As an illustrative 2026 range, a 60×80 metal building costs roughly $43,000 to $82,000 ‹confirm› for the bare steel shell kit, or about $9 to $17 per square foot across its 4,800 square feet ‹confirm›. Add a concrete slab, doors, insulation, and erection labor and a finished, ready-to-use 60×80 often lands near $95,000 to $200,000 ‹confirm›. Treat every figure here as a starting point to confirm against a live quote, never a fixed price, because your local snow and wind loads, the eave height, the finish level, and the steel market the day you order move the number more than the size does.
This page sits under the metal building sizes pillar and gives the full price answer for a 60×80, the question our 60×80 metal building kits guide covers in brief. Below: what the kit price includes, the cost by package level, what drives the number up or down, and the extras that turn a kit price into a finished total. For the per-foot method behind every figure here, see the cross-silo prices pillar. Steel reprices month to month, so each number on this page is a dated 2026 illustrative range, not a quote.
What you get
What a 60×80 kit price covers
The headline price buys the kit, not the finished building, so the first thing to pin down is what a quote includes. A bare 60×80 shell gives you the primary frame, the roof and wall panels, the secondary framing, and the bolts and hardware to raise it. It leaves out the slab, the labor, and the openings unless the quote spells them out.
That is why two 60×80 quotes can sit tens of thousands apart and both be honest. One prices a shell; the other prices a shell plus rollup doors, walk doors, windows, and trim. Read the spec line by line before you compare, and confirm the frame is rated for your local snow and wind loads ‹confirm›. At 60 feet wide the frame choice matters: a clear-span frame carries the roof with no interior posts, while a multi-span drops a column line down the middle for less steel. A cheaper kit on a lighter or multi-span frame is a different building, not a discount.
The ranges
60×80 metal building cost by package level
A 60×80 covers 4,800 square feet, big enough for a truck shop, an indoor arena, a fleet garage, or a mid-size warehouse. Where your number lands depends mostly on how finished you want it. Here is how the levels stack up as a 2026 illustrative range:
| Package level | What it includes | 2026 illustrative range ‹confirm› |
|---|---|---|
| Shell-only kit | Frame, roof, wall panels, hardware | $43,000 – $82,000 ‹confirm› |
| Enclosed kit | Shell plus doors, windows, trim | $58,000 – $105,000 ‹confirm› |
| Installed / turnkey | Kit plus slab, permits, and erection | $95,000 – $200,000 ‹confirm› |
Illustrative 2026 ranges for a 4,800 sq ft 60×80, not fixed quotes. Loads, finish, and the steel market move every line. Confirm against a live quote.
On a per-square-foot basis, a shell pencils out near $9 to $17 ‹confirm›, while a fully installed building lands closer to $20 to $42 ‹confirm›. The rate eases as a building grows, so a 60×80 usually costs less per square foot than a small garage of the same finish. For where this size sits among big footprints, see the large metal building kits guide, and for the common picks across the range, the most popular metal building sizes.
What moves it
What drives a 60×80 price up or down
Two 60×80 buildings can quote tens of thousands apart, and the gap is rarely random. A few spec choices carry most of the swing:
- Eave height. A 14-foot wall is a working baseline; stepping up to 18 or 20 feet for equipment, cranes, or RV clearance adds steel on every column and lifts the shell price by a real margin ‹confirm›.
- Snow and wind loads. A building stamped for heavy snow or coastal wind needs more steel than a low-load region, so the same 60×80 costs more in Buffalo than in Phoenix ‹confirm›.
- Clear span vs multi-span. Holding the full 60-foot width with no interior posts takes the most steel; a multi-span frame trims cost but plants a column line you have to design around.
- Doors, windows, and insulation. Each rollup door, walk door, and window is its own line, and insulating 4,800 square feet can add well over ten thousand dollars ‹confirm›.
- The steel market. Mill coil prices ride tariffs and demand, so the same kit can reprice month to month no matter what you choose.
The loads and the market you cannot argue with; the finish level you control. Right-sizing the spec to what you truly need is the cleanest saving, since you stop paying for height and steel you will not use. If you are still weighing footprints, our how to choose a metal building size guide walks the tradeoffs before you lock a number.
The real total
The costs a 60×80 kit price leaves out
The kit is the biggest line, not the only one. Budget for the finished building, or the kit price will mislead you. The extras that turn a 60×80 shell into a usable building include:
- Foundation. A 4,800 square foot slab can run from the low tens of thousands to well over forty thousand dollars depending on thickness, reinforcement, and site prep ‹confirm›.
- Delivery. Freight on a 60×80 worth of steel depends on distance and routing, and on a load this size it is a real line, rarely free ‹confirm›.
- Permits and engineering. Stamped drawings and local permits add cost, and they are not optional in most jurisdictions ‹confirm›.
- Erection labor. A building this size almost always wants a crew and equipment, which is the gap between a kit price and a turnkey price.
Confirm before you commit
Every figure on this page is a 2026 illustrative range, not a quote. Steel prices move, and your loads, eave height, and finish change the math. Use these numbers to sanity-check a real quote, then confirm the actual price with a supplier for your spec and your zip code. Treating an illustrative range as a fixed price is how budgets blow up.
Price the finished building, not the shell. A 60×80 kit is the headline number, but the slab, the doors, the permits, and the labor decide what you pay.
Whether you erect it yourself or hire a crew swings the total more than almost any other choice, and on a footprint this size the labor line is large. The same 60×80 steel frames shops, arenas, fleet garages, and warehouses, so once you have a budget in mind, the 60×80 metal building kits guide covers the layouts and specs that fit the price, and the metal building sizes pillar puts it next to every other footprint.
Related
Read more
This 60×80 price answer connects to the rest of the sizing and cost picture. Follow these next:
- Metal building sizes (the parent sizing pillar).
- 60×80 metal building kits (the full size-and-spec guide this page deepens).
- Large metal building kits (the wider class of big footprints).
- Clear span vs multi-span widths (the 60-foot frame choice that moves the price).
- How to choose a metal building size (the tradeoffs before you lock a size).
- Metal building kit prices (the cross-silo cost pillar and per-foot method).





