Fringe benefits under Davis-Bacon are the portion of the prevailing wage that must be paid either through bona fide benefit plans or as additional cash wages. Contractors must meet both the base wage and fringe amount listed in the wage determination for every hour worked.
Fringe benefits under Davis-Bacon directly impact labor cost accuracy, certified payroll compliance, and audit exposure for construction companies. When fringes are miscalculated or misapplied, contractors risk underpayments, back wage assessments, and delayed project closeouts.
For accountants and payroll teams, fringe benefits are not optional add-ons. They are a required part of prevailing wage compliance that must be calculated, documented, and reported correctly every pay period. Understanding how fringe benefits work under Davis-Bacon helps teams control costs, avoid compliance gaps, and maintain clean certified payroll records.
This guide breaks down fringe benefits in plain terms and provides practical steps accounting teams can use immediately.
Fringe benefits are the portion of a prevailing wage rate allocated to benefits rather than cash wages. Under Davis-Bacon, employers must satisfy both the base wage and the fringe portion listed on the applicable wage determination.
Prevailing wage determination is the official wage rate issued by the U.S. Department of Labor that specifies required base wages and fringe amounts by classification and location.
Bona fide fringe benefits include employer-paid benefits such as health insurance, retirement contributions, and certain training programs that meet DOL requirements.
Cash in lieu of fringes means paying the fringe portion directly to the employee as taxable wages when no qualifying benefit plan is used.
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Start by reviewing the wage determination for the project. Each classification lists a base wage and a fringe amount. Both must be satisfied for every hour of covered work.
Fringe benefits can be satisfied in two ways:
Employer contributions to bona fide benefit plans
Cash payments added to the employee’s hourly wage
Many contractors use a combination of both, but total compensation must meet or exceed the required fringe rate.
Fringe benefits must be calculated based on actual hours worked on the prevailing wage project. Misallocating fringes across multiple jobs or pay periods is a common compliance error.
Accounting teams should verify that fringe calculations align with time records and job costing data.
Fringe benefits must be paid or contributed on a timely basis. Delayed benefit deposits or retroactive corrections can trigger audit findings.
Maintain documentation that shows:
Certified payroll reports must reflect how fringe requirements were met. Supporting records should be retained in case of review by the Department of Labor or state labor agencies.
Accountants can reduce risk and improve cost control by:
These steps help prevent underpayments and protect margins on public works projects.
Many compliance issues stem from avoidable errors, including:
These mistakes often surface during audits, when corrections are costly and time-consuming.
Accounting and payroll teams should review how fringe benefits are calculated and reported across current projects. If gaps exist, address them before certified payroll submissions or audits occur.
Many construction teams use platforms like eBacon to centralize fringe tracking, wage calculations, and certified payroll reporting, which helps reduce manual errors and improve compliance visibility.
See how eBacon simplifies fringe benefits under Davis-Bacon. Book a quick demo.
Fringe benefits represent the benefit portion of the prevailing wage rate and must be satisfied through bona fide benefits or cash payments.
Yes. If no qualifying benefit plan is used, the fringe amount can be paid directly to the employee as taxable wages.
Yes. Fringes must be applied to all hours of covered work on the prevailing wage project.
Underpayments can result in back wage assessments, penalties, and withheld project payments.
The material presented here is educational in nature and is not intended to be, nor should be relied upon, as legal or financial advice. Please consult with an attorney or financial professional for advice.