The most expensive bookkeeping mistake home service contractors make in 2026 isn't pricing. It isn't overhead. It's how technician compensation gets recorded — and the operational decisions that flow from those records.
The trades are short 110,000 licensed technicians heading into summer. Wages are up 15–25% since 2020. AI data center construction is pulling skilled electricians, HVAC techs, and welders toward higher-paying commercial work, draining the residential talent pool. The shop that wins technicians without killing margin in 2026 isn't the one paying the most. It's the one whose bookkeeping is structured to show what a tech actually costs and what they actually generate — week by week, job by job, line by line.
This post is for HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and other home service contractors trying to hire and retain technicians this summer without watching their gross margin collapse. The fix isn't on the offer sheet. It's in the books.
In most contractor bookkeeping systems, technician compensation lives in one or two general ledger accounts: "Wages" and maybe "Payroll Taxes & Benefits." That's it. Everything else — workers' comp, training time, windshield time, PTO accrual, callback labor — gets buried in overhead or absorbed silently into job costs that nobody actually traces.
The result: most home service contractors don't know what a single technician costs them per hour. Not the wage. The true cost — fully burdened, fully loaded, including the cost of the truck they drive and the supervisor who manages them.
That's a problem in any year. In a year where the cost of a technician is moving 10% in either direction quarter to quarter and the war for talent is reshaping comp expectations, it's a margin-killing problem.
Bookkeeping for HVAC contractors, plumbing contractors, and electrical contractors needs to expose technician cost — not hide it. That's the foundation of every other hiring and comp decision you'll make this summer.
Ask a home service contractor what their service tech costs per hour and you'll usually hear the base wage. Maybe with a multiplier — "we figure about 1.3x for burden."
The real burdened cost is almost always higher than that. For a properly structured contractor bookkeeping system, here's what has to be added to base wage:
When you actually run those numbers, the fully burdened cost of an HVAC, plumbing, or electrical service technician typically lands at 1.5x to 1.8x base wage — not the 1.3x most owners use in their head.
On a $32/hour tech, that's a true cost of $48–$58/hour. Every hour. Bookkeeping that lumps this into "wages plus a fudge factor" hides 15–25% of your real labor cost. Hiring decisions made on the wrong number land you in margin trouble fast.
There's no single comp structure winning across home services right now. There are four — each with different operational and bookkeeping implications. Picking the right one (and tracking it correctly) is the difference between a comp model that scales and one that quietly erodes margin.
Base hourly wage, plus dollar-amount bonuses for hitting defined goals (membership sales, average ticket, callback rate, review generation).
Best for: Smaller shops, less experienced techs, businesses prioritizing predictability over performance leverage.
Bookkeeping requirement: Spiff payments tracked as separate line items, attributed to the activity that generated them, reported weekly. A "$50 membership sale" spiff should show up in your books tied to the actual membership it created, not lumped into general bonuses.
Base hourly wage plus a percentage of revenue (typically 3–8%) on work the tech personally sold (replacements, add-on services, accessories).
Best for: Mid-sized shops with strong service-to-replacement conversion expectations. Aligns tech incentive with shop profitability when used correctly.
Bookkeeping requirement: Job-level revenue attribution to the selling tech. Your books need to be able to produce, weekly, a report of revenue sold by tech and commission earned by tech. Without that, the tech doesn't trust the math and you can't defend the cost.
Tech is paid a percentage of billable revenue generated (typically 15–25%), often with a guaranteed weekly minimum.
Best for: High-performing service techs in mature shops. Strong leverage model, but only works with strong pricing discipline and high ticket averages.
Bookkeeping requirement: This is the most accounting-intensive structure. Every invoice has to be coded to the producing tech. Pay calculations run weekly off invoiced revenue. Books must clearly separate billable revenue, callback revenue, and warranty revenue (callbacks and warranty typically don't generate tech pay).
Annual salary for senior or lead technicians, plus quarterly or annual performance bonuses tied to team metrics (revenue per tech, callback rate, training delivered).
Best for: Foreman, lead techs, or team leads. Useful for retention of senior talent and aligning leadership incentives with team performance.
Bookkeeping requirement: Salary cost allocated to the appropriate cost center (overhead vs. direct labor depending on the tech's role). Bonus accruals booked monthly so they don't shock the P&L in Q4.
Whichever structure you use, your contractor bookkeeping has to surface five KPIs per technician, weekly:
Total invoiced revenue attributable to each tech, divided by hours worked. This is the most important single number in your books for hiring and retention decisions.
Industry benchmarks for 2026:
A tech producing $300/hour costs roughly $55/hour fully burdened. That's a 5.5x ratio — strong. A tech producing $180/hour at the same cost is barely covering their loaded cost before overhead and profit. That's not a comp problem; that's a productivity problem.
Average invoiced amount per service call. Variation by tech often reveals more than the average itself. Two techs running the same call types with significantly different average tickets points to either pricing discipline issues or training gaps — both of which are fixable.
Percentage of jobs that require a return visit. Industry benchmark for a well-run service shop: under 5%. A 12% callback rate on a $300K/year revenue tech is costing you $30–40K in absorbed labor and material that should never have been spent.
If your shop sells maintenance plans, the attach rate by tech is one of the highest-value KPIs in the books — because every membership sold is a customer-lifetime-value annuity. Top performers will sit at 25–40% attach rate. Average performers at 10–15%. The gap is six-figure annual revenue difference per tech.
The percentage of paid hours that turn into billable work. Industry benchmark: 65–80% for service techs depending on geography and call volume. Below 60% is a dispatch and routing problem, not a comp problem.
When you can pull these five KPIs out of your bookkeeping system on demand, the comp conversation changes completely. Every hiring or pay-raise decision can be evaluated against the math.
The framework:
Step 1: Calculate the fully burdened cost of the role. Use the 1.5–1.8x multiplier honestly. Don't lowball.
Step 2: Project the revenue per technician this hire is likely to produce based on their experience level. New techs run 60–70% of senior tech productivity for the first 6–9 months. Bake the ramp into the math.
Step 3: Calculate gross margin contribution. Revenue per tech minus burdened cost minus allocated material and direct overhead. If a service tech is going to gross less than $80K in margin contribution after burdened cost and overhead, the hire doesn't pay back at current comp structures.
Step 4: Layer in retention math. A tech you hire and lose in 8 months costs you the recruiting, ramp, and replacement cycle — typically $25–$50K in absorbed cost. Comp that's $4K/year below market and saves money on paper costs you $50K when the tech leaves.
Step 5: Make the offer with the books behind you, not in spite of them.
Here's the part nobody wants to say out loud: HVAC, plumbing, and electrical technicians know what they're worth in 2026. They have offers. They have options. AI data centers are paying union scale plus per-diem. Commercial new construction is paying up to staff projects with deadlines.
The shop that wins the next 12 months isn't necessarily the highest-paying one. It's the shop whose bookkeeping is rigorous enough that the right tech sees the offer letter and understands exactly how the comp structure rewards their work. Tribes-on-trucks compensation built on gut feel doesn't compete with comp structures backed by real productivity data.
A great tech sitting across from you has, in their head, a question: "If I hit the numbers, will the math actually pay me what I'm worth?"
The shop with the books to answer that question wins.
The reason most contractor bookkeeping setups don't produce these reports is that they're built by generalist accountants who don't understand the operational rhythm of an HVAC, plumbing, or electrical service business. Wages get one line. Job costing is theoretical. Tech-level revenue attribution doesn't exist. The chart of accounts is built for tax filing, not management decisions.
At PIVOTL, our bookkeeping and fractional accounting services are built specifically for HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and other home service contractors. We structure the books so that tech-level productivity is visible in real time, comp decisions are math-backed, and the hiring conversation in May 2026 is informed by the actual economics of your business. We're not accountants who learned the trades. We're home service operators who learned accounting.
Summer 2026 will sort home service contractors into two groups: the ones who knew exactly what each tech cost and produced, and the ones who hired on gut and hoped the margin would hold.
The bookkeeping work that separates those two groups is the same work that pays back tenfold over the next decade. Get the comp math right, get the books to surface it weekly, and the hiring conversation stops being scary. It becomes one of the most strategic conversations you have all year.
Clarity creates confidence. In a talent market this tight, clarity is also how you keep the right people on the truck.
Want help building tech-level bookkeeping that powers smarter comp decisions? Schedule a 30-minute contractor bookkeeping consultation with PIVOTL — we'll show you what's missing in your current setup and what tech-level reporting looks like when it's structured right.
PIVOTL provides bookkeeping and fractional accounting services built specifically for HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and other home service contractors. We translate the books into operational decisions — so you can run your business with the same clarity you bring to a job site. We're not accountants who learned the trades. We're home service operators who learned accounting.
How should HVAC contractors structure technician compensation in 2026? The right structure depends on shop size and maturity, but the four working models are: (1) hourly + performance spiff, (2) hourly + commission on sold work, (3) performance pay/pay-per-bill, and (4) salary + bonus for lead techs. Each requires specific bookkeeping infrastructure — particularly job-level revenue attribution to the producing tech.
What is the burdened hourly cost of a service technician? Fully burdened cost typically runs 1.5–1.8x base wage when properly calculated. That includes payroll taxes, workers' comp, health insurance, retirement match, PTO accrual, training time, windshield time, uniforms, and allocated vehicle costs. Most contractors using a 1.3x rule of thumb are underestimating real labor cost by 15–25%.
What KPIs should a contractor bookkeeping system track per technician? Five KPIs are essential: revenue per technician per hour, average ticket by tech, callback rate, membership/service plan attach rate, and hours billed vs. hours paid. Together these give an owner enough information to make hiring, comp, and training decisions on math instead of gut.
Can a generalist bookkeeper produce these reports for an HVAC or plumbing contractor? Rarely. Tech-level productivity reporting requires a chart of accounts and job costing structure specifically built for service contracting. Most generalist bookkeeping setups don't have it. That's why specialized contractor bookkeeping services — like PIVOTL's — exist for HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and other home service businesses.