The PEO Workers' Comp equation shifts at small business scale for three reasons:
- Regulatory thresholds. Small business operators are below the 50-EE ACA employer-mandate threshold; Forms 1094-C/1095-C reporting not yet required. For residential construction specifically — already managing OSHA Construction Standards (29 CFR 1926), prevailing-wage compliance on federal projects (Davis-Bacon Act), certified payroll, EEO-1 reporting for federal contractors — adding the ACA layer compounds the compliance load.
- Multi-state likelihood. Multi-state operations are lower — many small-business operations are single-state, though multi-site expansion is increasingly common. Residential Construction work that crosses state lines triggers additional registrations, tax filings, and (for federal projects) certified-payroll requirements that the right PEO Workers' Comp partner handles automatically.
- PEO tier fit. At small business scale, the right PEO tier is budget tier (Justworks, Gusto) and lower-mainstream (TriNet for tech-forward); construction-focused PEOs (CoAdvantage, Insperity construction practice) for high-mod trades. PEPM economics typically run $95–$135 PEPM for elevated-risk industries; $85–$115 PEPM for low-risk.
Group health insurance buying power (15–30% lower premiums vs solo small-group rates) and workers' comp pool dynamics for high-mod industries — these are the dollar drivers for small business residential construction operators considering PEO Workers' Comp.