Post-Frame Building Cost Estimator
Compare kit-package and fully-installed post-frame building pricing by size and use — garages, workshops, barns, and storage buildings.
Post-Frame Building Cost Estimating
Post-frame construction — the style behind most pole-barn kits, including packages sold through retailers like Menards — is one of the most cost-effective ways to add large, clear-span structure, but kit pricing rarely includes the full installed cost.
We build post-frame building cost estimates comparing a retail kit-package price against the fully installed cost, including foundation work, site prep, and labor that kit pricing typically doesn't cover.
Post-frame buildings use embedded or bracketed posts rather than a continuous foundation wall, which keeps material cost down, but Florida's wind-load requirements still call for engineered post spacing and anchoring, especially in coastal counties.
Whether you're comparing a DIY kit build against hiring it out, or comparing kit suppliers against each other, our estimate gives you the true all-in number for your specific building size and use.
If you're comparing this estimate against a contractor bid, expect close alignment on materials and labor with some variation in overhead and profit margin, which differs contractor to contractor. Estimates that differ significantly from ours in either direction are worth a closer look before signing, since either scope is being missed or the contractor is pricing outside the typical range for the work involved.
What Drives Post-Frame Building Costs
Six factors move a post-frame building estimate the most.
No two projects move through this checklist the same way. Two homes or two jobs of similar size can land on opposite ends of the price range below depending on how many of these factors apply and how significant each one is, which is why we walk through each of them individually rather than relying on a single blended rate.
Building Size
Square footage and wall height both scale material quantity and cost directly.
Wind Rating
Florida wind-load requirements affect post spacing, size, and anchoring, especially in coastal wind zones.
Foundation/Floor
A concrete floor slab is a significant added cost beyond a kit's base package, which often assumes a dirt or gravel floor.
Site Prep
Grading and site access affect both foundation and construction labor cost.
Doors & Windows
Overhead doors, walk doors, and windows are typically priced separately from the base building shell.
Installed vs. DIY
Professional installation adds labor cost but reduces risk of errors on wind-rated connections that inspectors will check.
Typical Post-Frame Building Costs
Ranges reflect fully installed cost, including a basic concrete floor, for common building sizes.
Kit-only material packages from retail suppliers typically represent 35-50% of the total installed cost above — the remainder covers foundation, labor, doors, and any electrical rough-in.
We include a kit-vs-fully-installed comparison in every estimate so you can see exactly what a self-build would save versus hiring the work out.
Keep in mind that published price ranges reflect typical market conditions; unusual site access, rush scheduling, or specialty material requests can move a specific project outside these ranges in either direction. Your delivered estimate will reflect your actual project details rather than the midpoint of a general range.
| Building Size | Installed Cost Range |
|---|---|
| 24 x 24 ft (576 sq ft) | $22,000 – $34,000 |
| 30 x 40 ft (1,200 sq ft) | $40,000 – $62,000 |
| 40 x 60 ft (2,400 sq ft) | $72,000 – $110,000 |
| 60 x 80 ft (4,800 sq ft) | $135,000 – $205,000 |
| Concrete floor slab (add per sq ft) | $5.50 – $8.50 |
| Overhead door (per door, installed) | $1,400 – $3,200 |
Comparing Kit Suppliers?
Get an all-in installed estimate to compare against any kit quote.
How We Build Your Post-Frame Estimate
Four steps from building size to a delivered estimate.
The process below is designed to get you a usable number quickly without sacrificing accuracy. Most of the back-and-forth happens up front, during the scope and detail-gathering step, so nothing has to be revisited once pricing is underway.
Building Details
Send dimensions, intended use, and any door/window requirements.
Wind & Site Review
We apply wind-load requirements for your location and assess site prep needs.
Full Cost Buildout
Shell, foundation, doors, and labor are priced together for a true installed total.
Delivery
You receive a line-item PDF estimate ready to compare against kit or contractor quotes.
Common Post-Frame Estimating Mistakes
These mistakes are the most common causes of post-frame budget surprises.
Most of the mistakes below aren't obvious until the invoice arrives or a change order shows up mid-project. Reviewing this list before you sign a contract, whether you're the property owner or the one submitting the bid, is the fastest way to catch a scope gap while it's still cheap to fix.
Comparing Kit Price to Installed Price
A kit-only quote and a fully installed quote aren't the same number — comparing them directly misleads the budget.
Skipping the Floor
A concrete floor is often not included in base kit pricing and is a significant added cost.
Underrated Wind Design
Coastal-zone buildings need engineered post spacing and anchoring beyond a generic inland kit spec.
No Permit Research
Post-frame buildings still require permits in most Florida jurisdictions — assuming otherwise causes delays.
Forgetting Doors & Windows
Overhead and walk doors are typically priced as add-ons, not included in base shell pricing.
DIY Without Wind-Rated Connections
Incorrect post anchoring on a self-build can fail inspection and require costly rework.
Post-Frame Estimates Across Florida
We build post-frame building estimates for homeowners, farm/ranch owners, and contractors statewide.
Our estimates support homeowners planning a garage, workshop, or storage building, and agricultural property owners planning a barn or equipment building, anywhere in Florida.
We account for Florida's wind-load requirements by region, so the post spacing and anchoring assumptions in your estimate reflect what will actually be required at permit review.
Estimates are delivered as a clean PDF comparing kit-only and fully-installed pricing side by side.
We work directly with homeowners and property owners as well as with contractors who use our numbers to build or check their own bids, so the estimate is written to be useful either way: detailed enough to hand to a contractor as a scope of work, and clear enough to use for your own budgeting without a construction background.
Get Your Post-Frame Estimate
Send your building size and use, and get pricing back in 48 hours.
How to Use This Estimate
Once you have your number, here's how most people put it to work.
If you're a homeowner planning to hire out the work, use the itemized breakdown to request bids from two or three licensed, insured contractors and compare each bid line by line against ours, flagging any category that's missing or priced well outside the range shown.
If you're a contractor using this as a second opinion, cross-check our quantities and unit pricing against your own takeoff before finalizing a bid. Discrepancies usually point to a missed scope item on one side or the other, and it's better to catch that before submission than after you've won the job.
If the estimate is for planning or financing purposes, a renovation loan application, an insurance conversation, or simply deciding whether a project is affordable this year, the PDF is formatted to stand on its own as documentation, with your project details, itemized costs, and the preparation date clearly noted.
We're also available to answer follow-up questions about anything in the estimate at no additional cost. If a line item doesn't make sense, or you want to understand why a particular factor moved the price, ask before you use the number for a bid or budget decision.
Estimates are typically valid for 30-60 days from delivery, since material pricing can shift over longer periods. If your project timeline stretches beyond that window, let us know and we can refresh the numbers before you lock in a contractor.
Ready to Move Forward?
Request your post-frame building cost estimator today, no obligation, no pressure.
Why Homeowners and Contractors Trust This Estimate
Four things separate a useful estimate from a rough guess.
Every estimate we deliver is built from real, current material and labor pricing for your specific Florida market, not a generic national average pulled from an online calculator. We track regional supplier and labor cost data across the state and update our pricing models regularly, so the number you receive reflects what a licensed contractor will actually quote, not an industry-wide guess.
We've delivered more than 1,000 cost estimates to homeowners, contractors, and property managers across Florida, spanning nearly every trade and project type. That volume means our estimators have seen the real range of outcomes on similar projects, including the version of the job that goes smoothly and the version that runs into complications, and we price accordingly rather than optimistically.
Every estimate is itemized by material, labor, and any relevant permit or code-compliance cost, rather than delivered as a single lump-sum number. That transparency makes the estimate useful for three purposes at once: budgeting your own project, comparing competing contractor bids apples-to-apples, or supporting a lender, insurer, or HOA approval that requires documented figures.
There's no obligation attached to requesting an estimate and no pressure to hire a specific contractor afterward. Many homeowners and businesses who use this service already have a contractor in mind and simply want an independent number to check the bid against before signing; others use the estimate to decide whether a project fits their budget before reaching out to contractors at all.
Our estimators come from construction and trade backgrounds rather than pure data-entry roles, which means the numbers you receive reflect real field judgment about how a project like yours typically unfolds, not just a spreadsheet formula applied to square footage.
Post-Frame Building FAQs
Is a post-frame building the same as a pole barn?
Yes, post-frame is the technical construction term for the style commonly called a pole barn.
Does the estimate include a concrete floor?
Floor cost is broken out separately since many kit packages assume a dirt or gravel floor by default.
How does Florida's wind zone affect post-frame pricing?
Coastal wind zones require larger or more closely spaced posts and engineered anchoring, which increases material cost.
Can I compare a specific kit quote against your estimate?
Yes, send us the kit quote and we'll build a fully-installed comparison including foundation and labor.
Do post-frame buildings need a permit in Florida?
In most jurisdictions, yes — we note applicable permit requirements in the estimate.
How fast can I get a post-frame estimate?
Most estimates are delivered within 48 hours of receiving building size and use details.
Get Your Post-Frame Building Estimate
Send your building details today and get all-in pricing back in 48 hours.