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Construction Time Tracking: The Complete Guide for Contractors (2025)

How to Track Crew Hours, Control Labor Costs, and Transform Your Payroll From a Nightmare Into a Competitive Advantage

Last Updated: November 2025 | Reading Time: 40 minutes | 10,000+ words


Table of Contents

Key Industry Data: Construction businesses lose an average of 5-7% of labour costs to inaccurate time tracking (Master Builders, 2025), which on a $400,000 project translates to $8,000-$11,200 in unrecovered wages. Construction software adoption among Australian builders increased 34% year-on-year (Built Simple Industry Report, 2026), with time tracking being the most-requested feature among first-time software adopters.

  1. The Hidden Fortune in Your Timesheets
  2. Why Construction Time Tracking Is Different
  3. The True Cost of Poor Time Tracking
  4. Methods of Time Tracking Compared
  5. Essential Features for Construction Time Tracking
  6. Setting Up a Time Tracking System
  7. Ordinary Hours vs. Overtime: Getting It Right
  8. Job Costing and Labor Allocation
  9. The Weekly Time Tracking Workflow
  10. Mobile Time Tracking for Field Workers
  11. Common Time Tracking Challenges (And Solutions)
  12. Time Tracking and Payroll Integration
  13. Analyzing Your Labor Data
  14. Legal Compliance and Recordkeeping
  15. ROI of Proper Time Tracking
  16. Frequently Asked Questions

1. The Hidden Fortune in Your Timesheets

Here’s a number that should keep you up at night: Labor costs represent 40-60% of most construction project budgets.

On a $500,000 project, that’s $200,000-$300,000 in labor. On $2 million in annual revenue, you’re spending $800,000-$1,200,000 on people.

Now here’s the question: Do you know exactly where that money is going?

Most contractors don’t. They know the total payroll. They know roughly who’s on which job. But they can’t tell you:
– Which projects are eating more labor than estimated
– Which crews are most productive
– Whether overtime is justified or wasted
– What their true labor cost per square foot is
– How much time is lost to non-productive activities

This knowledge gap is costing you a fortune.

The Data on Time Tracking Failure

Studies consistently show that manual time tracking in construction has error rates of 20-40%. That includes:

  • Time theft: Employees overstating hours (intentional or memory-based)
  • Buddy punching: One worker clocking in for another
  • Rounding errors: “About 8 hours” versus actual 7.5
  • Job code mistakes: Hours charged to wrong projects
  • Missing entries: Time worked but never recorded
  • Overtime misclassification: OT recorded as regular time (or vice versa)

On a 10-person crew making $50/hour average:
– 40 hours/week × 10 workers = 400 labor hours
– 25% error rate = 100 hours of inaccurate data
– At $50/hour = $5,000/week in uncertainty
– 50 weeks/year = $250,000 annually you can’t trust

This isn’t theoretical. This is happening in your business right now if you’re using paper timesheets or honor-system reporting.

What Accurate Time Tracking Delivers

Contractors who implement proper time tracking systems report:

Improvement Area Typical Gain
Payroll accuracy 95-99% (from 60-80%)
Job costing accuracy 90%+ (from “guessing”)
Overtime reduction 20-35%
Administrative time 70-80% reduction
Billing accuracy 95%+
Bid accuracy 15-25% improvement
Profit margin 3-5% increase

The bottom line: Proper time tracking isn’t overhead—it’s profit protection.


2. Why Construction Time Tracking Is Different

The Unique Challenges of Construction

Time tracking that works for an office environment fails miserably on construction sites. Here’s why:

Challenge 1: Multiple Job Sites
Your crew might start at the Smith renovation, move to the Johnson job after lunch, and finish the day on the Brown project. How do you track that?

Challenge 2: Varying Workers
Today you have 8 workers. Tomorrow you have 12 (plus a sub). Next week it’s 6. The workforce fluctuates constantly.

Challenge 3: No Fixed Workstation
There’s no office to clock into. Workers might be on a roof, in a crawlspace, or driving between sites. Traditional time clocks don’t work.

Challenge 4: Overtime Complexity
Construction overtime isn’t just “over 40 hours.” It’s:
– Daily overtime (over 8 hours in some states)
– Weekly overtime (over 40 hours)
– Weekend premium
– Holiday premium
– Prevailing wage rates on government jobs
– Different rates for different tasks

Challenge 5: Job Costing Requirements
It’s not enough to know someone worked 8 hours. You need to know they spent 3 hours on framing at Job A, 2 hours on punch list at Job B, and 3 hours on a new project.

Challenge 6: Subcontractor Coordination
Your subs are tracking their own time, but you need visibility into their progress for scheduling and billing purposes.

Challenge 7: Weather and Variable Conditions
Some days get rained out. Some days are short. Some days extend late to meet deadlines. The schedule varies constantly.

What Generic Time Tracking Gets Wrong

Most time tracking software assumes:
– Fixed location (office-based)
– Consistent schedule (9-5)
– Single rate per employee
– Simple overtime (just over 40 hours)
– No job costing needed
– Stable workforce

None of that matches construction reality.

That’s why you need time tracking built for construction—or more specifically, time tracking that understands:
– Job codes and project allocation
– Ordinary vs. overtime separation
– Multiple rate structures
– Weekly planning and reconciliation
– Crew-based management
– Mobile-first field access


3. The True Cost of Poor Time Tracking

Direct Costs

1. Overpayment (Time Theft)

Conservative estimates suggest 5-10% of construction payroll is lost to time theft. On $500,000 annual payroll, that’s $25,000-$50,000.

Common forms:
– Inflated hours (8 reported, 7.5 worked)
– Early arrival/late departure padding
– Extended breaks not deducted
– Buddy punching
– “Working” travel time that’s actually personal

2. Underbilling

If you bill hourly or time-and-materials, inaccurate time tracking means lost revenue:
– Hours worked but not recorded
– Time allocated to wrong job (billed to non-billable)
– Unbilled overtime

Typical underbilling: 3-7% of billable time

3. Job Cost Inaccuracy

When you don’t know true labor costs per project:
– Fixed-price jobs go over budget without warning
– Future estimates repeat the same mistakes
– Profitable and unprofitable work looks the same

4. Overtime Surprises

Unmanaged overtime is budget-destroying:
– 10 workers × 5 hours unexpected OT × $75 OT rate = $3,750/week
– 50 weeks = $187,500 in unplanned overtime annually

Indirect Costs

5. Administrative Burden

Paper timesheet processing consumes significant office time:
– Collecting timesheets (chasing stragglers)
– Deciphering handwriting
– Entering data manually
– Correcting errors
– Reconciling discrepancies
– Preparing payroll exports

Typical administrative cost: 4-8 hours/week for a 20-person company

6. Payroll Errors

Manual data entry produces errors that cause:
– Employee complaints
– Reprocessing costs
– Trust erosion
– Potential legal issues

7. Decision-Making Blindness

Without accurate labor data, you can’t:
– Identify your most profitable project types
– Spot your most efficient crews
– Justify labor rates to clients
– Negotiate accurately with subs
– Plan resource needs

8. Audit and Compliance Risk

Inadequate records create exposure:
– DOL wage-and-hour audits
– Prevailing wage compliance
– Workers’ comp audits
– Tax audits
– Client billing disputes

The Compound Effect

Poor time tracking doesn’t just cost money—it compounds:

Year 1:
– $50,000 in time theft
– $30,000 in underbilling
– $100,000 in overtime overruns
– $20,000 in admin costs
$200,000 total cost

Year 2: Same problems, plus:
– Estimates are wrong (based on bad historical data)
– You win wrong jobs (unprofitable ones)
– You lose good employees (payroll issues)
Costs accelerate

Year 5: Competitors with good systems have:
– 15-20% lower labor costs
– More accurate bids
– Better margins
They’re taking your market share


4. Methods of Time Tracking Compared

Method 1: Paper Timesheets

How it works:
Workers fill out paper forms daily or weekly. Office staff collects and enters data.

Pros:
– No technology required
– Familiar to workers
– No software cost

Cons:
– 20-40% error rate
– Easy to falsify
– Lost/damaged forms
– Illegible handwriting
– No real-time visibility
– Heavy admin burden
– No job costing integration
– No overtime automation

Verdict: Outdated. The cost of errors far exceeds any software investment.

Method 2: Spreadsheets (Excel/Google Sheets)

How it works:
Workers or supervisors enter time into spreadsheets. Formulas calculate totals.

Pros:
– Familiar tool
– Some automation possible
– Low/no direct cost
– Can build custom formats

Cons:
– Manual entry errors
– Formula mistakes
– Version control nightmares
– No mobile optimization
– Limited job costing
– No real-time visibility
– No integration
– Not scalable

Verdict: Marginally better than paper, but still inadequate for serious contractors.

Method 3: Generic Time Tracking Apps

Examples: Clockify, Toggl, Harvest

How it works:
Cloud-based apps for tracking time. Usually timer-based.

Pros:
– Easy to use
– Mobile apps available
– Affordable ($5-15/user/month)
– Basic reporting

Cons:
– Not construction-specific
– No ordinary/overtime differentiation
– No job costing structure
– No crew management
– No integration with construction workflows
– No weekly planning/reconciliation

Verdict: Fine for consultants and agencies, wrong for construction.

Method 4: Payroll System Time Tracking

Examples: Gusto, QuickBooks Payroll, ADP

How it works:
Time tracking built into payroll software.

Pros:
– Direct payroll integration
– Handles overtime calculations
– Tax compliance built in
– Employee self-service

Cons:
– Not construction-specific
– Limited job costing
– No project management integration
– No field-specific features
– No weekly planning

Verdict: Acceptable for simple operations. Insufficient for job costing needs.

Method 5: Construction-Specific Time Tracking

Examples: Built Simple Crew Tracker, Busybusy, ClockShark

How it works:
Purpose-built for construction with job codes, ordinary/overtime, crew management, and integration with project management.

Pros:
– Designed for construction workflows
– Ordinary vs overtime separation
– Job/task code allocation
– Weekly planning and reconciliation
– Mobile-first design
– GPS/location verification
– Integration with PM and estimating
– Crew-based management

Cons:
– Monthly cost
– Learning curve
– Requires smartphone adoption

Verdict: The right choice for professional contractors.

Comparison Summary

Feature Paper Spreadsheet Generic App Payroll Construction-Specific
Accuracy Poor Fair Good Good Excellent
Job costing Manual Manual Limited Limited Built-in
Ordinary/OT Manual Manual Basic Good Excellent
Mobile No Poor Yes Limited Excellent
Real-time No No Yes Limited Yes
Integration No No Limited Payroll only Full PM
Cost $0 $0 $5-15/user Included $10-30/user
Hidden cost Very high High Medium Medium Low

5. Essential Features for Construction Time Tracking

Must-Have Features

1. Job Code / Project Allocation

Workers must be able to assign hours to specific projects. This enables:
– Accurate job costing
– Project profitability analysis
– Client billing accuracy
– Historical data for estimates

What to look for:
– Easy project selection
– Multiple projects per day supported
– Task/phase level tracking (optional)
– Subcontractor allocation

2. Ordinary vs. Overtime Separation

Construction payroll requires clear differentiation:
– Ordinary hours (standard rate)
– Overtime hours (premium rate)
– Different OT rates (1.5x, 2x, weekend, holiday)

What to look for:
– Separate entry fields for ordinary/OT
– Automatic OT calculation rules
– Multiple OT rate support
– Daily vs. weekly OT rules
– State-specific compliance

3. Mobile Access

Your workers aren’t at desks. Time tracking must work on smartphones.

What to look for:
– Native iOS and Android apps
– Offline mode with sync
– Simple interface (big buttons, minimal typing)
– Quick entry (under 60 seconds per day)
– Photo attachment capability
– GPS verification (optional)

4. Weekly Approval Workflow

Time entries need review before payroll.

What to look for:
– Employee submits → Manager reviews → Approved for payroll
– Exception flagging (unusual entries)
– Edit history/audit trail
– Lock-down after approval
– Correction process

5. Reporting Suite

Data without reports is useless.

Essential reports:
– Hours by employee
– Hours by project
– Overtime summary
– Labor cost by job
– Weekly summary
– Payroll export

Should-Have Features

6. Weekly Planning / Forecasting

Plan labor allocation before the week starts. Compare planned vs. actual.

Benefits:
– Better resource allocation
– Early warning on variances
– Budgeted labor visibility
– Crew coordination

7. Rate Management

Handle varying pay rates:
– Per-employee base rates
– Overtime multipliers
– Project-specific rate overrides
– Category-based rates (field vs. PM)

8. GPS Location Verification

Verify workers are where they say they are.

Options:
– Clock-in location capture
– Geofenced job sites
– Location history

Privacy note: Be transparent with employees about location tracking.

9. Photo Documentation

Attach photos to time entries:
– Progress documentation
– Issue evidence
– Verification of presence

10. Integration Capabilities

Connect to your other systems:
– Project management software
– Payroll systems (export)
– Accounting software
– Scheduling tools

Nice-to-Have Features

11. Facial Recognition / Biometric
Prevents buddy punching with biometric verification.

12. Equipment Hour Tracking
Track equipment usage alongside labor.

13. Task-Level Time Tracking
Allocate time not just to projects, but to specific tasks within projects.

14. Break Tracking
Automatic break deductions or manual break logging.

15. Custom Fields
Track additional data (cost codes, departments, equipment used).


6. Setting Up a Time Tracking System

Step 1: Define Your Structure

Before choosing software, define:

Project/Job Codes
– How will projects be identified?
– Consistent naming convention
– Include all active projects
– Archive completed projects

Time Categories
– Ordinary hours
– Overtime (and rates)
– Travel time (billable vs. non-billable)
– Shop time
– Admin time

Rate Structures
– Base rates by employee or role
– Overtime multipliers
– Project-specific rates
– Category adjustments

Step 2: Choose Your Software

Based on the features above, select a platform that matches your needs.

For small crews (1-10 people):
– Simplicity is paramount
– Mobile-first design
– Basic job costing
– Consider: Built Simple, Busybusy

For mid-size operations (10-50 people):
– Full feature set needed
– Integration with PM software
– Advanced reporting
– Consider: Built Simple, ClockShark

For larger operations (50+ people):
– Enterprise integrations
– Multi-location support
– Advanced compliance
– Consider: Specialized enterprise solutions

Step 3: Configure the System

Import/create projects
– Add all active projects
– Set up consistent coding
– Include project managers/supervisors

Set up employees
– Import employee roster
– Assign roles and rates
– Configure permissions
– Set up supervisors

Define rules
– Overtime calculation rules
– Rounding rules (if any)
– Required fields
– Approval workflow

Create reports
– Standard report templates
– Payroll export format
– Management dashboards

Step 4: Train Your Team

For workers:
– Focus on entry simplicity
– Show them WIIFM (What’s In It For Me)
– Hands-on practice with real examples
– Quick reference cards

For supervisors:
– Daily check-in process
– Approval workflows
– Exception handling
– Reporting access

For office staff:
– Full system navigation
– Report generation
– Payroll export process
– Troubleshooting

Step 5: Pilot and Refine

Week 1: Parallel testing
– Run old system and new simultaneously
– Compare results
– Identify issues

Week 2-3: Address issues
– Fix configuration problems
– Additional training where needed
– Process refinement

Week 4: Full cutover
– Stop old system
– Monitor closely
– Support users

Step 6: Ongoing Management

Daily:
– Spot-check entries
– Address issues promptly

Weekly:
– Review and approve timesheets
– Analyze exceptions
– Reconcile planned vs. actual

Monthly:
– Review labor cost reports
– Analyze trends
– Optimize processes


7. Ordinary Hours vs. Overtime: Getting It Right

Why This Matters for Construction

Construction overtime is expensive. At time-and-a-half, a $30/hour worker costs $45/hour in overtime—50% more expensive.

Yet many contractors:
– Don’t track overtime accurately
– Can’t distinguish regular vs. OT hours by project
– Don’t know their true overtime percentage
– Miss overtime on bills/estimates

Understanding Overtime Rules

Federal (FLSA):
– Overtime = hours over 40 in a workweek
– Rate = 1.5x regular rate
– Applies to non-exempt employees

State variations (examples):
– California: Daily OT over 8 hours, double-time over 12
– Alaska: Daily OT over 8 hours
– Colorado: Daily OT over 12 hours
– Many states: Follow federal only

Know your state requirements!

Types of Premium Time

Type Typical Rate When Applied
Standard overtime 1.5x Over 40 hours/week
Daily overtime 1.5x Over 8 hours/day (some states)
Double time 2.0x Over 12 hours/day (CA), 7th consecutive day
Weekend premium 1.5x-2.0x Saturday/Sunday (if applicable)
Holiday premium 1.5x-2.0x Recognized holidays
Shift differential +$1-5/hr Night shifts, undesirable hours

Tracking Ordinary vs. Overtime Correctly

The wrong way:
Workers report total hours. Office calculates overtime retroactively.

Problems:
– Can’t allocate OT to correct jobs
– No daily visibility
– Easy errors
– No planning capability

The right way:
Workers report ordinary AND overtime separately per job, per day.

Example entry:

Monday, November 4
Job: Smith Renovation
Ordinary: 8 hours
Overtime: 2 hours
Category: Building

Job: Johnson Addition
Ordinary: 0 hours
Overtime: 0 hours

This allows:
– Accurate job costing (OT costs hit the right project)
– Daily overtime visibility
– Better resource planning
– Accurate client billing

How Built Simple Handles Ordinary/Overtime

Built Simple’s Crew Tracker was designed specifically for this challenge:

Separate entry fields:
– Ordinary hours field
– Overtime hours field
– Per job, per day

Rate management:
– Employee base rates
– Overtime multipliers (1.5x, 2x, custom)
– Rate overrides by category or project

Automatic calculations:
– Total ordinary hours
– Total overtime hours
– Cost calculations at correct rates
– Weekly summaries

Reconciliation:
– Planned vs. actual comparison
– Overtime flagging
– Variance analysis
– Approval workflow

Overtime Management Best Practices

1. Plan for it
Budget overtime appropriately. Don’t pretend it won’t happen.

2. Approve it
Require supervisor approval for overtime before it’s worked (when possible).

3. Track it real-time
Know who’s approaching 40 hours before they hit OT.

4. Allocate it correctly
OT hours should hit the job that caused them.

5. Analyze it
Is overtime concentrated on certain jobs? Certain workers? Certain days?

6. Control it
If overtime is excessive, investigate root causes:
– Poor scheduling
– Understaffing
– Scope creep
– Inefficiency
– Unrealistic deadlines


8. Job Costing and Labor Allocation

What Is Job Costing?

Job costing allocates all costs (labor, materials, equipment, overhead) to specific projects. This reveals true profitability per job.

Without job costing:
– “We made $200,000 last year”
– No idea which projects were profitable
– Can’t improve future estimates
– Repeat mistakes

With job costing:
– “Project A made $50,000, Project B lost $10,000”
– Know exactly what went wrong
– Improve future estimates
– Stop taking unprofitable work

Labor as the Key Component

Labor is typically 40-60% of project cost. Accurate labor allocation is essential for meaningful job costing.

The allocation process:
1. Worker records hours
2. Worker assigns hours to specific project(s)
3. System calculates labor cost (hours × rate)
4. Labor cost rolls up to project total
5. Compare to budgeted labor
6. Variance analysis reveals issues

Setting Up Job Codes

Naming conventions:
– Consistent format: [Year]-[Number] or [Client]-[Project]
– Searchable and sortable
– Meaningful to workers (not cryptic codes)

Examples:
2024-001 - Smith Kitchen Renovation
2024-002 - Johnson New Build
ADMIN - Non-billable administrative
SHOP - Shop time / prep

Organization tips:
– Group by client or project type
– Archive completed projects
– Limit selection to active projects (avoid clutter)

Task-Level vs. Project-Level Tracking

Project-level tracking:
Hours assigned to the project only.

Pros: Simpler, faster entry
Cons: Less detail

Task-level tracking:
Hours assigned to specific tasks within projects.

Pros: Detailed cost visibility, better for complex projects
Cons: More time-consuming, may be over-engineering for small jobs

Recommendation: For most small builders, project-level tracking provides the right balance. Add task-level for complex commercial projects.

Analyzing Labor Cost Data

Key metrics to track:

Metric Formula Target
Labor cost % Labor Cost / Total Revenue 40-55%
Labor efficiency Budgeted Hours / Actual Hours > 95%
Overtime ratio OT Hours / Total Hours < 10%
Cost per SF Labor Cost / Square Footage Varies
Revenue per labor hour Revenue / Total Hours Maximize

Variance analysis:

When actual labor exceeds budget, investigate:
– Was the estimate wrong?
– Was there scope creep?
– Were there efficiency issues?
– Was there excessive rework?
– Was overtime necessary?

Feed back to estimating:

Your actual labor data should improve future estimates:
– Track hours per task type
– Build database of production rates
– Adjust estimates based on reality


9. The Weekly Time Tracking Workflow

The Best Practice Workflow

Monday Morning: Plan the Week

  1. Review upcoming schedule
  2. Create weekly labor plan
  3. Allocate crews to projects
  4. Set expected hours per job
  5. Communicate assignments to team

Daily: Record and Monitor

  1. Workers enter time at end of day
  2. Supervisors spot-check entries
  3. Address issues same-day
  4. Monitor hours vs. plan

Friday: Reconcile and Approve

  1. All time entered for the week
  2. Supervisor reviews entries
  3. Compare planned vs. actual hours
  4. Investigate significant variances
  5. Request corrections if needed
  6. Approve timesheets for payroll

Monday (Following): Process and Learn

  1. Export to payroll
  2. Run labor cost reports
  3. Analyze trends
  4. Plan improvements

Built Simple’s Weekly Workflow

Built Simple’s Crew Tracker module implements this best-practice workflow:

Planner Module:
– Create weekly labor plans
– Allocate expected hours per job
– Set baseline for comparison

Timesheet Module:
– Daily hour entry (ordinary + overtime)
– Job code selection
– Category assignment
– Notes and descriptions

Reconciliation Module:
– Side-by-side planned vs. actual
– Variance highlighting
– Overtime flagging
– Manager approval
– Lock-down after approval

Reports:
– Payroll export (CSV/Excel)
– Project labor cost
– Employee summary
– Overtime analysis

Daily Best Practices

For workers:
– Enter time the same day (not end of week)
– Be accurate (not approximate)
– Select correct job code
– Distinguish ordinary vs. overtime
– Add notes for unusual situations

For supervisors:
– Check entries daily
– Address errors immediately
– Watch for patterns (consistent late entries, always round numbers)
– Communicate expectations

Weekly Reconciliation Best Practices

What to look for:
– Entries missing for any day/worker
– Hours significantly over or under plan
– Unexpected overtime
– Time charged to wrong job
– Inconsistent patterns

Questions to ask:
– Why did Job A take 20 hours instead of planned 15?
– Why does Worker B always have exactly 8 hours every day?
– Why is there overtime on a job that’s not behind schedule?

Actions to take:
– Correct errors before payroll
– Document explanations for variances
– Adjust future plans based on learning
– Address systematic issues


10. Mobile Time Tracking for Field Workers

Why Mobile Is Essential

Your workers aren’t at desks. They’re:
– On roofs
– In crawlspaces
– Driving between sites
– Working in areas with no computer

If time tracking requires returning to the office or accessing a computer, it won’t happen accurately.

Mobile solves this:
– Entry at end of each day
– On-site while memory is fresh
– No paperwork to collect
– Instant visibility for management

What Makes a Good Mobile Experience

1. Speed
Entry should take under 60 seconds. Workers won’t tolerate slow apps.

2. Simplicity
Minimal taps to complete entry. Clear interface. Big buttons.

3. Offline capability
Job sites often have poor connectivity. App must work offline and sync later.

4. Battery efficiency
App shouldn’t drain phone battery.

5. Field-friendly design
Works with gloves, in bright sunlight, on dirty screens.

The Optimal Mobile Workflow

End of day:
1. Open app (5 seconds)
2. Select date (defaults to today)
3. Select job (from favorites or recent)
4. Enter ordinary hours
5. Enter overtime hours (if any)
6. Add note (optional)
7. Submit

Total time: 30-60 seconds

If multiple jobs in a day:
Repeat steps 3-6 for each job, then submit all together.

Getting Workers to Actually Use It

The change management challenge:
– “I’m not good with technology”
– “This takes too long”
– “I don’t have a smartphone”
– “Why do I need to do this?”

Solutions:

Make it easy:
– Pre-configure their job list
– Set their default location
– Create simple one-page guides
– Offer help during first week

Show the benefit:
– Faster payroll (no waiting for paper processing)
– Fewer paycheck errors
– Less paperwork
– Professional operation

Address objections:
– No smartphone? Company provides basic phone or tablet for crew.
– Not tech-savvy? Show them it’s simpler than texting.
– Takes too long? Time them—it’s usually under a minute.

Hold accountable:
– Make it part of the job
– No entry = follow-up call from supervisor
– Consistent enforcement

GPS and Location Verification

What it does:
Captures location when time is entered or when clocking in/out.

Benefits:
– Verify workers are on-site
– Prevent time theft
– Automatic job site detection (geofencing)
– Travel time documentation

Privacy considerations:
– Be transparent about tracking
– Explain the business purpose
– Track only during work hours
– Follow local laws
– Get consent (may be legally required)

Implementation tip: Start with optional GPS. Use it to verify suspicious patterns rather than monitoring everyone all the time.


11. Common Time Tracking Challenges (And Solutions)

Challenge 1: Workers Don’t Enter Time

Symptoms:
– Missing entries
– Last-minute Friday rushes
– Estimated rather than actual hours

Root causes:
– Inconvenient system
– No consequences
– Don’t see the value
– Forgot

Solutions:
– Make it easier (mobile, simplified)
– Daily reminders (automatic notifications)
– Supervisor check-ins
– Tie to payroll (no entry = delayed check)
– Show them the bigger picture

Challenge 2: Inaccurate Entries

Symptoms:
– Always round numbers (exactly 8 hours every day)
– Estimates instead of actuals
– Job codes don’t match work performed

Root causes:
– Entering days later
– Don’t understand importance
– Intentional falsification

Solutions:
– Require same-day entry
– Spot-check against schedule
– Compare to similar workers/projects
– Use GPS verification
– Address issues immediately

Challenge 3: Time Theft

Symptoms:
– Consistently high hours
– Clock-in before arrival
– Buddy punching
– Inflated hours with no supporting work

Root causes:
– No verification system
– No consequences
– Cultural acceptance

Solutions:
– GPS verification
– Photo clock-in
– Supervisor verification
– Compare hours to productivity
– Clear policy with consequences
– Lead by example

Challenge 4: Job Code Confusion

Symptoms:
– Hours on wrong projects
– “Miscellaneous” or “General” codes overused
– Workers guessing

Root causes:
– Too many codes
– Unclear naming
– Workers don’t know which job they’re on
– Codes not available in the field

Solutions:
– Simplify code structure
– Clear naming conventions
– Limit to active projects
– Pre-assign expected jobs per worker
– Training on importance

Challenge 5: Overtime Out of Control

Symptoms:
– OT every week
– Budget overruns on labor
– Surprised by overtime costs

Root causes:
– Poor planning
– Understaffing
– No real-time visibility
– Unrealistic schedules

Solutions:
– Weekly labor planning
– Real-time OT tracking (alerts at 35 hours)
– Approval required for OT
– Root cause analysis
– Adjust staffing or scheduling

Challenge 6: Resistance to Change

Symptoms:
– “We’ve always done it this way”
– Sabotage of new system
– Complaints about technology

Root causes:
– Fear of the unknown
– Concerns about surveillance
– Genuine difficulty with technology
– Wasn’t involved in decision

Solutions:
– Communicate WHY
– Involve workers in selection
– Address concerns honestly
– Provide training and support
– Patient but persistent enforcement


12. Time Tracking and Payroll Integration

Why Integration Matters

Without integration:
1. Time recorded in tracking system
2. Exported to spreadsheet or report
3. Manually entered into payroll system
4. Errors introduced at each step
5. Double-entry waste

With integration:
1. Time recorded in tracking system
2. Approved
3. Flows directly to payroll
4. Processed automatically
5. Minimal errors

Integration Options

Option 1: Manual Export/Import
Export CSV from time tracking, import to payroll.

Pros: Works with any systems
Cons: Manual process, potential for errors

Option 2: Direct Integration
Systems connected via API—data flows automatically.

Pros: Minimal manual work, real-time sync
Cons: Requires compatible systems, may cost extra

Option 3: Middleware
Tool like Zapier connects systems that don’t have direct integration.

Pros: Connects almost anything
Cons: Additional cost, complexity

Preparing Data for Payroll

Your time data needs to match payroll requirements:

Standard payroll needs:
– Employee identifier
– Pay period dates
– Regular hours
– Overtime hours
– Other pay types (PTO, sick, etc.)
– Gross pay calculations

Export format:
Most payroll systems accept CSV with standard columns.

Example export:

Employee ID, Name, Period Start, Period End, Regular Hrs, OT Hrs, Regular Pay, OT Pay
001, John Smith, 11/04/2024, 11/10/2024, 40.00, 5.00, 1200.00, 225.00
002, Jane Doe, 11/04/2024, 11/10/2024, 38.50, 0.00, 1155.00, 0.00

Common Payroll Integrations

Payroll System Integration Quality Notes
QuickBooks Payroll Good Most construction tools integrate
Gusto Good Modern API, growing adoption
ADP Varies Often requires custom work
Paychex Varies Contact for specifics
Square Payroll Limited Simpler integration options

Built Simple status: Export to standard formats; direct integrations in development.


13. Analyzing Your Labor Data

Key Reports Every Contractor Needs

1. Weekly Hours Summary

Employee Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Total Reg Total OT
John S. 8 8 8 10 6 40 0
Jane D. 8 8 10 10 9 40 5
Mike T. 8 8 8 8 8 40 0

2. Hours by Project

Project Budget Hours Actual Hours Variance % Complete
Smith Reno 200 180 +20 85%
Johnson Build 800 650 +150 75%
Brown Addition 150 175 -25 100%

3. Labor Cost by Project

Project Budget Actual Variance
Smith Reno $10,000 $9,200 +$800
Johnson Build $40,000 $34,500 +$5,500
Brown Addition $7,500 $9,100 -$1,600

4. Overtime Analysis

Week Total Hours Regular OT OT % OT Cost
11/4 425 395 30 7.1% $1,350
11/11 440 385 55 12.5% $2,475
11/18 410 400 10 2.4% $450

Metrics That Matter

Labor Utilization

Utilization = Billable Hours / Total Hours Available
Target: 75-85%

Labor Efficiency

Efficiency = Budgeted Hours / Actual Hours
Target: 95-105%

Cost Per Hour

Loaded Labor Rate = (Wages + Benefits + Taxes + Insurance) / Hours
Typical: $45-75/hour fully loaded

Revenue Per Labor Hour

Revenue/Hour = Project Revenue / Labor Hours
Target: 2-3x your loaded labor rate

Using Data to Improve

Identify profitable vs. unprofitable work:
– Which project types have best labor efficiency?
– Which have worst?
– Adjust pricing or stop taking unprofitable work.

Identify top performers:
– Which crews/workers are most efficient?
– What are they doing differently?
– Can you replicate their methods?

Improve estimates:
– Compare estimated vs. actual hours by task type
– Build database of actual production rates
– Adjust future estimates based on reality

Reduce overtime:
– Which projects generate most OT?
– Which workers consistently have OT?
– Is OT planned or reactive?
– Can scheduling changes reduce OT?


14. Legal Compliance and Recordkeeping

Federal Requirements (FLSA)

The Fair Labor Standards Act requires:
Accurate records of hours worked
Minimum 3-year retention for payroll records
Minimum 2-year retention for time cards/schedules
Proper overtime calculation and payment

Records required:
– Employee name and identifying info
– Time and day of week work begins
– Hours worked each day
– Total hours each workweek
– Basis of pay (hourly rate)
– Regular hourly rate
– Total overtime pay
– Additions/deductions from wages
– Total wages paid
– Date of payment

State Requirements

Many states have additional requirements:
– Daily overtime (California, Alaska, Nevada, Colorado)
– Meal/break documentation
– Longer retention periods
– Additional record requirements

Know your state laws!

Prevailing Wage Compliance

For government contracts:
– Must pay prevailing wage rates
– Certified payroll reporting required
– Detailed hour tracking by classification
– Significant penalties for non-compliance

Audit Protection

Proper time tracking protects you in:

Department of Labor audits:
– Demonstrate compliance
– Show accurate overtime payment
– Prove recordkeeping

Workers’ compensation audits:
– Verify payroll amounts
– Support classification decisions
– Avoid premium adjustments

Tax audits:
– Justify payroll deductions
– Support contractor vs. employee classifications

Client disputes:
– Document hours worked
– Support T&M billing
– Evidence for change order claims

Best Practices for Compliance

  1. Keep records for 4+ years (exceeds minimum requirements)
  2. Use electronic systems with audit trails
  3. Document policies and train employees
  4. Conduct periodic audits of your own data
  5. Consult with HR/legal on state-specific requirements

15. ROI of Proper Time Tracking

Cost of the Solution

Software costs:
– Construction time tracking: $10-30/user/month
– 10-person company: $100-300/month
– Annual: $1,200-3,600

Implementation costs:
– Setup time: 4-8 hours
– Training: 1-2 hours per person
– Total: ~$1,000-2,000 one-time

Total Year 1 Cost: $2,500-5,500

Benefits Calculation

Benefit 1: Reduced Time Theft
– Conservative estimate: 5% of payroll recovered
– On $400,000 payroll: $20,000/year

Benefit 2: Administrative Time Savings
– 4 hours/week saved processing timesheets
– At $35/hour: $7,280/year

Benefit 3: Overtime Reduction
– 20% reduction in overtime through better visibility
– On $50,000 annual OT: $10,000/year

Benefit 4: Job Costing Improvement
– Better estimates from accurate historical data
– Avoiding one $15,000 underestimate: $15,000/year

Benefit 5: Billing Accuracy
– Capturing previously missed billable time
– 2% improvement on $1M billable: $20,000/year

ROI Summary

Category Annual Value
Time theft reduction $20,000
Admin time savings $7,280
Overtime reduction $10,000
Estimate improvement $15,000
Billing accuracy $20,000
Total Benefits $72,280
Total Cost $5,500
Net Benefit $66,780
ROI 1,214%

Even cutting these benefits in half, the ROI exceeds 500%.

Payback Period

Month 1: Implementation and setup
Month 2: First full month of data
Month 3: Benefits start materializing
Month 4: Cost fully recovered

Payback period: 3-4 months


16. Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What’s the best time tracking app for construction?

A: Look for construction-specific features: job costing, ordinary/overtime separation, mobile access, and crew management. Built Simple’s Crew Tracker, Busybusy, and ClockShark are leading options.

Q: How do I get my workers to use a time tracking app?

A: Make it easy, show them the benefits (accurate paychecks), provide training, and consistently enforce the requirement. It typically takes 2-3 weeks to become habit.

Q: Should I track time to the minute or round?

A: Track actual time. Rounding can create legal issues if it consistently favors the employer. Most software handles precise tracking automatically.

Q: How do I handle workers who work on multiple job sites in one day?

A: Use software that allows multiple entries per day with different job codes. Workers record hours at each location separately.

Q: Is GPS tracking legal?

A: Generally yes for company devices during work hours, with proper notice. Laws vary by state. Consult legal counsel and be transparent with employees.

Q: How do I prevent buddy punching?

A: Use photo verification, GPS location, or unique PIN codes. Most modern apps include anti-fraud features.

Q: What’s the difference between billable and non-billable time?

A: Billable time is charged to clients (project work). Non-billable is internal (admin, training, travel). Track both to understand true utilization.

Q: How often should workers enter their time?

A: Daily is best—end of each day while memory is fresh. Weekly entry leads to estimation and errors.

Q: How do I track time for salaried employees?

A: Even if not required for overtime, track for job costing and project management. Many “salaried” construction employees are actually entitled to overtime—check FLSA exemption rules.

Q: What reports should I run weekly?

A: Hours by employee, hours by project, overtime summary, and planned vs. actual comparison. Monthly: labor cost by project, trend analysis.


Conclusion

Time tracking isn’t sexy. It’s not the exciting part of construction. But it might be the most important business system you implement.

The math is undeniable:
– Labor is 40-60% of your costs
– Poor tracking costs 20-40% accuracy
– That’s potentially 8-24% of your labor budget wasted on inaccuracy

Contractors who master time tracking:
– Know exactly where their money goes
– Price jobs accurately based on real data
– Control overtime before it explodes
– Process payroll in minutes, not hours
– Make better business decisions

Contractors who don’t:
– Guess at job costs
– Repeat estimation mistakes
– Get surprised by overtime
– Waste hours on payroll administration
– Fly blind on profitability

The technology exists. The cost is minimal compared to the benefits. The only question is: how long will you wait?


Ready to transform your time tracking? Try Built Simple’s Crew Tracker and see the difference construction-specific time tracking makes.


Sources:
– U.S. Department of Labor – FLSA Recordkeeping Requirements
– Construction Financial Management Association Research
– American Payroll Association Studies
– QuickBooks Small Business Surveys
– Built Simple Product Documentation


Last Updated: November 2025
Word Count: 10,000+
Category: Feature Deep-Dives
Target Keywords: construction time tracking, contractor time tracking app, crew time tracking, construction labor tracking, construction timesheet software

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“Time tracking is the most undervalued tool in a builder’s tech stack. Builders who track time accurately across projects unlock insights into true labour costs, identify inefficient tasks, and build more accurate estimates for future jobs.”

— Daniel Marsh, Head of Construction Technology, Built Simple

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best time tracking app for construction workers in Australia?

Built Simple offers the best construction time tracking for Australian builders with GPS-verified clock-ins, job-level time allocation, and automatic timesheet generation from AU$49/month. ClockShark and Connecteam are alternatives but lack integrated estimating and project management features.

How do I track construction worker hours accurately on site?

The most accurate method is using a mobile time tracking app with GPS verification. Workers clock in on their phones when they arrive at site, allocate hours to specific tasks or cost codes, and clock out when leaving. GPS ensures workers are actually on site, and digital timesheets eliminate manual data entry errors.

Is construction time tracking software worth the cost for small teams?

Yes, even for teams of 3-5 workers. Manual time tracking typically results in 5-7% labour cost leakage through buddy punching, rounded hours, and lost paper timesheets. For a team of 5 workers earning $40/hour, that represents $400-$560 per week in unrecovered costs, far exceeding the cost of time tracking software.

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