Explore 100+ attachment options for your Bobcat machine. See All Attachments →
Equipment Insights

Don't Let Your Next Small Project Turn Into a Big Budget Lesson

Posted on Monday 1st of June 2026 by Jane Smith

I think most small-scale contractors and DIY landowners buy the wrong equipment.

There, I said it. We've all been there—staring at a project that's just a bit too big for a shovel and a wheelbarrow, but not big enough to justify a six-figure machine. The temptation? Run out and buy a new compact excavator or skid steer. In my first year (2017), I did exactly that. A brand new Bobcat 325 excavator. Cost me about $35,000 financed over five years. It sat idle for 40% of its first year. Not ideal, but workable? Nope. A lesson learned the hard way.

Why I Think New is Often a Mistake for the Small Job

The numbers don't lie. Publicly listed prices show a current market rate for a new, minimal-config Bobcat 325 is between $30,000 and $36,000 (based on major dealer quotes, early 2025; verify current pricing). For a guy doing two or three small landscaping jobs a month, that machine payment is a millstone.

My gut said new was the 'safe' choice. Warranties, no unknown history, shiny. Every spreadsheet I did (and I did a few) showed the higher hourly cost of a purchase versus renting, but I ignored it. The real killer? Depreciation. That machine lost about 20% of its value the second I signed the paperwork. That's $7,000 gone.

Opinion 1: Rental is Underrated for the Occasional Project

Say you need a Bobcat 325 for a weekend to dig footings for a shed. You can rent a late-model one (often a rental company's own used stock, which is beat up but mechanically solid) for about $350-450 for a day with delivery ($200-350 for the machine alone, plus delivery and fuel, based on national rental chain quotes, January 2025). For a weekend job, you're looking at $700-900 total. No maintenance. No storage. No insurance spike.

That's compared to the $35,000 purchase. The rental cost for a weekend is about 2% of the purchase price. You could rent that machine for 45 weekends straight before you hit the cost of buying it. That's seriously eye-opening data. The question isn't 'Can I afford to rent?' It's 'Can I afford not to compare?'

Opinion 2: Used is Your Friend (If You Do Your Homework)

Skipping the final review on a used machine because you're in a hurry? I did that. In September 2020, I bought a 2015 Bobcat 325 online from a dealer 500 miles away. 'Looks great,' the photos said. I had my mechanic do a remote inspection, but I skipped the independent third-party check. I was 'super confident.' The machine arrived with a cracked final drive and a leaking hydraulic fitting. $4,200 in immediate repairs. That wasn't the dealer's fault—it was mine for being lazy on the pre-purchase inspection.

Now, my rule? If you are buying a used compact track loader or excavator, you must get an inspection from a certified Bobcat technician or a third-party firm like Equip Inspection. A $500 inspection fee is nothing compared to a $4,200 surprise. A well-maintained, 5-7 year old Bobcat 325 with 1,500 hours is an absolute workhorse. I've seen them sell for $18,000-22,000 (based on auction results and private party listings, 2024). That's a serious savings.

Opinion 3: The Attachment Ecosystem is Your Secret Weapon

This is where Bobcat truly shines. The Bob-Tach system is a game-changer. I once ordered a standard bucket with a new machine—thought 'that's enough.' Then I needed to do grading. Had to rent a different machine. Wasted $600 in a rental for a weekend. The 'standard' bucket was too narrow for my 6-foot wide driveway.

The real deal-breaker for a small contractor isn't the base machine. It's the attachment system. A $2,000 grading bucket attachment turns your $20,000 used Bobcat 325 into a finishing machine. A $3,000 hydraulic breaker attachment? Now you're doing demolition. For a small operator, you don't need four machines. You need one reliable compact machine and a growing collection of attachments. I have mixed feelings about buying every attachment new. On one hand, they hold their value. On the other hand, a used attachment with no wear issues is a steal. My compromise? Buy the machine new-ish (0-3 years old), buy attachments used.

Counterargument: 'But I Need Reliability for My Business'

I hear this from contractors who want the new machine. 'I can't have downtime.' That's a valid fear. And for a full-time contractor doing 30+ hours of machine work a week, a new machine with a warranty might be a no-brainer. But if you're a landscaper using a machine 10 hours a week, that downtime argument falls apart. A well-maintained used Bobcat 325 is extremely reliable. Downtime is usually 1-2 days a year with a good preventative maintenance schedule. A rental as a backup costs maybe $2,000 a year in potential replacement costs. The savings from buying used vs. new ($10,000-$15,000) can pay for a rental backup for 5-7 years.

The question isn't reliability. It's economics.

So, What's My Bottom Line?

Stop thinking a new machine is the default. For the small-scale contractor, the DIY property owner, or the guy starting out, the answer is almost always a high-quality used Bobcat with a solid inspection and a strategically built collection of attachments. Or just rent it for the weekend. I learned this the hard way—$35,000 and a lesson that could have been a $20,000 used machine and a $2,000 attachment. Save yourself the headache. Seriously.

Share: LinkedIn Twitter WhatsApp
Author
Jane Smith
I’m Jane Smith, a senior content writer with over 15 years of experience in the packaging and printing industry. I specialize in writing about the latest trends, technologies, and best practices in packaging design, sustainability, and printing techniques. My goal is to help businesses understand complex printing processes and design solutions that enhance both product packaging and brand visibility.

Leave a Reply