What Is Piece Work Pay?
Piece work pay — also called piece rate pay — is a compensation model where workers earn money based on the amount of work they complete rather than the number of hours they work. Instead of paying $25 per hour, you might pay $30 per square of roofing installed or $5 per linear foot of fence built.
This model has been used in manufacturing for over a century, but it is gaining traction fast in construction, roofing, siding, and other trades where production can be measured in clear, countable units.
How Does Piece Rate Pay Work?
The basic formula is simple:
Pay = Number of Pieces Completed × Rate Per Piece
For example, if a roofer installs 35 squares in a week and the piece rate is $30 per square, their gross pay for the week is $1,050.
You as the contractor set the rate based on the type of work, the difficulty, and the going rate in your market. Rates can vary by:
- Type of work — tear-off vs. install, new construction vs. repair
- Material — architectural shingles vs. metal roofing
- Project — residential vs. commercial
- Crew member — apprentice vs. journeyman
Why Contractors Use Piece Work Pay
1. It Rewards Productivity
Your best workers earn more because they produce more. This naturally motivates your crew to work efficiently without you having to micromanage.
2. Your Labor Costs Are Predictable
When you know your cost per unit of work, you can bid jobs more accurately. If you know it costs you $35 per square in labor to install a roof, you can calculate labor cost for any size job before you even start.
3. Less Supervision Required
When your crew is paid by production, they have a built-in incentive to stay productive. You spend less time watching over shoulders and more time running your business.
4. Faster Payroll
Instead of tracking hours across multiple job sites and calculating overtime, you just count pieces. Multiply by the rate. Done.
Common Concerns About Piece Work Pay
Quality Control
The biggest concern is that workers will rush and cut corners. The solution is simple: inspect the work. If a piece does not meet your standards, it does not count. Most experienced contractors find that piece work quality is just as good — because workers know sloppy work gets rejected and redone.
Legal Compliance
Piece rate pay is legal in all 50 states, but you need to make sure your workers are earning at least minimum wage when their piece rate earnings are divided by hours worked. Keep records of both hours and pieces to stay compliant.
Tracking the Work
This is where most contractors struggle. Paper time cards, text messages, and spreadsheets all work — until they do not. That is why tools like Piece Work Pro exist: to make tracking piece work as easy as clocking in and out.
Getting Started with Piece Work Pay
- Choose your unit of measurement — squares, linear feet, sheets, units, whatever makes sense for your trade
- Set competitive rates — talk to other contractors, look at what the market pays, and set rates that attract good workers
- Track production accurately — use a system that captures pieces at the point of work, not from memory at the end of the week
- Review and adjust — look at your data after a few weeks and adjust rates if needed
Piece work pay is not for every situation, but for contractors who can measure production in clear units, it is one of the most effective ways to control costs, motivate your crew, and simplify your payroll.