District of Columbia — Construction Workforce
A directional, operational read of the District of Columbia construction labor market — exposure tier, employment scale, wage positioning, and trend orientation. For executive workforce-planning visibility.
Headline read
The District of Columbia construction labor market currently registers limited operational exposure. Employment scale is smaller (below ~100k), with the trend softening over the most recent reporting window. Senior construction compensation in District of Columbia is modestly above national medians.
Market position
Where District of Columbia sits nationally
Construction-relevant context
District of Columbia sits in a low operational tier across the published components of the Workforce Exposure framework: compensation pressure, labor-supply constraint, demand trajectory, and contractor concentration. Federal contract-award activity is folded in as a leading execution-intensity signal. As with all operational reads, the framing is intended for workforce planning and execution-risk visibility — not a deterministic labor forecast.
What this means for workforce planning
- Talent acquisition posture: Conditions remain favorable for measured hiring. Consider this market for opportunistic talent moves or benchmark anchoring.
- Compensation visibility: District of Columbia runs modestly above national medians; expect small upward adjustments on offers vs. benchmark.
- Demand orientation: Employment is softening across the most recent reporting window — a directional signal of near-term hiring intent and contractor backlog pressure.
Methodology & sources
Sources: BLS OEWS, BLS QCEW, U.S. Treasury USAspending. The exposure framework integrates these into a single operational tier per state. Methodology version v2; see the methodology page for component definitions and confidence handling. Briefs are refreshed on the underlying source cadence. Operational, directional read — not a forecast. Tiers, not scores. Ranges, not spot figures.