Construction Labor Cost Tracking Built for Contractors.

Labor is the highest and most complex cost on a construction project. Many contractors focus only on hourly wages, without accounting for the full cost per labor hour. Construction labor costs include more than just pay rates. Payroll taxes, fringe benefits, overhead allocations, and employee reimbursements all contribute to the actual cost of labor. Without insight into these components, project teams are forced to react to overruns rather than working to prevent them. Penta’s labor cost management software provides clear, accurate insight into total labor expenses. By integrating labor tracking, job cost management, and payroll within a single construction ERP, contractors can calculate, monitor, and control labor costs while projects are still in progress.

Common Construction Labor Management Challenges

Many contractors struggle with labor cost management because their systems are not built for construction workflows. This leads to delays, unnecessary administrative effort, and limited cost control across projects. Common challenges include:

Labor hours that are manually entered and tracked into a spreadsheet.
Limited visibility into labor costs until payroll is processed.
Difficulty tracking labor by job, phase, and code for job costing.
Payroll corrections caused by inaccurate or incomplete time data.

Why Choose Penta’s Labor Cost Management Software?

Penta’s labor cost management software integrates labor tracking, job costing, and payroll into one unified system designed specifically for contractors. By consolidating labor data into a single construction ERP, Penta provides a complete and reliable picture of workforce cost performance.

Key capabilities include:

  • Real-Time Labor Tracking by Job and Cost Code

    Labor hours are captured accurately and applied directly to the correct job and cost category.

  • Fully Burdened Cost Allocation

    Penta tracks and applies employer taxes, benefits, and overhead allocations to ensure accurate labor cost reporting.

  • Integrated Payroll

    Labor data flows directly into payroll, eliminating duplicate entry and reducing errors.

  • Job Cost Visibility

    Labor expenses automatically update project budgets, allowing teams to compare estimated and actual performance as the work progresses.

  • Executive-Level Reporting

    Dashboards provide insight into workforce trends, profitability, and project forecasting.

Labor cost management graphic

How to Calculate Labor Cost in Construction

Understanding your construction labor cost requires more than looking at hourly wages. Contractors must calculate the fully burdened labor rate, which represents the total cost of employing a worker for one hour on a job. This calculation provides a clear view of the actual hourly cost of labor, enabling more accurate estimates, forecasts, and profitability analysis.

A fully burdened labor rate typically includes:

Direct Wages and Overtime

Base hourly pay plus overtime premiums.

Employer Payroll Taxes (FICA, FUTA, SUTA)

Federal and state required taxes.

Fringe Benefits

Health insurance and retirement contributions.

Paid Time Off
Benefits

Vacation and holiday pay.

Overhead Allocations

Supervision, training, safety programs, and administrative support.

Employee Reimbursements

Per diem, mileage, and other project-related expenses.

Take Control of Your Construction Labor Cost

Penta eliminates disconnected systems and gives contractors the tools they need to track labor accurately, allocate costs correctly,
and make proactive decisions that protect project margins.

Request a demo to see how Penta’s ERP helps contractors manage the true cost of labor.

Construction Labor Cost FAQs

Construction labor cost represents the total expense of employing workers on a project. This includes direct wages, payroll taxes, benefits, overhead allocations, and reimbursements. To understand the full labor expense, contractors must calculate a fully burdened labor rate rather than relying solely on hourly pay.

To calculate labor cost in construction, divide total annual labor expenses (wages, taxes, benefits, and overhead) by total productive labor hours. This determines the fully burdened labor rate, which reflects the true hourly cost of labor applied to a project.
A fully burdened labor rate reflects the total cost of one hour of labor. It includes direct wages, overtime, employer payroll taxes, insurance, fringe benefits, paid time off, administrative overhead, and reimbursements.
Employees typically cost significantly more than their base wage. In addition to pay, contractors must account for payroll taxes, workers’ compensation, health benefits, retirement contributions, administrative expenses, and indirect overhead. Understanding these components is essential for accurately managing construction labor costs.
Labor cost management software centralizes labor tracking, payroll data, and job cost reporting within a single system. By connecting these functions, contractors gain clearer insight into labor performance, reduce manual calculations, and identify cost overruns earlier, improving financial control and overall project profitability.
Penta provides the data and reporting needed to accurately calculate fully burdened labor rates. By integrating payroll, labor tracking, and job costing, contractors can generate reliable labor cost calculations without relying on spreadsheets.