A construction takeoff takes plans or site images and turns them into actual numbers – areas, lengths, and counts – so you can give people a pretty good idea of what that job is going to cost without trying to wing it. Bolster's Takeoff tool lets you measure on a computer from plans you upload, from satellite images of the site, or from scratch, and then link those measurements right to the items and assemblies in your estimate so anything that changes doesn't require going back to the drawing board.
If you want to get done with your estimates quickly and without second-guessing yourself, you need your takeoff process to be real simple, easy to follow, and directly connected to how you actually price a job. Bolster's Construction Takeoff tool is all about that: measure digitally (from your plans, from a satellite image of the site, or just from scratch) and then connect those measurements to the items and assemblies that are going to make up your budget.
Quick answer: A construction takeoff is the step where you take your drawings and turn them into actual numbers (areas, lengths, and counts) so you can go ahead and price the job right.
A construction takeoff (also called “material takeoff” or “quantity takeoff”) is the process of taking a project and pulling out actual numbers so you can go ahead and estimate the cost and scope with some real confidence.
Typical takeoff outputs include the following:
The more accurate your takeoff, the fewer headaches you'll get down the line (change orders, missed materials, or your margin getting eaten away).
A good digital takeoff tool should do three things well:
Bolster focuses a lot on that third point: measurements aren't just numbers on a piece of paper - they're inputs you can connect to the assemblies, items, and calculations that make up your estimate.
Bolster lets you do a takeoff in three ways, depending on how the job shows up:
Then you can measure the following:
Bolster also includes a joist & beam tool for framing layouts that takes into account custom material thickness and spacing - super useful for deck and framing-heavy estimates.
Here's a clean, easy workflow you can follow for most residential projects:
Bolster’s takeoff workflow is especially useful for residential work where scope repeats but dimensions change.
Takeoff is what you do when you go through a project (from drawings or snapshots) and actually measure things up to figure out what the work will involve - be it square footage, lengths of material, or the sheer number of things you need to count - so you can start to get a handle on how much labor and materials are going to cost.
Bolster lets you measure spaces, lengths and the number of things or products, and then link all those measurements to bits of your estimate - like assemblies, items, or all sorts of calculations
Yes. Bolster actually lets you use satellite images to do a takeoff and draw from scratch, even if the formal plans aren’t available.
Its a framing tool that actually lets you come up with a plan for joists and beams based on the design of your deck or area, so you can take into account the thickness of the joist and the spacing
In Bolster, the measurements you take get linked directly to the estimate’s items/assemblies or calculations - so your measurements get turned into actual pricing inputs rather than being something you have to retype later on.
You can have a closer look at how Bolster’s takeoff works here.
And then check out the tutorials on Bolster’s takeoff too.