Utility procurement is about more than just the upfront purchase price. Municipalities, utilities, and contractors need to manage budgets while prioritizing safety and ensuring long-term reliability. Imported products may look cheaper at first glance. But over the life of the asset, higher-quality American-made products often cost less because they reduce failures, truck rolls, change orders, and compliance headaches.
That’s why it helps to look beyond the PO total and uncover the hidden costs that come with imported products.
Imports can make the initial proposal look less expensive, but hidden costs often appear once the products are in the ground.
Hidden costs to watch in utility procurement:
Useful context: industry analyses indicate large, ongoing losses tied to aging infrastructure and failures. A 2024 ASCE review cites about 260,000 water main breaks per year across the U.S. and Canada and $2.6 billion in annual repair costs. Independent market research estimates more than $6 billion per year in U.S. utility losses tied to non-revenue water. These conditions magnify the cost of premature product failures.
All of these hidden costs point back to one thing: the real value of reliability.
Reliability cuts lifecycle costs by avoiding repeat work. Every avoided failure saves a truck roll, a dig, surface restoration, and the customer disruption that comes with it.
Field cost example you can adapt:
If a lower-cost import fails at 3.0% within 3 years and a comparable American-made product fails at 0.5%, then for 1,000 units you see 25 additional failures with the import.
If the import saved $15 per unit on the initial PO (1,000 × $15 = $15,000), the higher-reliability product still nets about $5,375 in savings over the early life period before considering customer impacts or reputational cost from service interruptions.
Bingham & Taylor designs for durability. The Bison line uses the thickest-walled ABS plastic in the market, engineered to resist impact and environmental stress. Fewer failures mean fewer interruptions and a lower total cost of ownership.
And it’s not just about avoiding rework, it’s also about staying in compliance.
Compliance isn’t optional anymore, it’s a core requirement in utility procurement. Products that don’t meet AIS and BABA can jeopardize federal funding, require waivers, or even force a project back to square one.
Compliance impacts cost in three ways:
American-made products that exceed AIS and BABA simplify submittals and inspections. They also avoid tariff exposure and international shipping risk. For procurement teams, this reduces uncertainty and protects project timelines.
Beyond compliance, quality products also improve the day-to-day experience for customers and crews.
Read more about AIS and BABA compliance and why it matters in our full blog post.
Absolutely. Reliable products reduce the frequency and duration of service interruptions. That means fewer boil-water advisories, fewer emergency digs, and fewer customer calls.
Impacts that matter to utilities and municipalities:
Distributors also benefit: fewer returns, fewer RMAs, and stronger repeat business.
Better products also align with sustainability goals and that can save money too.
Quality and sustainability now go hand in hand in modern U.S. manufacturing. At Bingham & Taylor, our foundry operations focus on efficiency and waste reduction:
These practices lower operating costs and improve consistency. Domestic manufacturing also shortens lead times and reduces freight risk, which helps utilities align deliveries with construction windows and avoid premium shipping.
Bingham & Taylor has been making utility access solutions in the United States since 1849. We’re also a founding member of both the American Water Works Association (AWWA) and the American Gas Association (AGA). Longstanding suppliers bring proven patterns of quality control, traceability, and reliable support.
Additional safety and performance credentials matter in procurement scoring. Bingham & Taylor reports significant safety improvements in recent years, aligning with utility priorities for contractor and supplier safety performance.
Alongside sustainability, experience and trust also matter when choosing suppliers.
So what’s the real way to measure value? It comes down to total cost of ownership.
When you look at the full picture, total cost of ownership (TCO) matters more than unit price. Think of it as:
TCO = Purchase Price + Installation + Planned Maintenance + Corrective Maintenance + Downtime Impact + Compliance Administration + End-of-Life Disposal
Checklist for bid comparisons:
Illustrative comparison for 1,000 units over an early life period:
These conservative numbers do not include service penalties, traffic control premiums, or lost customer goodwill. In practice, quality products often widen the savings.
When you run the numbers, the savings from quality products quickly add up.
Utility procurement works best when it focuses on lifecycle value, not just initial price. American-made products that meet AIS and BABA, and are built for durability, reduce failures and cut down on administrative headaches. That’s why quality utility products cost less over time.
Selecting quality today lowers long-term cost and strengthens critical infrastructure for the communities you serve.
Still have questions? Here are some quick answers to the ones we hear most often.
Q: What are the hidden costs of imported utility products?
A: Early failures, more truck rolls, longer install times due to dimensional variance, compliance gaps, and logistics volatility. These add labor, delay, and admin costs that wipe out the initial savings.
Q: Why is compliance important in utility procurement?
A: AIS and BABA are prerequisites for many funded projects.Using compliant, American-made products keeps schedules on track and reduces paperwork..
Q: How do American-made products save money over time?
A: They have lower failure rates and better fit and finish, which reduce corrective maintenance and emergency response.
Q: What role does sustainability play in cost savings?
A: Efficient domestic manufacturing lowers energy use and scrap, improving both cost and consistency.. Shorter freight lanes reduce risk and expedite delivery.
Q: How can procurement teams compare options objectively?
A: Use a TCO worksheet that factors in failure rates, truck roll costs, compliance documentation time, and lead time risk, right alongside unit price.