Construction Overhead Calculator - Know Your True Rate in 2026
Enter your real business costs and this construction overhead calculator shows your exact overhead rate, the markup you need on every bid, and how much overhead each project must cover. Built for USA contractors who want to stop leaving money on the table.
Construction Overhead Facts - 2026 USA
Avg Overhead Rate
Of annual revenue for residential and commercial contractors (CFMA 2024)
Typical OH&P Combined
Overhead and profit markup added to direct costs on most USA construction bids
Top Overhead Cost
General liability and workers' comp average $12,000-$60,000/year depending on trade
Net Profit Target
Net margin target for healthy residential contractors; commercial trades often hit 10-20%
Who Uses This Overhead Calculator?
General Contractors
Calculate company-wide overhead rate and apply it correctly to every project bid to protect margins.
Specialty Trades
Electricians, plumbers, HVAC, and concrete contractors who need to track overhead by trade and project type.
Estimators
Build accurate bids by applying the correct overhead rate and profit margin to every line item.
Small Business Owners
Solo contractors and small crews who need a simple way to confirm they're pricing jobs to cover all costs.
🧮 Calculate Your Construction Overhead Rate
Fill in your annual business costs. Every field is optional — enter what you know and the calculator handles the rest.
How the Construction Overhead Calculator Works
Enter Overhead Costs
Input your indirect annual costs - rent, insurance, admin salaries, vehicles, software, and marketing. No guessing required; enter only what you know.
Enter Revenue & Volume
Enter your annual revenue and how many projects or billable hours you complete. This converts your fixed overhead into a rate you can apply to any job.
Set Profit Target
Choose your desired net profit margin. The calculator shows the exact markup percentage you need on direct costs to hit your goal after covering all overhead.
Get Full Breakdown
Receive your overhead rate, overhead per project, overhead per billable hour, required markup, and a cost breakdown chart you can download as a PDF report.
Construction Overhead Costs Explained - 2026 Guide
Every dollar you spend on direct job costs - labor, concrete, lumber, subcontractors - is straightforward. You price it, you buy it, you bill it. Overhead is different. It is the cost of running the business that continues whether you have jobs this week or not. Rent, insurance, your office manager's salary, and your estimating software bill keep coming regardless of how busy your crews are.
Most contractors who struggle with cash flow or thin margins are not bad at their trade. They either do not know their actual overhead number, or they know it but do not apply it to every job. According to CFMA's 2024 Financial Benchmarker, the average overhead rate for small construction firms is 20-25% of revenue. If you are not systematically recovering that in your bids, you are funding your overhead out of what you thought was profit.
Fixed Overhead vs. Variable Overhead
Fixed overhead does not change with project volume: office rent, insurance premiums, and salaried admin staff cost the same every month. Variable overhead moves with activity: vehicle fuel, disposable supplies, and per-project software fees increase when you are busier. Most construction companies have a mix of both. For bidding purposes, use your total overhead figure and apply it as a consistent percentage to your direct costs or revenue.
The Two Most Common Overhead Calculation Methods
| Method | Formula | Best For | Typical Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| % of Revenue | Overhead / Revenue × 100 | Most contractors - simple bidding | 15-25% |
| % of Direct Costs | Overhead / Direct Costs × 100 | Estimators building unit-cost bids | 25-45% |
| Per Billable Hour | Overhead / Billable Hours | T&M contractors, hourly rate shops | $25-$80/hr |
| % of Direct Labor | Overhead / Direct Labor × 100 | Specialty trades - labor-heavy work | 30-60% |
The Markup Formula Most Contractors Get Wrong
A 25% overhead rate does not mean you add 25% to your estimate. If your direct costs are $50,000 and you add 25%, you get $62,500. But that means overhead is $12,500 / $62,500 = 20% of the bid, not 25%. To actually recover 25% overhead, you need to divide by (1 - 0.25), giving you a multiplier of 1.333. The correct markup for 25% overhead is 33.3% on top of direct costs. Add your profit target the same way. Use the contractor markup calculator to confirm your multiplier on every bid.
Overhead Rates by Company Type (2026 USA)
Overhead burdens vary widely by trade. Labor-intensive specialty trades like electrical and plumbing carry higher relative overhead because they have more vehicles, licensing costs, and specialized equipment depreciation. Use these benchmarks as a sanity check against your own numbers, then refine using this calculator with your actual costs.
💡 Pro Tip: Review Overhead Every Quarter
Your overhead rate from 12 months ago is probably wrong today. Insurance renewals, new hires, vehicle additions, and lease changes move your number constantly. A quarterly review - or at minimum an annual one - keeps your bids accurate. Underbidding overhead is one of the top three reasons profitable-looking contractors end the year with nothing in the bank.
How to Reduce Construction Overhead Without Cutting Quality
Increasing project volume is the fastest way to lower your overhead rate because fixed costs get spread across more revenue. Subcontracting non-core work reduces payroll overhead. Reviewing your insurance annually and shopping carriers can cut $3,000-$8,000 per year. Cross-training office staff reduces headcount. Consolidating software tools often uncovers $300-$600/month in duplicate subscriptions. Pair overhead reduction with proper profit margin tracking to see the real impact.
⚠️ Do Not Include Direct Job Costs as Overhead
Labor billed to a specific job, materials purchased for a project, and subcontractor invoices tied to a job are direct costs, not overhead. Mixing them inflates your overhead rate and makes your analysis useless. Keep your overhead list strictly to costs you would pay even if you had zero jobs this month.
Real Construction Overhead Examples - 2026
Small Residential GC - 2 Crews
With a 10% profit target, this contractor needs a 57% markup on direct costs. Using only a 40% markup means losing $89,000 in unrecovered overhead per year.
Electrical Contractor - 8 Techs
At $85/hr billable rate with 1,920 hours per tech, overhead adds $27.78/hr. Failing to include this in service rates means absorbing the loss on every call.
Solo Concrete Contractor
Solo operators often underestimate overhead because they skip their own salary. Including a realistic owner draw reveals the true cost structure and prevents chronic underpricing. Use the concrete pour cost calculator to price individual jobs correctly on top of your overhead recovery.
Construction Overhead Calculator - Frequently Asked Questions
The average overhead rate for construction companies ranges from 10% to 30% of revenue, depending on company size. Small contractors (under $50M/year) typically run 20-25%, mid-size firms run 15-20%, and large companies run 10-15%. Specialty trades like electrical and plumbing often run higher overhead than general contractors due to vehicle fleets and licensing costs.
Construction overhead includes all indirect costs not tied to a specific project: office rent, administrative salaries, general liability and workers' comp insurance, vehicle payments, software subscriptions, marketing, accounting and legal fees, utilities, equipment depreciation, licenses, and dues. Direct job costs like labor, materials, and subcontractors are NOT overhead.
Overhead Rate (%) = (Total Annual Overhead Costs / Total Annual Revenue) x 100. Example: $240,000 overhead / $800,000 revenue = 30% overhead rate. Alternatively, use overhead as a percentage of direct costs: (Overhead / Direct Costs) x 100. This calculator handles both methods and also shows overhead per billable hour and per project.
Overhead covers indirect business costs needed to keep the company running - rent, insurance, admin staff. Profit is what remains after all costs, direct and overhead, are paid. A contractor must cover all overhead before earning any profit. Combined OH&P rates of 20-35% are typical in USA construction bidding. Use the profit margin calculator alongside this tool to model the full picture.
Add your overhead rate to your direct job costs, then add your profit margin on top. Example: $50,000 direct costs + 25% overhead ($12,500) = $62,500 total cost. Add 15% profit ($9,375) = $71,875 bid price. Important: do not just multiply the overhead percentage by direct costs - use the correct markup formula to ensure full recovery. This calculator shows you the exact multiplier needed.
Net profit margins of 5-10% are typical for residential general contractors. Commercial contractors often target 8-15%. Specialty trades can achieve 10-20%. According to CFMA's 2024 Financial Benchmarker, top-quartile contractors achieve net margins above 6%, while the average is closer to 3-4%. Tracking margin by job type is critical - use the construction profit margin calculator to monitor this consistently.
Review your overhead rate at least once per year, ideally every quarter. Recalculate whenever major costs change - a new truck, a lease renewal, adding an office manager, or a significant change in project volume. An outdated overhead rate is one of the top causes of underbidding and lost profit. Run this calculator at the start of each new year and after any major business change.
To cover 25% overhead and 10% profit, you need a markup of approximately 53.8% on direct costs. The correct formula is: Markup = (Overhead % + Profit %) / (1 - Overhead % - Profit %) = (0.25 + 0.10) / (1 - 0.35) = 53.8%. A common mistake is simply adding 35% - that would underprice every job by a significant margin. This calculator outputs the exact markup multiplier you need.
Data Sources and Accuracy
- Overhead benchmarks: CFMA (Construction Financial Management Association) 2024 Financial Benchmarker
- Labor rates: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Occupational Employment Statistics 2026
- Insurance costs: IRMI Construction Insurance Benchmarking Report 2025-2026
- Industry averages: Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) 2025 Financial Survey
- Tax and legal guidance: IRS Publication 535 (Business Expenses), 2026 edition
- Software cost data: Capterra and G2 construction software pricing, March 2026
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Disclaimer: All calculations are estimates for planning purposes. Actual overhead rates depend on your specific business costs, location, trade type, and project mix. Always verify results with your accountant or financial advisor. ConcreteCalculate.com is not responsible for financial decisions made based on these estimates.
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No financial data you enter is stored, collected, or transmitted. All calculations run entirely in your browser. This calculator does not require an account, sign-up, or personal information of any kind. Your cost figures never leave your device.