is waiting on locates, parts, or approvals, that time should show up in the forecast.

  • Log idle time by cause.
  • Count bores per week.
  • Track lost days from weather.
  • Book the next job early.
  • Cut remobilization and deadhead time.

Fill the schedule in tight geographic runs so one job leads straight into the next. When utilization improves, the same overhead base supports more invoiced work, so gross profit and cash flow improve before headcount or equipment spend has to rise.

1


Pricing And Job Mix


Pricing and Job Mix

Horizontal directional drilling (HDD) income rises when the bid rate matches the job, not just the footage. In year one, the model uses $450/hour for HDD installation, $375/hour for pipe bursting, and $650/hour for emergency repairs, with HDD installation at 600% of modeled work, pipe bursting at 250%, and emergency repairs at 100%. The right mix lifts revenue without adding the same fixed cost twice.

This driver includes soil, depth, diameter, access, restoration, and risk. If the quote only prices footage, the owner can miss moving crew and gear to site, locates, and cleanup time. Here’s the quick math: a higher hourly rate only helps if the bid covers those extras, or cash flow and owner pay get squeezed even on busy months.

Price the risk, not just the footage

Track realized rate by job type, plus mobilization, locates, and restoration hours. Compare quoted hours to actual hours on every job. If the gap keeps widening, the pricing grid is too low for the soil, depth, or access conditions you are taking on.

Use job mix to protect margin. Push higher-rate emergency work only when billing stays fast and the crew can still stay productive. If a low-rate bore needs extra setup or surface repair, raise the price or re-scope it; otherwise, owner take-home drops while revenue looks fine.

2


Production Efficiency


Production Efficiency

When the crew turns scheduled work into billable hours faster, the owner bills sooner and wastes less labor. The model starts at 160 billable hours for HDD installation, 80 for pipe bursting, and 40 for emergency repairs, then rises over the model period. Less idle time, fewer failed pulls, and fewer remobilizations mean more of each shift becomes revenue.

This driver depends on driller-locator coordination, setup quality, and job flow. If the crew loses time on bad alignment, extra walkouts, or rework, labor cost rises while invoices slip. One clean pull is worth more than a busy-looking day. Faster production improves cash flow, cuts schedule slippage, and helps owner pay show up sooner.

Track Hours That Convert

Measure scheduled hours, billable hours, failed pulls, remobilizations, and idle time by job type. The gap between scheduled and billed time tells you where money is leaking. For example, if an 80-hour pipe bursting job needs a second setup, the extra labor and fuel can erase margin fast.

Push the crew to tighten locate checks, setup steps, and handoffs before the rig starts. Watch completion rate by day, not just revenue by month. Better production means more invoices sent, less labor waste, and less cash tied up in unfinished work. Keep the field log tight so you can price, staff, and forecast from real output, not hope.

3


Direct Job Cost Control


Direct Job Cost Control

For horizontal directional drilling, owner pay lives or dies on field cost control. Year-one direct job costs are modeled at 300% of revenue, covering materials, conduits, drilling fluids, fuel, maintenance, parts, permitting, and locating; by the mature year, the load drops to 244%. Every missed locate, extra pothole, worn tool, or restoration overrun cuts cash that should reach the owner.

Here’s the quick math: at 300%, a $100,000 job rolls into $300,000 of direct cost, so the job burns cash unless pricing and execution improve. One clean bore with fewer locates and less restoration waste protects gross margin; one bad day on site can wipe out several good ones.

Track Every Field Cost Leak

Track direct cost per job and per foot, then compare it to the bid. Use the same cost buckets on every job so overruns show up fast. The key inputs are materials, fuel, drilling fluids, maintenance, parts, permitting, locating, and restoration. When any one of those spikes, owner take-home drops before overhead even gets paid.

  • Cost per bore
  • Cost per linear foot
  • Locate misses
  • Potholes dug
  • Tool wear
  • Restoration overruns

If mature-year cost load stays near 244%, the fix is tighter job scoping, faster issue logging, and a hard review of any rework charge. The owner wins when the field crew stops turning small mistakes into full-margin leaks.

4


Equipment Debt And Downtime


Equipment Deb t and Downtime

Directional drilling can look profitable on paper even when cash is tight. The launch stack totals $820K in capex: $350K drill rig, $185K vacuum excavator truck, $120K support fleet, $45K locating systems, $35K pipe fusion gear, $25K mixing systems, and $60K yard setup. Profit must also absorb depreciation, loan payments, repairs, and reserves, so income depends on how many billable days cover those fixed costs.

If the rig sits idle, owner take-home still carries insurance, yard rent, mechanic time, and possible loan payments. That matters because first-year fixed overhead is $2.832M before payroll. The key metric is utilization: working days, billable hours, completed bores, and downtime from weather, permits, or maintenance. One idle week can wipe out a lot of margin.

Track Cash, Not Just Profit

Measure active rig days, billable hours, and idle days every week. Here’s the quick math: higher utilization spreads the same yard and truck costs over more invoices, so owner draw rises without adding another full set of overhead. A clean drill schedule and preventive maintenance plan protect cash better than chasing a low-margin job.

Build a repair and loan-payment reserve into every rate. Price for downtime risk, not just footage, and check whether each crew day is billing enough to carry the monthly fixed load. If permitting delays or weather push utilization down, cut discretionary spend fast so insurance, repairs, and debt do not quietly eat the owner’s pay.

5


Backlog And Estimating Discipline


Backlog And Estimating Discipline

Horizontal directional drilling (HDD) estimating protects margin before the first bore starts. Bad scopes turn into change-order fights, unpaid overruns, and slower cash, while a strong backlog keeps the crew working and cuts income swings. This driver matters because it decides how much of each job becomes real profit instead of rework or disputes.

The estimate has to cover unknown utilities, soil surprises, access limits, restoration duties, slow approvals, and delayed payments. With first-year fixed overhead at $2.832M before payroll, small misses can hit owner draw fast. Better scope control means cleaner invoices, fewer write-offs, and less cash tied up in jobs that should have paid more.

Tight Scopes Protect Cash Flow

Build each bid from the real job inputs: bore length, soil type, depth, pipe size, access, restoration, permit timing, and locate risk. Then compare estimated labor, materials, fuel, and change orders with actuals on every job. The goal is simple: make the estimate match the field work before the crew rolls.

  • Track estimate vs. actual hours.
  • Track change-order dollars.
  • Track approval delay days.
  • Track unpaid overrun amounts.
  • Track booked work by week.

If the backlog is thin, the crew sits and overhead still runs. If the scope is loose, the work looks busy but the owner still loses cash on extras that never get approved or collected. Tight estimating keeps more billings in the contract and more profit in the business.

6



Compare lean, base, and mature HDD owner-income scenarios

Owner income scenarios

Owner income shifts with revenue scale, job mix, staffing, and overhead. Lean, base, and high cases show how utilization and pricing change cash left after core operating costs.

Three planning cases for owner income across ramp, growth, and mature operations.
Scenario Lean CaseLean Base CaseBase High CaseHigh
Launch model Lower earnings path with a first-year ramp and thin profit. Modeled earnings path with stronger volume and a steadier profit base. Stronger earnings path with a larger mature backlog and wider profit spread.
Typical setup About $16M revenue, $742K payroll, $2.832M overhead, and $45K marketing leave about $49K operating profit before taxes and debt service. About $32M revenue, $1.206M payroll, and roughly $786K operating profit before taxes and debt service. About $58M revenue, $1.803M payroll, and about $22M operating profit before taxes and debt service.
Cost drivers
  • job volume
  • payroll load
  • overhead
  • marketing spend
  • utilization
  • revenue scale
  • crew size
  • overhead spread
  • pricing mix
  • utilization
  • revenue scale
  • job mix
  • utilization
  • overhead leverage
  • payroll density
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves $49KLean plan $786KBase plan $22MUpside plan
Best fit Use this to test a slow start, weak bid flow, or delayed job ramp. Use this as the main operating case for budget and lender planning. Use this to test upside if capacity stays full and pricing holds.

Planning note: Scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or distributions.

Frequently Asked Questions

An HDD owner can make about $49K in first-year operating profit in this model, with a mature-year profit pool near $22M before taxes, debt service, reserves, and distributions If the owner fills the General Manager role, the model also carries $145K of management payroll Cash take-home depends on financing, downtime, and reinvestment