Custom PC builder quotes $11,000 labor fee for $4,000 build, claims it will take 280 hours

midian182

Posts: 11,710   +177
Staff member
WTF?! If you were going to pay someone to build a PC, how would you expect the labor costs to be? One Redditor was quoted the comically high price of over $11,000 for a build that was allegedly going to take seven weeks, pushing the total price of the RTX 4080 Super/Ryzen 7 7900X build to just shy of $15,000.

For many people, building a PC is one of the most satisfying and, usually, enjoyable parts of our expensive hobby. But not everyone feels the same way. Some prefer the prebuilt route, while others might opt for boutique builders.

Redditor New_Midnight2686 decided to go for a custom build and asked for opinions on a quote given by an unnamed UK company. It was posted on the r/PCBuild subreddit, but the post has now been removed by a moderator as the situation tuned into a "witch hunt."

The first red flag is the itemized parts list. The cost for components alone comes to $3,849, though for some reason it doesn't include any storage. Those prices are definitely on the high side: a Ryzen 9 7900X priced at $404 by the firm is $323 on Newegg. The builder also claimed the excellent Hyte Y70 Touch case is $859, though it can be found for $400 at retailers. This is a UK-based company, but even the prices given in pounds for most of the parts are way above what you'd pay in the country.

The big point of contention, though, is the labor costs. The builder's quote claims creating this PC will take four weeks, working 40 hours per week, or 160 hours in total. At a rate of $32 per hour, it comes to £5,120, or $6,351. But that's not all.

The quote also states that there are 3 weeks – at 40 hours per week – of "pre-project" labor, adding another $4,763 to the cost of the build and pushing the total for labor alone to over $11,000 for 280 hours work. This brings the total cost of the build to $14,964. But that's still not all: the Redditor claims that if you decline the given quote, there's a $4,000 cancellation fee.

There are plenty of custom PC builders that can add a variety of exotic materials and designs to a PC. These push the prices much higher than normal and extend build times. However, with a total of seven weeks of labor and a cost of $15,000, one would expect this PC to be encased in solid gold and adorned with diamonds.

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Well, this is a very extreme funny story, but still...
Ripping off people is veeery validated in almost every possible field, and it's always the trick of making stuff aspirational and pretentious to inflate margins onto non technically savvy buyers...
Think of anything "gear", or anything like "premium, boutique, exclusive, designer", "retro/vintage", "handmade" for example...
 
Why would the costs be in GBP and USD?

A bunch of stuff in the UK just has its currency changed, and the price stays the same as on the CPU at $325 in the US it would simply be £325 in the UK.

The supposed seller wasn't named so I'm guessing it was all made up or it's a seller trying to dupe people into spending a lot more than necessary. If this is at all real, I doubt many if any have given them money to build anything. It just seems so unlikely to be real which is probably why reddit removed it.
 
I work at a PC shop. We do make a little money on the hardware, but we charge a single build fee to build it, and its nowhere near that price.
 
Maybe the builder doesn't want to be bothered with the build. I've gotten insane quotes from people on various things from time to time, and that assures I won't go with them.
 
This aint a company, but an individual trying to dupe someone.
Also, slow news days if you need to scout reddit for out of touch news.
 
Sounds like the same ***** that tried to scam Dokibird then teamed up with a drama tuber called Katliente to try and make doki look like the villain.. same price range and hourly rate/ length of build time..
 
Basically this price-gouging tactic is what mechanics and car shops do to people who don't know much about cars. Overpriced repairs that take advantage of people naive about how cars work

In this case they probably hope to find customers who know nothing about PCs -- practice should be illegal
 
Well, this is a very extreme funny story, but still...
Ripping off people is veeery validated in almost every possible field, and it's always the trick of making stuff aspirational and pretentious to inflate margins onto non technically savvy buyers...
Think of anything "gear", or anything like "premium, boutique, exclusive, designer", "retro/vintage", "handmade" for example...

Nothing to see here -- this is just how late stage capitalism works
 
Well, this is a very extreme funny story, but still...
Ripping off people is veeery validated in almost every possible field, and it's always the trick of making stuff aspirational and pretentious to inflate margins onto non technically savvy buyers...
Think of anything "gear", or anything like "premium, boutique, exclusive, designer", "retro/vintage", "handmade" for example...
I can't imagine the price I'd be able to get if I said I fabbed the chips myself. ;)
 
At those rates the builder is either hand forging the GPU out of meteorite ore or secretly funding a second career in yacht racing. No one should need seven weeks of full time work to plug in a motherboard.
 
And this is why you don't do drugs kids. (and learn how to build pc's for yourself)
And this is why you do do drugs kids. To open and free a tiny mind. Not only will you be able to build your own PC but you'll be able to fix it and not think you know everything when you haven't even dared venture into the real World. A Reddit warrior you can unbecome and gain Real World Experience.
 
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