Best Subcontractor Software for New York Contractors
TLDR
New York has approximately 45,000 specialty trade contractor establishments (NAICS 238). NYC dominates the market and runs its own licensing system separate from the rest of the state. Specialty subs here deal with municipal licensing layers, union labor, high prevailing wage exposure on public work, and one of the most complex compliance environments in the country.
The New York Specialty Trade Market
New York has approximately 45,000 specialty trade contractor establishments under NAICS 238 — electricians, plumbers, HVAC, mechanical, and other specialty subs. New York City alone accounts for roughly 20,000 of those, making it the most concentrated urban specialty trade market in the country.
The market divides sharply between NYC and the rest of the state. Each has different compliance requirements, different union dynamics, and different software needs.
New York City: Volume, Complexity, and Municipal Licensing
The five boroughs are their own world. NYC operates a separate licensing system through the Department of Buildings. Electricians need a NYC DOB Electrician License. Plumbers need an NYC Master Plumber License. HVAC and mechanical contractors need appropriate DOB credentials.
For specialty trade subs doing commercial work in Manhattan, Brooklyn, or Queens, the compliance overhead is significant: NYC DOB permits, prevailing wage certified payroll on public work, and exposure to Scaffold Law liability on any job with elevated work. Knowing the margin on every job before you commit to the price matters more here than anywhere else in the state.
Long Island: Residential and Commercial Mix
Long Island’s specialty trade market serves a dense residential base in Nassau and Suffolk counties alongside commercial development in corridor markets like Melville and Hauppauge. Licensing follows local municipality requirements, though many contractors hold NYC DOB credentials for work that crosses into Queens or Brooklyn.
Upstate: Buffalo, Albany, Rochester
Upstate markets are smaller but active. Buffalo’s construction market has seen renewed activity from manufacturing investment and downtown development. Albany has steady demand from government and institutional projects — state facilities, university buildings, and public infrastructure all carry prevailing wage requirements.
The upstate market runs more non-union than NYC. Job sizes are smaller, margins tighter, and software costs more visible. Tools priced per seat become a real friction point when you’re managing a 15-person shop.
Prevailing Wage and Certified Payroll
New York Labor Law requires prevailing wage payments on public works contracts statewide. The New York Department of Labor publishes prevailing wage schedules by trade and county — rates vary significantly from NYC to upstate markets.
Specialty subs doing any school district work, transit authority projects, or state building work need software that can produce compliant certified payroll records. Manual spreadsheet tracking creates audit exposure and takes hours that come out of someone’s Friday afternoon.
What New York Subs Need from Software
Certified payroll reporting. If any of your revenue comes from public work — school districts, MTA subcontracts, state facilities — you need certified payroll documentation by trade and county.
Change order control. NYC commercial work moves fast and verbal change orders are endemic. Specialty subs who can’t show a signed change order paper trail get crushed on final billing. Job costing software that tracks changes from estimate to invoice protects margin on the back end.
Multi-job visibility. NYC subs routinely run 15-40 active jobs across different boroughs and project types. Knowing which jobs are profitable in real time is the difference between finishing the year up and finishing it wondering what happened.
Why MarginLock Fits New York Subs
We built MarginLock for specialty trade subcontractors in the $1M-$20M range — the segment that’s outgrown QuickBooks but doesn’t need Foundation or Sage 100’s per-seat pricing and implementation overhead.
New York subs pay $20/month (Core), $49/month (Pro), or $99/month (Enterprise) — flat rate, unlimited users, no implementation fees. Your whole team gets access, from estimators to project managers to your office manager, without renegotiating the seat count every time you grow.
It’s available now. The trade-off is direct: job costing, WIP, retainage, and change order tracking at a fraction of what Foundation or Sage 100 costs. No full GL, no payroll, no AP/AR automation yet. If you need an all-in-one accounting platform, Foundation is the conversation. If you need job cost visibility at a price that works for a 10-25 person sub, MarginLock is worth evaluating.
| Metro Area | Establishments |
|---|---|
| New York City | ~20,000 |
| Long Island | ~7,000 |
| Buffalo | ~3,000 |
| Albany | ~2,000 |
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Q&A
What software do specialty trade subcontractors in New York use for job costing?
New York specialty trade subs most commonly use Foundation Software, Sage 100 Contractor, and QuickBooks with Excel supplements. NYC subs dealing with prevailing wage and certified payroll requirements often need software that handles DIR-compliant reporting or have separate payroll systems alongside their job costing tools.
Q&A
What are the job costing software requirements for New York public works contractors?
New York subcontractors on public works must track certified payroll by trade and county under the New York Labor Law prevailing wage schedule. Software that handles certified payroll reporting, retainage management, and change order documentation reduces compliance risk significantly on public school, transit, and government building projects.
Licensing Requirements — New York
New York does not have a statewide general contractor license, but specialty trade licensing is enforced at the local level — and New York City has the strictest system. NYC requires licensed electricians to hold a New York City Electrician License issued by the NYC Department of Buildings (DOB). Licensed master plumbers in NYC are licensed through the NYC DOB and must hold a Master Plumber license. HVAC and mechanical contractors must hold appropriate NYC DOB licenses for their scope. Outside NYC, electrical and plumbing licensing requirements vary by county and municipality. Workers' compensation coverage is mandatory for all employees under the New York Workers' Compensation Law — enforcement is aggressive and penalties for non-compliance are severe. New York also requires contractors doing public work to pay prevailing wages under the Scaffold Law and New York Labor Law.
Seasonal Demand — New York
New York construction follows a hard winter cycle. November through March slows exterior work significantly in upstate markets — Buffalo, Rochester, Albany, and Syracuse all see construction activity drop. Interior MEP work (mechanical, electrical, plumbing) continues through winter. NYC and the five boroughs have milder seasonal variation but are constrained by permitting backlogs, DOB inspection schedules, and the density of scheduling around occupied buildings. Spring and summer see a surge in commercial buildout and renovation work across all markets.
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