📋 Certified Payroll Guide
Complete guide to prevailing wage and certified payroll. Davis-Bacon, state requirements, and WH-347 forms.
What is Certified Payroll?
Certified payroll is a weekly report submitted on public works projects showing:
- Each worker's name and classification
- Hours worked each day
- Hourly rate paid
- Fringe benefits
- Gross wages
- Deductions and net pay
When is it Required?
Federal Projects (Davis-Bacon)
- Any federally funded construction over $2,000
- Must pay federal prevailing wages
- Weekly WH-347 forms required
State Projects (California)
- State-funded projects over $1,000
- Must pay state prevailing wages
- DIR registration required
- eCPR electronic filing
Key Requirements
Prevailing Wage Rates
| Component | What It Includes |
|---|---|
| Basic hourly rate | Cash wages paid to worker |
| Fringe benefits | Health, pension, vacation, training |
| Total hourly rate | Basic + Fringe = Prevailing wage |
Common Classifications
- Carpenter
- Electrician
- Laborer (various groups)
- Operating Engineer
- Plumber
- Sheet Metal Worker
Misclassification Penalties
Classifying workers incorrectly to pay lower rates can result in back-pay penalties of 2-3x the underpayment, plus civil penalties up to $200 per day per worker.
The WH-347 Form
Required Fields
- Contractor name and address
- Project name and location
- Week ending date
- Worker information (name, address, last 4 SSN)
- Work classification
- Hours worked (daily breakdown)
- Rate of pay (basic + fringe)
- Gross wages
- Deductions
- Net wages
Statement of Compliance
The certification statement must be signed by an authorized company representative stating:
- Wages paid are accurate
- Classifications are correct
- No kickbacks occurred
- Apprentices are registered (if applicable)
California DIR Requirements
eCPR Filing
California requires electronic certified payroll reporting:
- Register with DIR as a public works contractor
- Submit CPRs within 30 days of each pay period
- Upload to the DIR eCPR system
Apprenticeship Requirements
- Minimum ratio of apprentices required
- Must use registered apprentices
- Apprentices must be paid apprentice prevailing wage
Common Audit Findings
- Wrong classification — Workers doing multiple tasks
- Missing fringe payments — Not making contributions
- Incomplete records — Missing daily time records
- Late filing — Not submitting within 30 days
- Split checks — Paying part cash to avoid taxes
Best Practices
- Use software — Manual tracking is error-prone
- Daily time records — Don't recreate from memory
- Verify rates monthly — Prevailing wages change
- Train your foremen — They classify workers daily
- Audit yourself — Before the government does
Related Resources
- BLDR Time — Prevailing wage time tracking software