Construction salary guide

Salary Needed for Construction Laborers in Washington

Construction Laborers in Washington: compare salary needs with estimated annual costs. Basic costs are about $46,773, while a 20% cushion is about $56,128.

Updated with BLS OEWS source metadata from May 2025; cost estimates reflect current WatchPennies county-level data.

Salary adequacy in Washington

WatchPennies compares construction laborer salary context with statewide median county costs for a single adult household. The comfort target adds a 20% cushion for savings, emergencies, and month-to-month variation.

Baseline annual costs

$46,773

About $3,898 per month.

Comfort salary target

$56,128

About $4,677 per month.

OEWS median salary

$57,720

Adequacy versus comfort target: 103%.

The available salary benchmark is $1,592 above the WatchPennies comfort target for Washington.

Housing25%
Food9%
Transport30%
Healthcare10%
Other Costs11%
Taxes16%

More Construction Laborers states

Compare salary-needed targets for this occupation across all states.

Washington cost of living

See county rankings, housing, food, healthcare, taxes, and transportation costs.

Compare counties

Model a salary and family type across two counties before moving.

Common questions

What salary is needed for construction laborers in Washington?

WatchPennies estimates baseline annual costs around $46,773 for a single adult household in Washington. A 20% comfort cushion is about $56,128.

Does this page use an official Washington wage benchmark?

Yes. The occupation wage benchmark on this page is imported from BLS OEWS.

What costs are included in the salary-needed estimate?

The estimate includes housing, food, transportation, healthcare, childcare where applicable, other necessities, taxes, and income context from WatchPennies cost data.

Sources

Wage benchmark fields are based on Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (May 2025, last modified 2026-05-15). Cost estimates use WatchPennies county cost data for housing, food, transportation, healthcare, childcare, necessities, taxes, and income context.