Contractor payroll can mean two very different things: paying employees on your crew or paying subcontractors. Mixing those up is one of the biggest payroll risks.
Know whether the person belongs in payroll or vendor/payment records.
Hours, locations, and crews may change from job to job.
Some construction work can involve more complex wage rules.
Workers comp and payroll records often need to line up.
Payroll costs to compare
Provider pricing only makes sense after you know what needs to be handled. Compare the full cost, not just the monthly base fee.
| Cost item | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Crew wages | Hourly or salary pay for employees. |
| Subcontractor payments | Usually handled separately from employee payroll. |
| Workers comp | May be closely tied to payroll and job classification. |
| Job-cost reporting | Some contractors need payroll data by job or project. |
What provider type usually fits?
Contractors should prioritize clean worker classification, job-based payroll records, workers comp coordination, and a provider that understands crews rather than only office payroll.
Common mistakes
- Treating all labor as subcontractor payments.
- Not tracking job-level hours cleanly.
- Ignoring workers comp classification issues.
- Choosing payroll software that cannot support field crews.
Related industry payroll guides
Compare payroll issues across similar employer types.