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πŸ’° Fringe Benefits in Construction

Fringe benefits make up 30–50% of total compensation on prevailing wage and union construction projects. Understanding how fringes work β€” and how to manage them β€” directly impacts your labor costs, tax burden, and compliance risk.

Key Principle

Fringes are not optional β€” they're mandatory. On prevailing wage projects, you must provide the full fringe amount either as cash (added to the hourly wage) or as bona fide benefits (contributions to qualifying plans). The choice affects your costs significantly.


What Are Fringe Benefits?​

In construction, "fringes" refer to employer-paid benefits in addition to the basic hourly wage. They're a core component of prevailing wage rates and union agreements.

Fringe TypeWhat It ProvidesTypical Range
Health & Welfare (H&W)Medical, dental, vision insurance for workers and dependents$8–18/hr
PensionDefined benefit retirement plan$6–15/hr
Annuity / 401(k)Defined contribution retirement account$3–10/hr
Vacation / HolidayPaid time off fund$2–6/hr
Training / JATCApprenticeship and continuing education$0.50–2.00/hr
Industry / PromotionIndustry promotion, market recovery$0.25–1.00/hr
Supplemental duesUnion working dues (deducted from worker but reported)2–6% of gross

Total Fringe Package Examples​

Trade (Example β€” Varies by Area)Base WageTotal FringesTotal Package
Carpenter$52.00$38.50$90.50
Electrician (IBEW)$55.00$42.00$97.00
Laborer (LIUNA)$38.00$28.00$66.00
Operating Engineer$58.00$35.00$93.00
Plumber (UA)$54.00$40.00$94.00

How Fringe Payment Works​

Option 1: Pay to Bona Fide Plans​

Contribute the fringe amounts directly to qualifying benefit plans (trust funds, insurance plans, 401(k) plans):

ComponentWhere the Money Goes
H&WTrust fund or insurance carrier
PensionPension trust fund
AnnuityIndividual worker accounts (trust fund administered)
VacationVacation trust fund (paid out to worker periodically)
TrainingJoint Apprenticeship Training Committee (JATC)

Advantages:

  • Lower payroll taxes β€” Trust fund contributions are NOT subject to FICA (7.65%), FUTA, or SUTA
  • Lower workers' comp premiums β€” Comp is calculated on wages, not fringe contributions
  • Lower GL premiums β€” Same logic as workers' comp
  • Workers receive real benefits (health insurance, retirement)

Option 2: Pay as Cash​

Add the fringe amount to the worker's hourly cash wage:

ComponentAmount
Base wage$52.00
Fringe as cash$38.50
Total cash wage$90.50/hr

Advantages:

  • Simpler β€” no trust fund administration
  • No monthly reporting to multiple funds

Disadvantages:

  • Higher payroll taxes β€” FICA on the full $90.50 vs. $52.00
  • Higher workers' comp β€” Premium on $90.50 vs. $52.00
  • Higher GL β€” Same as workers' comp
  • Workers get no actual benefits (just more taxable income)

Option 3: Combination​

Pay some fringes to plans and the remainder as cash:

ComponentAmountPaid To
Base wage$52.00Worker (cash)
H&W$14.50Trust fund
Pension$11.25Trust fund
Training$1.00JATC fund
Remaining fringes as cash$11.75Worker (cash)
Total compensation$90.50
The Cost Difference Is Significant

On a $52/hr base wage with $38.50 in fringes, the payroll tax difference between paying fringes as cash vs. to plans is roughly:

  • FICA savings: $38.50 Γ— 7.65% = $2.95/hr saved
  • Workers' comp savings (at 15% rate): $38.50 Γ— 15% = $5.78/hr saved
  • GL savings (varies): $38.50 Γ— ~3% = $1.16/hr saved

That's nearly $10/hr per worker in savings by paying fringes to plans instead of as cash. On a crew of 10, that's $100/hr β€” roughly $200,000/year.


Bona Fide Fringe Benefits β€” What Qualifies?​

For prevailing wage purposes, a fringe benefit is "bona fide" if it meets DOL requirements:

Qualifying Benefits​

BenefitQualifies?Notes
Health insurance (medical, dental, vision)YesMust be a real plan with actual coverage
Defined benefit pensionYesMust be funded and legitimate
401(k) / annuity contributionsYesEmployer contributions only (not employee deferrals)
Vacation fundYesMust actually be available to workers
Training fundYesMust provide actual training
Life insuranceYesIf part of a plan
Disability insuranceYesIf part of a plan

Non-Qualifying "Benefits"​

ItemQualifies?Why Not
Workers' compensation insuranceNoIt's a legal requirement, not a "benefit"
FICA/Social Security (employer share)NoLegal requirement
FUTA/SUTA (unemployment tax)NoLegal requirement
General liability insuranceNoBusiness expense, not worker benefit
Tools and equipment providedNoNot a fringe benefit
Profit sharing (discretionary)NoMust be a regular, established plan
Uniforms and PPENoBusiness/safety requirement
Common Mistake

Some contractors try to credit their workers' comp premiums or employer FICA taxes toward the fringe requirement. This is not allowed. These are mandatory costs you'd pay regardless β€” they don't count as bona fide fringes.


Calculating Fringe Obligations​

Step-by-Step Calculation​

Scenario: Worker classified as Carpenter. Prevailing wage total = $90.50 (Base $52.00 + Fringe $38.50). Your company provides:

Your BenefitHourly Credit
Health insurance plan$12.00/hr
401(k) match$4.00/hr
Vacation pay$2.00/hr
Total bona fide fringes provided$18.00/hr

Fringe shortfall (must be paid as cash):

$38.50 (required) - $18.00 (provided) = $20.50/hr cash fringe owed

Total hourly cash wage: $52.00 + $20.50 = $72.50/hr

Annualizing Fringe Credits​

If your benefits aren't calculated hourly, you need to annualize them:

Health insurance example:

  • Annual premium (employer portion): $18,000
  • Expected annual hours: 1,800
  • Hourly credit: $18,000 Γ· 1,800 = $10.00/hr

401(k) match example:

  • 3% match on $52/hr base wage
  • Hourly credit: $52.00 Γ— 3% = $1.56/hr

Hours Used for Annualizing​

MethodHoursWhen to Use
Actual hours workedVariesMost accurate for active employees
Standard 2,080 hours2,080Full-time annual estimate
Standard 1,800 hours1,800Common DOL-accepted estimate (accounts for time off)
Per your plan documentsVariesWhen plan specifies hour thresholds

Trust Fund Reporting​

If you're a union signatory or participate in multi-employer benefit plans:

Monthly Reporting Requirements​

Each trust fund requires a monthly contribution report showing:

FieldDescription
Employer name and IDYour company information
Reporting periodMonth covered
Employee nameEach worker reported individually
SSNSocial security number
ClassificationTrade classification
Hours workedTotal hours for the period
Contribution ratePer-hour rate for this fund
Total contributionHours Γ— rate
Grand totalSum of all employee contributions

Due Dates and Penalties​

ItemTypical Requirement
Report due date15th–20th of the following month
Payment due dateSame as report due date
Late interest10–18% annualized (often from day 1 of delinquency)
Liquidated damages10–20% of the amount owed
Audit frequencyEvery 2–3 years
Audit lookbackUp to 6 years

Trust Fund Audit Process​

  1. Fund sends audit notification (usually 30 days' notice)
  2. You provide payroll records, tax returns, GL, and bank statements
  3. Auditor compares your reported hours to actual payroll records
  4. Discrepancies result in assessments for underpayment
  5. Assessment includes interest + liquidated damages + audit costs
Audit Preparation

Keep your trust fund reporting reconciled monthly. The most common audit finding is unreported hours β€” workers who performed covered work but weren't included in the monthly report. A clean reconciliation between your payroll register and trust fund reports is your best defense.


Fringe Benefits and Overtime​

How fringes interact with overtime varies:

Federal (Davis-Bacon) Overtime Rules​

ComponentStraight TimeOvertime (over 40 hrs/week)
Base wage1Γ— base rate1.5Γ— base rate
FringesFull fringe rateFull fringe rate (NOT 1.5Γ—)

Example: Carpenter, $52.00 base + $38.50 fringe

HoursBase WageFringeTotal
40 hrs ST$52.00 Γ— 40 = $2,080$38.50 Γ— 40 = $1,540$3,620
8 hrs OT$78.00 Γ— 8 = $624$38.50 Γ— 8 = $308$932
Week Total$2,704$1,848$4,552
Fringes Don't Get Overtime Premium

On federal prevailing wage projects, fringes are paid at the straight time rate even for overtime hours. Only the base wage gets the 1.5Γ— multiplier. This is a common error on certified payroll.

State Rules May Differ​

Some states (notably California) require overtime on the total prevailing wage rate, not just the base. Always check your state's rules.


Fringe Benefit Administration Tips​

For Non-Union Contractors on Prevailing Wage​

  • Calculate your existing benefit costs on an hourly basis
  • Compare to the required fringe rate to determine the cash shortfall
  • Consider establishing or enhancing benefit plans to cover more of the fringe obligation
  • Track fringe credits per employee (different employees may have different benefit elections)
  • Document all benefit plan costs with receipts and plan documents

For Union Signatory Contractors​

  • Set up a system for monthly trust fund reporting
  • Reconcile trust fund reports to payroll every month
  • Pay on time β€” the penalties for late payment are severe
  • Keep 6 years of payroll records for audit purposes
  • Track reciprocity for traveling workers
  • Verify contribution rates when the CBA is updated (rates change with each agreement)