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Estimate Template

Pest control estimate with treatment plan options, inspection findings, material costs, and terms. Auto-fills common treatment descriptions. PDF output.

Company Information

Customer Information

Current Pest Assessment

Good / Better / Best Options

Good
Total $6,000
Most Popular
Better
Total $7,300
Best
Total $9,150

Scope of Work

Financing

Terms

Estimate Summary

Good
$6,000
One-Time Interior Treatment
Most Popular
Better
$7,300
Interior + Exterior Perimeter Treatment
Best
$9,150
Full Property Treatment + Quarterly Plan
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How to Use This Template

1. Fill in your company information. Enter your company name, phone, email, and license number. These appear in the header of your estimate. The estimate number auto-generates but you can change it to match your numbering system.

2. Add the customer details. Enter the customer name, address, and phone. This information populates the estimate header so the customer knows exactly who it was prepared for.

3. Assess the current pest situation. Document the pest type, infestation duration, and severity. This builds credibility and gives the customer context for why treatment is recommended. Add notes about specific activity you found during your inspection.

4. Build your Good/Better/Best options. Enter treatment descriptions, coverage levels, and costs for each tier. The Good option should be the minimum effective solution. Better adds extended coverage. Best is the premium package. Totals calculate automatically as you type.

5. Generate and print. Click "Generate Estimate PDF" to open a clean, print-ready estimate in a new window. Use your browser's print function to save as PDF or print directly. The estimate includes all three options, scope of work, and terms.

Why Good/Better/Best Works

Customers want to choose, not be told. Presenting a single option forces a yes-or-no decision, and "no" is easy. Three options shift the conversation from "should I buy" to "which one should I pick." This psychological reframe is why tiered pricing consistently outperforms single-option proposals across every study in the home services industry.

The middle option wins most of the time. This is the compromise effect, also known as the center-stage bias. When presented with three choices, most people avoid the cheapest (feels like cutting corners) and the most expensive (feels excessive). The Better option feels reasonable and safe. If you use Good/Better/Best, expect 50 to 60 percent of customers to pick the middle tier.

Your average ticket goes up without a hard sell. Even the customers who pick Good are choosing from a menu rather than haggling on price. And the 15 to 20 percent who pick Best are upselling themselves. The net effect is a higher average ticket with less sales friction, which is exactly why every major pest control franchise trains their sales team on this method.

It builds trust and positions you as an advisor. Presenting options shows the customer you are not just pushing the most expensive system. You are giving them information and letting them make an informed decision. That transparency builds trust, which leads to referrals and repeat business.

When To Use This

Initial treatment consultations. After inspecting a property with pest activity, sit down with the homeowner and fill this out on your tablet or laptop. Walk them through each option, explain the coverage differences, and show the totals. Print or email the estimate before you leave. Customers who receive a professional, multi-option estimate on the spot close at significantly higher rates than those who get a handwritten number on a notepad.

Emergency pest situations. When a customer has a severe infestation and needs immediate help, they need to make a fast decision. Having a clean estimate template ready means you can put professional-looking numbers in front of them within minutes. The Good option gives them an affordable path forward, while Better and Best let them upgrade to comprehensive coverage if the budget allows. Include financing to make the decision even easier.

Commercial bids and property managers. Property managers and commercial clients expect itemized, professional estimates. This template gives them the breakdown they need to compare bids and get approval from ownership. The Good/Better/Best format works especially well for commercial because it lets the decision maker choose the level of coverage without going back and forth on revisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should a Pest Control estimate include?
A professional pest control estimate should include company information and pest control license number, customer details, current pest activity assessment, treatment specifications with methods and chemicals to be used, itemized costs for treatments, labor, materials, and any required permits, applicable discounts, scope of work, service guarantee terms, payment terms, and a validity period. Presenting Good/Better/Best options increases close rates by giving the customer control over the decision.
How do I present Good/Better/Best options?
Start with the Good option as the minimum effective treatment that solves the problem. The Better option adds extended coverage or additional treatment methods like perimeter barriers or monitoring stations. The Best option is the premium choice with comprehensive treatment, ongoing monitoring, and maximum warranty coverage. Present all three side by side and let the customer choose. Most customers pick Better, which is typically your best margin option.
How long should a Pest Control estimate be valid?
Most pest control estimates are valid for 30 days. Chemical and material pricing from distributors typically holds for 30 to 60 days, and labor costs are relatively stable within that window. During peak pest season or periods of supply chain disruption, some operators shorten validity to 14 or 21 days. Always include a clear expiration date on the estimate.
Should Pest Control estimates include financing?
Yes. Including monthly payment options on estimates significantly increases close rates, especially for large-scale treatments like termite jobs over $2,000. Customers focus on monthly affordability rather than total cost. Common pest control financing terms are 12, 24, or 36 months. Even if you do not offer in-house financing, showing approximate monthly payments helps the customer visualize affordability and reduces sticker shock.

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