What construction laborers earn in Trenton-Princeton
At $34.58 an hour (median), construction laborers in Trenton-Princeton earn about 12% more than the New Jersey median of $30.80 — a higher-wage market that supports higher job pricing.
Wage figures: U.S. BLS Occupational Employment & Wage Statistics (OEWS), latest release. These are published labor-market averages — what construction laborers are paid, not the price you should charge. Your quote is built from your own burdened costs plus overhead and margin.
The construction laborers pay range in Trenton-Princeton — and what it signals for pricing
Wages here span a real range, and that spread is itself a pricing signal:
| Experience level | Hourly wage |
|---|---|
| Entry level (10th percentile) | $18.37/hr |
| Median (50th percentile) | $34.58/hr |
| Experienced (90th percentile) | $51.14/hr |
That's a wide spread — top earners make over 2.8× the entry rate. Experience and specialization command a real premium here, so price toward the upper end and back it with proof of expertise.
BLS counts about 960 construction laborers working in Trenton-Princeton — a read on both your competition and your potential demand.
Percentiles & employment: BLS OEWS, latest release. What a worker is paid is the input to your price, not the price itself.
Turning Trenton-Princeton labor cost into a profitable price
The wage above is the input, not the price. To quote a laborer job and actually keep the margin, you load that wage into a burdened rate, add overhead, then price from the margin you need:
- Burden the wage — taxes, comp, insurance, and non-billable time turn a $34.58 wage into a higher true cost per field hour. See the labor burden guide.
- Recover overhead — every job carries a slice of your fixed costs. See overhead recovery.
- Price from margin, not markup — to keep 30% you mark up ~43%, not 30%. Run your numbers in the markup ↔ margin calculator.
For the full trade-specific method, see how to price construction laborers work.
Trenton-Princeton market context
Pricing doesn't happen in a vacuum — the local cost of living and customer base shape what the market supports:
- Median household income: $96,152 (Census ACS) — a read on what local customers can support.
- Median home value: $390,900 — higher-value homes often mean larger, better-funded projects.
- Population: 381,671 — the size of the local market.
Demographics: U.S. Census ACS 1-year. Cost index: BEA Regional Price Parities. Context only — price from your own costs.
Stop pricing from memory
The Contractor Authority System™ turns this into a repeatable process — burdened labor & overhead, change-order protection, and client-ready proposals. One-time $97.
FAQ
Per BLS OEWS (latest release), the median wage is $34.58 per hour and the mean is $35.14 per hour for this area. That's the labor cost input — a customer-facing job price adds burden, overhead, and margin on top.
Local wages, cost of living, demand, and competition all move the number — in Trenton-Princeton, construction laborers run a median $34.58/hr across roughly 960 workers, with pay from $18.37 to $51.14 an hour entry-to-experienced. That's why a price built from your own burdened costs beats copying a regional average — use the area figure as context, not your quote.