PEO for Federal Contractors: Davis-Bacon, SCA, DCAA, and FAR Compliance

Quick Answer

Federal contractors face Davis-Bacon prevailing wages on construction, Service Contract Act wage determinations on services, DCAA-audit-ready accounting for cost-reimbursable contracts, and FAR flow-down clauses that pass primary-contract obligations to the PEO. Only 5–8 PEOs (led by ADP TotalSource, Insperity, CoAdvantage) have real federal-contractor practice with DCAA integration and certified-payroll automation.

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DBA
Davis-Bacon prevailing wages on construction
SCA
Service Contract Act on services contracts
DCAA
Audit requirements for cost-reimbursable
5–8
PEOs with real federal-contractor practice

Davis-Bacon Act Prevailing Wage Compliance

The Davis-Bacon Act (DBA) applies to federal construction projects over $2,000. It requires that workers be paid the prevailing wage in the project location, as determined by the Department of Labor.

Compliance components:

  • Wage determinations — Issued by DOL for each county and trade combination. Subject to revision; the wage determination in effect at the contract's start date typically governs.
  • Fringe benefit accounting — Required as part of the prevailing wage. Can be paid as cash, bona-fide fringe benefits, or a combination. PEO must track and report.
  • Certified payroll (Form WH-347) — Weekly reporting to the contracting agency. Documents wages paid, fringe benefits, hours, work classification.
  • Apprenticeship ratios — DBA requires registered apprentices, with ratios specified per program.
  • Site-of-work rules — Determines when DBA applies (the prime contract site) vs. exclusion (off-site fabrication).

Premium-tier PEOs (CoAdvantage, ADP TotalSource, Insperity) handle Davis-Bacon compliance for construction clients. Budget PEOs typically deflect Davis-Bacon back to the client. Missing certified payroll filings can void the contract.

Service Contract Act Wage Determinations

The Service Contract Act (SCA, also called McNamara-O'Hara Act) applies to federal services contracts over $2,500. Wage determinations specify minimum hourly rates for each labor category in the contract.

Compliance components:

  • Conformance process — When a wage determination doesn't include a needed labor category, the contractor requests "conformance" (DOL adds the category).
  • Health and welfare (H&W) benefits — Minimum dollar amount per hour worked, in addition to wages. Must be paid as cash or bona-fide fringe benefits.
  • Holiday and vacation requirements — SCA specifies minimum holiday and vacation accruals for covered workers.
  • Successor contractor obligations — When a new contractor takes over, they must retain the existing workforce at SCA wage rates.

SCA compliance is operationally distinct from Davis-Bacon. PEOs with construction depth often lack SCA depth (services contracts), and vice versa.

DCAA Audit Requirements for Cost-Reimbursable Contracts

Cost-reimbursable federal contracts (cost-plus-fixed-fee, cost-plus-incentive-fee, time-and-materials) trigger DCAA (Defense Contract Audit Agency) oversight. The contractor must maintain an audit-ready accounting system that can:

  • Segregate direct costs from indirect costs
  • Allocate indirect costs (overhead, G&A) using approved rates
  • Track unallowable costs separately (entertainment, advertising, certain compensation)
  • Produce contract-specific cost reports on demand
  • Support timecard audit trails to verify direct labor charged accurately

PEOs that support federal contractors typically integrate their HRIS with the client's DCAA-compliant cost accounting system. Few do this natively; most operate through documented integration with QuickBooks Online (with DCAA add-ons), Unanet, Deltek Costpoint, or similar government-contracting platforms.

For a federal contractor evaluating PEOs, the DCAA-compatibility question is typically the blocking one. PEOs that don't support DCAA-compatible accounting typically decline the account.

FAR Flow-Down Clauses Under Co-Employment

Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) clauses in your prime contract often flow down to subcontractors — and under co-employment, to your PEO. Key clauses that affect PEO arrangements:

  • FAR 52.222-26 (Equal Opportunity) — Requires affirmative-action plans, EEO-1 filings, and non-discrimination policies.
  • FAR 52.222-35/36 (Veterans/Disability) — Veterans and individuals with disabilities affirmative-action obligations.
  • FAR 52.219-8/9 (Small Business) — Small business subcontracting plan obligations if you're a large business.
  • FAR 52.204-2 (Security Requirements) — Personnel security clearance handling (relevant for classified contracts).
  • FAR 52.225-3 (Buy American Act) — Limits on foreign-sourced workforce or supplies.

The PEO's ability to handle FAR flow-down compliance varies enormously. Specialized federal-contractor PEOs (Engility, CGI Federal Solutions, certain regional players) build their service offerings around FAR compliance. Most general-market PEOs handle it ad-hoc.

Based on placement experience:

  • ADP TotalSource: Largest federal-contractor PEO book. Davis-Bacon compliance, SCA wage determinations, DCAA-system integration, FAR flow-down support across multiple agencies.
  • Insperity: Strong federal-contractor practice, particularly for construction (Davis-Bacon focus). Less DCAA cost-accounting integration.
  • CoAdvantage: Specialized in construction federal contracts (Davis-Bacon, federal infrastructure projects).
  • Paychex Employer Services: Mid-market federal contractors. Handles WH-347 certified payroll automatically.
  • Specialized federal PEOs: A handful of niche federal-focused providers (CGI, smaller govt-services-focused PEOs) for highly classified or DCAA-intensive work.

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Why PEO Metrics for federal contractors

DBA/SCA
Specifically evaluated PEO depth
5–8
PEOs with real federal practice
DCAA
Cost-accounting integration assessed
100%
Free, independent matching
How we calculate these numbers: see methodology

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Chris DeCarolis
Chris DeCarolis
Senior PEO Advisor

A Florida 220 General Lines licensed insurance professional (G038859), Chris DeCarolis brings 18+ years of PEO and group benefits expertise to PEO Metrics as Senior PEO Advisor. His placements span the full operational spectrum — from 10-person agencies to multi-state enterprises with 1,000+ employees. Chris is a graduate of Brown University.

FL 220 License (G038859) 18+ Years Experience Brown University

References & Sources

Government and industry sources referenced throughout this guide:

Federal-contractor PEO — common questions

Does the PEO handle Davis-Bacon certified payroll (Form WH-347)? +
Premium-tier PEOs (ADP TotalSource, Insperity, CoAdvantage) handle certified payroll automatically as part of their construction practice. Budget PEOs typically deflect Davis-Bacon back to the client. Always confirm in writing before signing — missing WH-347 filings can void the contract.
Can a PEO integrate with my DCAA-compatible cost accounting system? +
Some PEOs offer documented integration with QuickBooks (with DCAA add-ons), Unanet, Deltek Costpoint, or similar government-contracting platforms. Few do this natively. For cost-reimbursable federal contractors, DCAA compatibility is typically the blocking question — verify before signing.
How does the PEO handle EEO-1 and affirmative-action plan obligations? +
Federal contractor PEOs typically prepare EEO-1 filings (now Component 1) on behalf of clients, and many offer AAP preparation as a service or through documented partnerships. Standard commercial PEOs handle EEO-1 but often punt AAP work to outside consultants. Verify scope before signing.
Do all PEOs handle Service Contract Act compliance? +
No. SCA is operationally distinct from Davis-Bacon. PEOs with construction depth often lack SCA depth (services contracts) and vice versa. PEOs serving federal services contractors include ADP TotalSource and Paychex Employer Services. Verify specific SCA depth in references.
What FAR clauses typically flow down to the PEO under co-employment? +
Most commonly: FAR 52.222-26 (Equal Opportunity), 52.222-35/36 (Veterans/Disability), 52.219-8 (Small Business Subcontracting), and 52.204-2 (Security Requirements). The PEO must support compliance with each. Standard PEOs handle the first three; specialized federal-contractor PEOs handle security-requirements work for classified contracts.

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