A profit and loss statement isn’t just paperwork for your tax preparer. Read correctly, it tells you which jobs to take, which customers to fire, and when to raise prices. Here’s the contractor’s guide to actually using the report.
Most contractors look at their P&L once a year, in March or April, when their tax preparer asks for it. They check the bottom number, write a check to the IRS, and put it away. That’s like running a business with the dashboard taped over.
Income, Cost of Goods Sold (COGS), Expenses. Between sections: Gross Profit = Income − COGS. Net Profit = Gross Profit − Expenses.
If chart of accounts is set up well: Contract Revenue — New Construction, Remodel/Renovation, Service/Repair, plus Reimbursable Expenses Billed. Total Income line is gross revenue. Deceiving because it ignores what jobs actually cost.
The direct cost of delivering the work. Litmus test: if I didn’t have any jobs this month, would I still pay this cost? If no, it’s COGS. If yes (rent, insurance, accounting fees, phone bill), it’s an Expense.
Gross Profit = Income − COGS. What’s left after direct costs. Gross profit pays your overhead, taxes, and take-home.
| Gross profit % | What it means for contractors |
|---|---|
| Under 20% | Likely losing money. Pricing too low or job costs spiraling. |
| 20–30% | Tight. Overhead has to come out of this margin. |
| 30–40% | Solid range for most trades. Room for overhead and real profit. |
| 40–50% | Healthy. Strong pricing or efficient operations. |
| Over 50% | Specialty service with low materials, or COGS is misclassified. Double-check. |
Electrical and HVAC service often runs 50%+. New-construction GC work often runs 15-25%. Compare to your trade norms.
Office rent, insurance, vehicle expenses (if shared), phone, internet, accounting/legal fees, software subscriptions, office supplies, marketing, bank fees, interest, owner salary (if S-Corp).
As a contractor grows, overhead grows — but usually slower than revenue. If revenue doubles and overhead doubles, you have an overhead problem.
Net Profit = Gross Profit − Expenses. Net Profit Percentage healthy ranges: 10–15% for established GCs, 15–25% for specialty trades with lower COGS, 5–10% for high-volume operations.
1. P&L by month (trend view) — see seasonality, trends, anomalies. 2. P&L by job (project view) — see which jobs made money. Most actionable view. 3. P&L year-over-year (comparison view) — see where business is improving and degrading.
Block 30 minutes on the first Monday of every month to review last month’s P&L. Compare to same month last year. Note anything that looks off. This single habit separates contractors who run their businesses from contractors who hope their businesses run themselves.
Foad is a federally licensed Enrolled Agent who writes about tax and bookkeeping for small businesses.