New York prevailing wage
New York prevailing wage vs Davis-Bacon
New York has a state prevailing wage law with no minimum dollar threshold. See how it interacts with federal Davis-Bacon and which rate governs when both apply.
Does New York have a prevailing wage law?
Yes. New York has a state prevailing wage law (a "Little Davis-Bacon" law) covering state and local public works, with no minimum dollar threshold.
Coverage threshold
New York has no minimum dollar threshold — prevailing wage applies to covered public work regardless of contract value.
Which governs when Davis-Bacon and New York prevailing wage both apply
Neither law cancels the other. On a project covered by both federal Davis-Bacon (through federal funding or a Davis-Bacon Related Act) and the state prevailing wage law, the contractor must pay, for each labor classification, the higher of the federal Davis-Bacon rate and the state prevailing wage rate. Track both schedules and price the higher total hourly obligation.
Guardrail
This page is an estimator aid, not an official determination. Confirm the wage determination incorporated into the contract and any state schedule named by the owner before submitting a bid.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Does New York have a prevailing wage law in 2026?
Yes. New York maintains a state prevailing wage law for public works, with no minimum dollar threshold.
What is the New York prevailing wage coverage threshold?
New York sets no minimum dollar threshold — the law applies to covered public works regardless of contract value. New York has no minimum dollar threshold — prevailing wage applies to covered public work regardless of contract value.
Does Davis-Bacon or New York prevailing wage govern when both apply?
Neither law cancels the other. On a project covered by both federal Davis-Bacon (through federal funding or a Davis-Bacon Related Act) and the state prevailing wage law, the contractor must pay, for each labor classification, the higher of the federal Davis-Bacon rate and the state prevailing wage rate. Track both schedules and price the higher total hourly obligation.
Official sources