If your bank balance feels tighter than it did six months ago — even though you're booking just as many jobs — you're not imagining it. The math has changed underneath you.
Section 232 tariffs on imported steel and aluminum expanded again into 2026, with rates running between 25% and 50% on the products that show up on your job sites every day: copper line sets, ductwork, conduit, rebar, sheet metal, and HVAC components. Steel and aluminum alone are up 20–30% year over year. Alumina, the raw material behind every aluminum coil and fitting, is sitting 25–35% above pre-2024 levels. Lumber, concrete, and copper are climbing right alongside them.
Here's the part most owners haven't fully absorbed: a 20% jump in material cost can wipe out 50–70% of your net profit on the job. Not 20%. Fifty to seventy percent. And if you're running on the industry-typical 5–8% net margin, you don't have a lot of room to absorb that before you're working for free — or worse.
The contractors who are going to come out of 2026 stronger aren't the ones with the best estimators or the cheapest suppliers. They're the ones whose books can see the bleed in real time and stop it before the quarter ends.
This is the playbook.
Run the math on a typical $10,000 HVAC install:
Now apply a 20% tariff-driven cost bump on materials. Your material cost goes from $4,000 to $4,800. Everything else stays the same. Your net profit drops from $700 to negative $100.
You didn't lose a customer. You didn't slow down. You just sold the same job at last year's price and gave away your profit — plus a little extra — to a tariff schedule.
This is happening on every job, every week, in shops across the country. Most owners won't see it until the year-end P&L review with their accountant in February. By then it's eight months too late.
The annual P&L is a death certificate. You need a heart monitor.
Every job needs to be costed as it's running — materials, labor hours, equipment, and overhead allocation — and compared to the bid the moment work closes out. Not at the end of the month. Not when the accountant catches up. The same week.
If a job blows the bid by more than a defined threshold (we recommend 3% as a yellow flag, 7% as a red), your books should flag it automatically. That's how you catch a margin problem when you have one job's worth of damage, not a quarter's worth.
Most home service owners re-price annually. In a stable cost environment that works. In 2026, it's a slow leak.
Set explicit material cost triggers — for example, "if copper closes above $X per pound for two consecutive weeks, every active bid auto-adjusts by Y%." Same for steel, aluminum, refrigerant, and lumber. Tie those triggers directly to your bid software so a quote going out Friday reflects the cost reality of Friday, not the cost reality of January.
This isn't about gouging. It's about not subsidizing your customers' projects with your retirement.
When tariffs are climbing and supply chains are jittery, the parts in your warehouse are an asset that's actively appreciating. The parts you haven't bought yet are a liability that's actively getting more expensive.
That changes how you should think about inventory. Bulk buying ahead of announced tariff escalations isn't hoarding — it's hedging. But it only works if your books can tell you, at any moment, what your true carrying cost is, what your turnover rate is, and how much working capital you can deploy into inventory without breaking your cash position.
A good financial system makes that visible. A bad one — or no system at all — turns inventory hedging into a guessing game that ends in either a stockout or a cash crunch.
This is the move that separates owners who survive cost shocks from owners who get blindsided by them.
Your books should be tracking, weekly:
When any of those metrics moves outside its normal band, you get a flag. Not a year-end surprise. A flag.
That's the financial difference between running your business and being run by it.
None of this works on the back of a shoebox of receipts and a QuickBooks file your bookkeeper updates monthly. You need:
That's exactly what we built PIVOTL to do. We're not accountants who learned the trades. We're home service operators who learned accounting. We've sat in your truck and we've sat in your QuickBooks. We know which numbers actually matter and which ones are noise.
Tariffs aren't going away in 2026. Material volatility isn't going away. The owners who treat their financials as an operations tool — not a tax-time chore — are the ones who'll keep their margins through this cycle.
The ones who don't will spend the next twelve months wondering why they're working harder than ever and ending the year with less in the bank.
Clarity creates confidence. And in a 2026 cost environment, confidence is the difference between growing and surviving.
Want to see what real-time margin tracking looks like for a home service business? Schedule a 20-minute walkthrough with PIVOTL — we'll show you exactly where the margin leaks are hiding in your current setup, and what it would take to plug them.
PIVOTL provides fractional accounting and financial leadership built specifically for home service businesses. We translate the books into operational decisions — so you can run your business with the same clarity you bring to a job site.