Maintenance Calculator

DIY vs Shop Repair Calculator

Wrenching on it yourself can save real money — but your time isn't free. Compare the shop's bill to a DIY job and see your effective pay per hour.

The Job

Shop quote

Usually marked up over what you'd pay.


Doing it yourself

You Save Doing It Yourself

$410

for 5 hours of your time

Shop Total

$710

DIY Total (cash)

$300

Your Effective Pay

$82/hr

Parts Markup Avoided

$80

Verdict

At this effective hourly rate, the DIY job pays well for your time — a clear win if you have the tools and confidence.

How it works.

Shop total = Labor rate × Labor hours + Shop parts DIY cash cost = Your parts + One-time tools Savings = Shop total − DIY cash cost Effective pay = Savings ÷ Your hours

Frequently asked questions.

How do I decide if a DIY job is worth it?

Look at the effective pay per hour. If doing it yourself nets you $80/hour and you enjoy the work, it's usually worth it. If the savings come to a few dollars an hour on a job you dread, paying the shop may be the better trade of money for time.

Should I count tools as a full cost?

Only the first time. Tools are a one-time purchase you keep for future jobs, so the true per-job tool cost drops toward zero after the first use. For a fairer long-run picture, spread tool cost across the jobs you'll realistically use them for.

What about the risk of doing it wrong?

Factor in the cost of a mistake for safety-critical work like brakes, steering, or airbags. If a botched repair could be dangerous or cost more to fix than you saved, that risk tilts the decision toward a professional even when the math favors DIY.