How Much Can a Steel Jacketing Business Owner Make on $187M Revenue?

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Description

Under the researched base assumptions, a steel jacketing business owner is modeled with $185,000 in CEO and principal engineer compensation in Year 1 The business produces about $187M in Year 1 revenue, a 705% direct-cost margin before payroll, and about $118,800 of EBITDA before reserves, debt, reinvestment, and personal taxes By Year 5, the same model reaches about $1157M in revenue and $613M in EBITDA, but actual owner income varies by market, contract type, bonding, crew capacity, payment timing, and cost control



Owner income iconOwner income$185k
Net margin iconNet margin-72% to 25%
Revenue for target pay iconRevenue for target pay$0.76M
Business difficulty iconBusiness difficultyHard

Want to test your owner take-home?

Owner income calculator

Estimate owner take-home and the target-pay gap from revenue, margin, costs, reserves, and target pay.

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76%
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24%
12%
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Planning note: Research-based planning estimate only. It is not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice. It excludes personal taxes, non-cash accounting items, and one-time startup CAPEX unless you add them separately.



Want to see the full steel jacketing projection?

The dashboard in the Steel Jacketing Service Financial Model Template shows revenue, EBITDA, owner compensation, direct-cost margin, payroll, fixed overhead, and cash flow; open it to review the Year 1, Year 3, and Year 5 cases.

Owner-income model highlights

  • Owner pay vs profit gap
  • Revenue and EBITDA growth
  • Assumptions and scenario testing
Steel Jacketing Service Financial Model dashboard summarizes key KPIs, runway, cash position and performance with a dynamic dashboard, investor-ready visuals to spot cash-flow blind spots.

Does a steel jacketing owner make more by adding crews?


Adding crews can raise owner pay only if utilization stays high and the shop keeps control of estimating, supervision, and cash. In the Steel Jacketing Service model, lead certified welders scale from 2 FTE in Year 1 to 8 FTE in Year 5, and field technicians and ironworkers from 3 FTE to 12 FTE; revenue rises from $187M to $1,157M, but payroll also jumps from $867k to $247M. Higher revenue can still mean less take-home if crews sit idle, change orders lag, bonding needs tighten, or rework burns cash.

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When adding crews works

  • 2 FTE to 8 FTE welders
  • 3 FTE to 12 FTE field staff
  • Keep billable time high
  • Protect cash collection speed
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Where income gets squeezed

  • Idle crews cut margin fast
  • Estimating errors raise rework
  • Bonding can cap growth
  • Slow pay drains reserves

How much revenue does a steel jacketing business need to pay the owner?


For a Steel Jacketing Service, the owner pay question is mostly a math problem: add $185k owner pay, $682k non-owner payroll, $2.856M fixed overhead, and $45k marketing, then divide by the 70.5% direct-cost margin. That puts required revenue at about $170M before reserves and debt service. At the researched Year 1 revenue of $187M, there’s about $1.188M of EBITDA capacity before reserves and reinvestment.

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Revenue inputs

  • $185k owner pay
  • $682k payroll
  • $2.856M overhead
  • $45k marketing
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What the math says

  • 70.5% direct-cost margin
  • $170M revenue need
  • $187M Year 1 revenue
  • $1.188M EBITDA capacity

How much can a steel jacketing business owner make?


A Steel Jacketing Service owner can model $185k of Year 1 owner compensation plus about $1.188M EBITDA, but that EBITDA is profit capacity before reserves, debt, reinvestment, and personal taxes. For the profit levers behind that spread, see How Increase Profits Steel Jacketing Service?.

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Owner earnings

  • Count $185k as owner labor value
  • Separate salary from business profit
  • Use EBITDA before cash claims
  • Don’t treat profit as distributions
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Profit capacity

  • Year 1 EBITDA: ~$1.188M
  • Year 3 revenue: $496M
  • Year 3 EBITDA: ~$185M
  • Year 5 EBITDA: ~$613M



What drives steel jacketing owner income most?

1

Project Mix

65%-75%

More installation work lifts revenue per job, and the mix shift from 65% to 75% makes take-home less dependent on lower-fee assessment work.

2

Crew Utilization

85-125 hrs

Higher billable hours per active customer spreads fixed labor and yard costs over more work, so backlog turns into margin faster.

3

Labor Productivity

$867K-$2.47M

Payroll rises fast as headcount scales, so each extra unit of output has to beat wage growth or EBITDA gets squeezed.

4

Steel Costs

20%-16%

Raw steel, fabrication, and welding spend is a direct margin leak, so even small cuts flow straight into owner income.

5

Change Orders

$140-$270/hr

Hourly rates only help if estimating is tight and scope changes are billed cleanly, because underpriced work kills profit fast.

6

Overhead Control

$286K/yr

Fixed overhead runs about $285.6K a year before bonding, insurance, and reserves, so lean admin keeps more gross profit in pocket.


Steel Jacketing Service Core Six Income Drivers



Project Size and Mix


Project Size and Mix

Project mix is the biggest revenue lever here. Installation work carries the most value, and its share rises from 65% in Year 1 to 75% in Year 5. Installation pricing also climbs from $225 to $270 per billable hour, versus $175 to $210 for engineering assessment and $140 to $165 for maintenance and inspection.

That mix shift can lift revenue fast, but bigger retrofit scopes can also raise bid risk, bonding needs, payment delays, and technical complexity. More work does not always mean more take-home. If the job is poorly scoped or slow to collect, the owner can end up with higher revenue on paper and weaker cash in hand.

Track Hours by Service Line

Measure billable hours by job type, realized rate, and cash collected by project. Here’s the quick math: moving 100 hours from assessment at $175 to installation at $225 adds $5,000; at $210 to $270, it adds $6,000. So the owner should push for more installation-heavy scopes, but only when scope, access, and payment terms are tight.

  • Track installation share monthly
  • Price each scope separately
  • Test bonding and payment terms
  • Document change orders fast
1


Crew Utilization and Backlog


Crew Utilization and Backlog

Utilization is the share of paid crew time that gets billed. In this model, average billable hours per active customer rise from 85 in Year 1 to 125 in Year 5, while installation hours rise from 140 to 160, engineering from 35 to 45, and maintenance from 12 to 18. More billable hours turn payroll into gross profit, which is what funds owner pay.

Backlog is the work already sold but not yet done. Idle crews, weather delays, access limits, inspection holds, and gaps between jobs push cash out before cash comes in. If the crew is staffed but not billable, payroll still runs and the owner’s draw shrinks even when booked work looks strong.

Track billable hours and delay days

Measure billable hours per active customer, not just headcount. Split hours by installation, engineering, and maintenance, then compare booked work to staffed hours each month. The goal is simple: keep paid labor tied to sold work, because that is what protects margin and cash flow.

  • Track backlog weeks by crew.
  • Count weather and inspection delays.
  • Price access constraints before bidding.
  • Review gaps between jobs weekly.

When backlog thins, slow hiring or shift dates before overtime and idle time eat profit. If utilization rises but collections lag, the business can look busy and still trap cash, so forecast payroll and expected billing together before the owner counts on distributions.

2

Steel and Fabrication Cost Control


Material Cost Discipline

Steel jacketing jobs live or die on material control. In the model, raw steel and fabrication materials run at 140% of revenue in Year 1 and ease to 120% by Year 5, while welding supplies fall from 60% to 40% and logistics from 50% to 30%. If quotes slip, gross margin gets squeezed fast, and owner draws get delayed.

Track the bid inputs that move the most: steel quote, cut waste, coating, anchors, freight, and contingency. Here’s the quick math: every project needs a fresh material takeoff before pricing, because one bad freight or waste assumption can turn a strong-looking job into a cash drain before labor and overhead are even paid.

Refresh Quotes Before Every Bid

Build a bid check for supplier quotes, waste allowance, coatings, anchors, and freight. Update it before each proposal, not after award. That keeps the estimate tied to current costs and protects take-home income when steel moves or delivery gets tight.

  • Steel quote
  • Waste rate
  • Freight plan
  • Contingency percent

Use separate lines for material, shop fabrication, and logistics so you can see where margin is leaking. If realized material cost keeps landing above the bid, raise unit rates or tighten scope. The owner feels this first in cash flow, then in profit, then in pay.

3


Labor Productivity and Installation Efficiency


Labor Productivity and Installation Efficiency

Labor misses hit owner income fast. Total payroll rises from $867k in Year 1 to $247M in Year 5, and field crew payroll for lead certified welders, field technicians, and ironworkers rises from $392k to $157M. In this work, surface prep, fit-up, welding, grouting, safety rules, access limits, and inspection pass rates decide whether billed hours turn into gross profit or payroll drain.

Underestimated hours can wipe out a strong-looking contract. If crews need rework, standby time, or extra inspection passes, labor cost hits before the owner sees a draw. The key input is hours per installed job, not just contract value. When actual hours run high, gross margin falls, cash flow tightens, and owner pay gets pushed back.

Track Hours by Task

Measure planned vs actual hours for prep, fit-up, welding, grouting, and closeout. Also track pass rate, rework hours, and standby time from access or inspection holds. Build bids from those numbers, so the crew mix and schedule match the real job, not just the drawings.

If a job needs more safety setup, hard-to-reach work, or repeat inspections, price that time up front. One clean rule: only productive hours should carry margin. When unplanned hours keep climbing, raise price, tighten crew assignment, or narrow scope before the next bid.

4


Estimating Accuracy and Change Orders


Estimate the Full Repair Scope

This driver is the gap between the visible steel and the real job. A bid has to cover $225 to $270 per hour for installation, $175 to $210 for engineering assessment, and $140 to $165 for maintenance and inspection. If you price only field labor, the owner eats mobilization, access setup, specs review, and delays, which cuts gross margin and cash flow.

The key inputs are billable hours by task, site access time, inspection hold time, engineering changes, and scope growth. A job can look profitable on paper, but take-home income falls fast if change orders are not documented and billed. One missed change can wipe out the profit on a small structural repair contract.

Price the Hidden Work

Track estimate-to-actual hours by work type, plus change orders, delay days, and return visits. Here’s the quick m ath: revenue depends on billable hours times the right rate, so undercounting installation or assessment time cuts income twice, first on the bid and again on rework. If scope changes keep showing up, the estimate is too thin.

Use separate line items for mobilization, site access, engineering specs, and inspection downtime so the client sees the cost and you can recover it. The rule is simple: document every extra task before the crew starts. That protects gross margin, keeps cash coming in, and helps the owner pay themselves from real profit, not unpaid structural repair work.

5


Overhead, Insurance, Bonding, and Reserves


Overhead, Insurance, Bonding, and Reserves

Overhead gets paid before the owner takes extra cash. Fixed expenses run $23,800 per month, or $285,600 per year, before any owner draw. In this model, project bonding and insurance also take a big bite: 45% of revenue in Year 1 and 30% in Year 5. That means early sales can look busy while take-home income stays thin.

The key risk is timing. Reserves have to cover payroll and suppliers when client payments lag, or the business can be profitable on paper and still short on cash. The listed overhead lines include yard and office lease, insurance, equipment maintenance and storage, and engineering software, so the owner needs tight control of fixed burn and receivables.

Track burn, bond costs, and cash days

Measure fixed burn, bonding and insurance as a % of revenue, and days of cash reserve. If overhead stays at $23,800 per month, the business must collect fast enough to cover payroll before the owner can draw. Also reconcile the listed lease, insurance, storage, and software lines so the budget ties to the monthly total.

  • Track reserve months on hand.
  • Watch accounts receivable aging.
  • Price bond and insurance early.
  • Approve draws after payroll coverage.

One clean rule: no reserve, no extra owner pay.

6



Compare lean, base, and high steel jacketing owner-income scenarios

Owner income scenarios

Income swings with billable hours, pricing, and staffing because fixed overhead is heavy. Year 1 is still loss-making, while Year 3 and Year 5 move into profit.

Compare downside, base, and upside owner-income paths.
Scenario Low CaseLean case Base CaseBase case High CaseUpside case
Launch model This is the downside case, where early volume does not cover the full cost base. This is the modeled middle case, where the business reaches breakeven and starts producing owner earnings. This is the stronger earnings path, assuming the work mix and pricing hold as volume scales.
Typical setup It uses Year 1 assumptions with 6 active customers, $934k revenue, -$674k EBITDA, and $45k marketing. It uses Year 3 assumptions with 125 active customers, $3.115M revenue, $159k EBITDA, and a larger engineering and field team. It uses Year 5 assumptions with 226 active customers, $6.809M revenue, $1.671M EBITDA, and much larger engineering and field capacity.
Cost drivers
  • Low early revenue
  • heavy payroll
  • fixed overhead
  • startup marketing
  • thin margin
  • Higher billable hours
  • more customers
  • engineer labor
  • field crew scale
  • still-heavy overhead
  • More project volume
  • higher pricing
  • larger team
  • more maintenance contracts
  • stronger utilization
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves -$674k EBITDACash burn $159k EBITDANear breakeven $1.671M EBITDAScale upside
Best fit Use this to stress-test the first year when project flow is uneven and fixed costs are still high. Use this as the core planning case for staffing, pricing, and cash timing. Use this to test what the business looks like if demand, capacity, and execution all stay on track.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

In the researched Year 1 case, the owner role is modeled at $185,000, with about $118,800 of EBITDA before reserves, debt, reinvestment, and personal taxes That is not automatic cash The business first needs to cover $867k payroll, $2856k fixed overhead, $45k marketing, and direct project costs