Ask a contractor what’s slowing their jobs down, and the answer used to be permits, weather, or money. Now it’s people. The Associated General Contractors of America’s 2026 workforce survey puts hard numbers on a problem the industry has felt for years: not enough skilled hands, and not enough coming up behind them.
Ninety-two percent of firms say they’re having trouble filling hourly craft positions. For the first time in the survey’s run, worker shortages rank as the single biggest cause of project delays, ahead of supply-chain snags and financing.
The math behind the craft labor shortage
The trade is aging out faster than it’s hiring in. Nearly 40% of skilled construction workers are now over 45, and in the electrical trades almost one in five is past 55. Apprenticeships help, but they’re slow by design. A journey-level electrician or pipefitter takes five to seven years to train, so even a flood of new entrants today wouldn’t relieve the crunch until the early 2030s.
Associated Builders and Contractors pegs the gap at 349,000 net new workers needed in 2026, climbing to 456,000 in 2027. That’s not a rounding error on a $2 trillion industry. It’s the difference between a project that finishes on time and one that doesn’t, a pattern already visible in April’s soft construction jobs numbers.
Immigration enforcement adds pressure
The AGC survey also found that stepped-up immigration enforcement is touching nearly a third of firms, whether through lost workers, slower hiring, or subcontractors who can’t field a full crew. Construction leans heavily on foreign-born labor in framing, drywall, roofing, and concrete, and there’s no quick domestic substitute for a trade that takes years to learn.
Firms are responding the way you’d expect: raising pay, courting high schoolers, and leaning on the AGC Education and Research Foundation’s scholarships, which reopened for the 2026-27 year with a June 1 deadline. Some are betting on automation and prefab to do more with fewer people on site.
None of it closes the gap this year. The contractors who win in 2026 won’t be the ones with the best bid. They’ll be the ones who can actually staff the work. (AGC News)