The hardest staffing problem for most US construction firms is not finding cost estimators. It is affording them and getting estimates out on time.
Local estimators are expensive, hard to find, and stretched thin. When a qualified estimator is overloaded, bids go out late or do not go out at all. Every missed or rushed estimate is a project you did not win, or worse, a project you won on the wrong numbers and lost margin on.
There is a practical fix that a growing number of firms are already using: hiring dedicated remote cost estimators who handle takeoffs and pricing accurately and on schedule, at a fraction of the cost of a local hire.
The real cost of local estimating staffing
A full-time in-house estimator in the USA carries more than a salary. You are paying for benefits, software, office overhead, and the cost of downtime between bids. Local estimators can run upward of $60 to $80 per hour once everything is counted.
That cost is hard to justify when bid volume is uneven. In a busy month, you need more estimating capacity than one person can deliver. In a slow month, you are paying a full salary for partial work.
What the industry data shows
This is not a problem unique to your firm. It is one of the most documented challenges in US construction right now.
of construction firms report difficulty finding qualified workers to hire
AGC & NCCER 2025 Workforce Survey
of companies say estimating staff is one of the roles they are actively trying to fill — one of the hardest technical positions to fill
AGC & NCCER 2025 Workforce Survey
of firms say worker shortages have directly caused project delays — the single leading cause of delays in the survey
AGC & NCCER 2025
of companies say job applicants don’t have the skills or credentials needed for the job
AGC & NCCER 2025
The average hourly wage in the United States is currently $39.69, approximately 8.9% higher than the private sector average. This is the reason why it is so expensive to retain experienced estimating talent in-house (AGC, 2025). As of 2026, the Associated Builders and Contractors says the industry will need about 349,000 more workers, so this gap is getting bigger instead of smaller.
The takeaway is simple. The estimating bottleneck is structural, and it is getting tighter. Firms that solve their estimating capacity now will outbid those still waiting to fill a local seat.
What remote estimating staffing solves
Dedicated remote estimators remove the two problems at once: cost and capacity.
- You add experienced estimating talent without the overhead of a local hire.
- You scale capacity up during busy bid periods and down when volume drops.
- You get estimates turned around on time, so you stop missing deadlines.
- You maintain high accuracy, which protects your margin on every job you win.
The point is not just cheaper labor. It aligns your estimating capacity to your actual bid volume, so you never lose a project because you cannot get the numbers out in time.
Results firms are seeing
Construction companies using dedicated remote estimators report three consistent outcomes:
savings compared to traditional
local hiring.
more projects won simply by submitting more accurate bids on time.
more projects won simply by submitting more accurate bids on time.
EzyBuilds track record
The model is proven across our own client base, not just in theory.
providing dedicated staffing to construction firms.
projects delivered for clients over that period
lower cost than local hiring, with on-time delivery
Talent is matched from estimator level up to senior estimators, based on each project’s requirements and the firm’s staffing needs.
Roles you can staff remotely
Cost estimating is the starting point — the same model covers the wider technical roles a construction firm needs:
Cost Estimators
BIM Specialists
AEC Experts
AutoCAD / CAD Drafters
Quantity Takeoff Specialists
Construction Support
You build the team around your workload instead of forcing your workload to fit one overloaded in-house hire.
Is remote estimating reliable?
This is the fair question every firm asks. The concern is accuracy and accountability, not location. A dedicated remote estimator works as part of your team, on your software, to your standards, not as a one-off freelancer.
The talent is vetted specifically for construction estimating, so you are not training someone from scratch. You review the output the same way you would review an in-house estimator’s work. The difference is the cost and the speed of getting that capacity in place.
Firms that try it usually start with one or two estimators on live bids, confirm the accuracy on real projects, then scale from there.
What our clients say
“Before EzyBuilds, our estimating backlog forced us to pass on bids we should have won. Within [X weeks], we had a dedicated estimator delivering accurate takeoffs on time, and we increased our bid volume by [X%].”
— Client, US State
“We were paying a premium for a local estimator and still missing deadlines in busy months. EzyBuilds gave us senior estimating support at a fraction of the cost, and we cut our staffing spend by [X%].”
— Client, US State
“Accuracy was my concern going in. After [X projects] with our remote estimator, the numbers are reliable, and the turnaround is faster than what we had in-house.”
— Client, US State
My Point of View — Consultant
This view comes from my own experience after years in this field, from sitting down with clients, working through their challenges, and delivering outcomes. Take it as a practical observation, not a theory.
My team and I have met with many construction companies over the last 15 years, discussed their real problems, brought them on board, and finished more than 1,760 projects. Across almost all of those conversations, the same issue came up first.
The core issue was rarely the work itself. It was estimating. Inaccurate estimates and mispriced bids, usually caused by delays, errors, or simply not having enough skilled estimators, were quietly costing these firms a large share of their potential work. In many cases, firms were losing as much as 60 to 70 percent of the projects they could have competed for, not because they were not capable, but because the numbers were not submitted on time or were not accurate enough to win.
The fix that worked consistently was giving them dedicated remote estimating talent matched to each project, from estimator level up to senior estimators, starting at $13 an hour and scaled to the firm’s actual needs. The result was the same pattern again and again: up to 70 percent lower cost than local hiring, estimates delivered on time, and firms finally able to bid on the volume of work in front of them.
If there is one thing I would tell any construction business owner, it is this. Do not treat estimating as a back-office cost to minimize. It’s the entrance to every project you win. If you have that capacity, bids, margins, and growth will follow.
FAQ
How much does a remote construction estimator cost?
Dedicated remote estimators through EzyBuilds start at $13 per hour, which is up to 70% less than a typical local hire once salary, benefits, and overhead are factored in.
How fast can I add an estimator to my team?
The right talent can be matched and added to your team in as little as 48 hours, depending on your requirements.
What roles can I staff besides estimators?
BIM specialists, AEC experts, AutoCAD and CAD drafters, quantity takeoff specialists, and general construction support professionals.
Will the estimates be accurate?
Estimators are vetted specifically for construction estimating and work to your standards on your software. You review their output the same way you would an in-house estimator, and most firms validate accuracy on a few live bids before scaling.
Ready to lower your estimating costs and win more bids?
We’ll review your bid volume, budget, and staffing needs, and match the right estimating talent to your team.