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When estimating equipment costs, what is the break-even point for purchasing versus renting a piece of equipment?

Correct Answer

C) When total rental costs equal the purchase price minus resale value

The break-even point occurs when the total rental costs equal the net cost of ownership (purchase price minus expected resale value), considering the specific project duration and equipment needs.

Answer Options
A
When rental costs equal 50% of purchase price
B
When the equipment will be used for more than 6 months
C
When total rental costs equal the purchase price minus resale value
D
When equipment utilization exceeds 75%

Why This Is the Correct Answer

The break-even point for equipment purchase versus rental is reached when the total rental costs equal the net ownership cost. Net ownership cost is calculated as the purchase price minus the expected resale value at the end of the project period. This formula accounts for the fact that purchased equipment retains some value that can be recovered through resale, making it the true cost comparison point.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: When rental costs equal 50% of purchase price

The 50% threshold is arbitrary and doesn't account for actual project duration, equipment depreciation, or resale value. Equipment break-even analysis must consider the specific time period and recovery value, not a fixed percentage.

Option B: When the equipment will be used for more than 6 months

The 6-month timeframe is too general and doesn't consider equipment type, rental rates, purchase price, or resale value. Different equipment has different break-even periods based on these variables.

Option D: When equipment utilization exceeds 75%

Utilization percentage relates to how efficiently equipment is used during a project, not the financial break-even point between renting and purchasing. High utilization can justify rental costs but doesn't determine the purchase versus rent decision.

Memory Technique

Think 'Net vs. Rent' - when rental costs equal the NET cost of ownership (purchase minus what you get back), you've hit break-even.

Reference Hint

Construction estimating references, Chapter on Equipment Costs and Ownership vs. Rental Analysis

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