What Is Will-Call?
Will-call is a pickup arrangement used throughout the construction and building materials industry. Instead of having your order shipped or delivered by the supplier, you drive to the supplier’s facility and pick it up yourself. The term “will call” comes from the concept that the buyer “will call” at the facility to collect their goods.
In countertop fabrication, will-call means your fabricated countertops are ready at the factory — cut, edged, inspected, and staged at the loading area — waiting for you to pick them up.
For contractors working within driving distance of a fabricator, will-call is often the preferred method. It is faster (no shipping transit time), cheaper (no delivery charges), and gives you the ability to inspect every piece before it leaves the building.
How Will-Call Works at a Countertop Fabricator
The will-call process is straightforward:
1. Place Your Order
Submit your shop drawings or specifications to the fabricator. Confirm material, dimensions, cutouts, edge profiles, and quantity. Receive an order confirmation with pricing and estimated completion date.
2. Fabrication
The fabricator produces your order according to the confirmed specifications. TFL countertops typically take 2 business days from confirmed order. Solid surface takes approximately 5 business days. The fabricator notifies you when the order is complete and ready for pickup.
3. Schedule Pickup
Contact the fabricator to schedule your pickup time. Most fabricators have specific will-call hours (typically business hours, Monday through Friday). Give at least 24 hours notice so the shop can stage your order at the loading area.
4. Arrive and Inspect
When you arrive, your order is staged — either on the loading dock, in a will-call staging area, or at the shop door. This is your opportunity to inspect every piece before loading:
- Dimensions: Spot-check overall dimensions against your shop drawings
- Cutouts: Verify sink, grommet, and fixture cutout positions and sizes
- Edges: Check edge banding adhesion, profile consistency, and color match
- Surface: Look for scratches, chips, dents, or laminate defects
- Color: Confirm the material color matches your specification
- Quantity: Verify all pieces are present
5. Load and Transport
Load the pieces onto your vehicle with proper padding and securing. The fabricator’s team may assist with loading (depends on the facility), but you are responsible for providing an adequate vehicle and securing the load.
6. Transport to Job Site
Drive the pieces to the installation site. Transport is your responsibility once the pieces leave the fabricator’s facility.
Advantages of Will-Call
Speed
Will-call eliminates shipping transit time. A TFL order fabricated in 2 business days is available for pickup on day 2. Shipping the same order adds 1-5 days of transit depending on distance and carrier. For contractors on tight schedules, this difference matters.
On rush jobs, will-call can be a lifesaver. If a piece is damaged during installation or a change order adds a countertop, the replacement can be fabricated and picked up in 2 days instead of 2 days plus shipping.
Cost Savings
Shipping countertops is not cheap. The pieces are large, heavy, and fragile — they require careful packaging and often LTL (less-than-truckload) freight. Typical shipping costs:
- Local delivery (within 50 miles): $50-$150
- Regional shipping (50-200 miles): $150-$300
- Longer distance LTL freight: $300-$600+
On a single small order, $150 in shipping is a manageable line item. On a project with 10 separate orders over 6 months, $1,500-$3,000 in shipping charges adds up. Will-call eliminates all of it.
Even factoring in the cost of driving to the facility (fuel, labor time, vehicle wear), will-call is almost always cheaper for contractors within a 1-2 hour driving radius.
Quality Inspection Before Leaving the Shop
This is the advantage that experienced contractors value most. When countertops ship, you do not see them until they arrive at the job site — potentially days later. If there is a problem (wrong color, cutout in the wrong position, edge damage), you discover it when you unpack at the job site, and now you are waiting for a replacement to be fabricated and shipped.
With will-call, you inspect at the factory. If a piece is wrong, the fabricator can often fix it on the spot or refabricate quickly because the materials and equipment are right there. A problem that would cost a week of delay with shipping can be resolved in hours with will-call.
Direct Communication with the Fabricator
At the factory, you can talk directly with the shop team. If you have questions about a piece, need clarification on a spec for the next order, or want to discuss an upcoming project, you are standing in the facility with the people who do the work. This face-to-face relationship is valuable, especially for contractors who order frequently.
Reduced Damage Risk
Shipping involves multiple handling points: loading at the factory, transfer to the freight carrier, potentially one or more terminal transfers, delivery truck loading, and final delivery at the site. Each handling point is a damage opportunity.
With will-call, the countertops go from the factory staging area to your vehicle to the job site — two handling points. You control the loading, padding, and driving. Damage rates on will-call pickups are significantly lower than on shipped orders.
Logistics Tips for Will-Call Pickup
Vehicle Requirements
| Order Size | Recommended Vehicle |
|---|---|
| 1-3 pieces up to 8 feet | Standard pickup truck (tailgate down) |
| 4-8 pieces up to 8 feet | Full-size pickup truck or cargo van |
| Pieces 8-10 feet | Full-size truck with 8’ bed or utility trailer |
| Pieces 10-12 feet | Flatbed truck, 12’+ enclosed trailer |
| Large commercial orders | Box truck or flatbed with multiple pallets |
Padding and Protection
Countertop pieces must be padded during transport:
- Moving blankets between stacked pieces (minimum)
- Foam padding on any surface the countertop contacts (truck bed, rack)
- Cardboard corner protectors on exposed edges
- Ratchet straps to secure pieces (never use bungee cords — they stretch)
Laminate faces should face each other (face-to-face stacking) to protect the decorative surface. Never stack pieces face-to-back, as the back surface or substrate can scratch the laminate.
Loading Orientation
- Flat transport (laying pieces horizontal) is preferred for pieces under 8 feet
- A-frame or vertical transport (standing pieces on edge in an A-frame rack) is preferred for longer pieces and large quantities
- Never transport countertops standing upright without support — they will fall, flex, and break
Weather
Countertop materials — especially TFL and HPL on particleboard substrate — are not waterproof. If it is raining, cover the load with a tarp. Water infiltrating the substrate will cause swelling and damage that is not immediately visible but will manifest as bumps and delamination later.
Will-Call Economics
For contractors who order countertops regularly, will-call economics are compelling:
Example: Monthly Ordering Contractor
- 5 orders per month, average $800 per order
- Shipping cost avoided: $150 per order x 5 = $750/month, $9,000/year
- Drive time cost: 2 hours round trip x $50/hour labor x 5 trips = $500/month, $6,000/year
- Net savings: $3,000/year plus the value of same-day inspection and faster turnaround
The net savings are modest in dollar terms, but the speed and quality inspection advantages make will-call the clear winner for nearby contractors.
Break-Even Distance
The break-even point depends on your labor rate and order frequency, but as a general rule:
- Within 30 minutes: Will-call is almost always the right choice
- 30-60 minutes: Will-call is usually the right choice, especially for frequent orders
- 60-90 minutes: Will-call makes sense for large orders or when inspection is critical (healthcare, high-end commercial)
- Over 90 minutes: Shipping is usually more practical unless the order is large enough to justify a dedicated trip
Common Will-Call Mistakes
- Arriving without scheduling: Your order may not be staged, and the loading area may be occupied. Always call ahead.
- Undersized vehicle: A 12-foot countertop does not fit in a 6-foot truck bed. Know your piece dimensions before arrival.
- No padding or tie-downs: Countertops sliding around in an open truck bed will arrive damaged. Bring blankets, padding, and ratchet straps.
- Not inspecting before loading: The whole point of will-call is the inspection opportunity. Take 10 minutes to check every piece. It is much easier to resolve issues at the factory than at the job site.
- Rain transport without cover: Particleboard substrate absorbs water. Cover the load if there is any chance of rain.
Will-Call at Precision Edge
Precision Edge offers will-call pickup at our facility at 3158 Production Drive, Fairfield, Ohio. Orders are staged at our loading area during business hours. TFL orders are ready in 2 business days; solid surface in 5 business days. We welcome inspection of every piece before loading — check dimensions, cutouts, edge quality, and color right at the shop. Our team assists with loading and can advise on transport best practices for your vehicle. Contractors throughout OH, IN, and KY use our will-call service to eliminate shipping costs and delays. If you prefer delivery, we ship throughout the tri-state area as well.
Related Terms
Installation
Commercial countertop installation covers site prep, leveling, fastening, scribing, and inspection. Full process guide for contractors and installers.
Lead Times
Commercial countertop lead times range from 2 days to 8+ weeks. Learn what drives delays and how to keep projects on schedule.
TFL
TFL (Thermally Fused Laminate) is the fastest, most cost-effective commercial countertop material. 2-day fabrication turnaround.
Solid Surface
Solid surface countertops are non-porous, seamless, and repairable — ideal for healthcare, education, and commercial projects. 5-day turnaround.
Field Modification
Field modification means cutting or trimming countertops on the job site. Learn why it causes problems and how precision fabrication eliminates it.
Shop Drawings
Shop drawings detail exact countertop dimensions, cutouts, and edge profiles for fabrication. Essential for commercial project accuracy.
Countertop Pricing
Commercial countertop pricing ranges from $15-150/LF depending on material, edge, and complexity. Contractor cost breakdown inside.