£200 a week for me, mostly the vehicle but then there is the accountant, plant and other equipment, health and safety equipment and clothing, insurances like public liability and employers liability. This is per average working week so to cover the weeks when you are on holiday, sick days, bank holidays, snowed and rained off (Rendering jobs mostly). When you are on your annual holidays the vehicle is still depreciating, insurance and road tax, advertising, insurances and accountant still needs paying. So £40 a day in overheads. Most tradesmen don’t know the true breakdown of their own overheads and fail to tally the value of their overheads on the profit and loss sheet even though it is clearly wrote down.
Labour is the same as above, a daily working wage plus extra to cover for the non working days just like you have to with a employee, they get paid holiday pay and sick pay plus training days. Also an allowance to cover for your pension contributions just like employees have given them by law.
Wowsers! Over £10k annually before you've even landed your first job! Do u have two vehicles then- a van and a car? And if the missus has one then that's 3 on the drive each night?