Framing Cost Calculator for Connecticut - Free 2026 Cost Estimates

Get accurate framing cost estimates using Connecticut regional pricing data. Our free calculator adjusts for local labor rates and material costs specific to CT.

Connecticut Framing Labor Costs — Verified from BLS OEWS (2025)

$33.02/hrCarpenters — mean hourly wageBLS OEWS 2025
$68,680Carpenters — mean annual wageBLS OEWS 2025
5%above national meanderived from two cited BLS figures

Every figure on this page is a published U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics value. Last verified 2026-06-20.

In Connecticut, carpenters — the core trade for framing work — earn a mean wage of $33.02/hr ($68,680 per year) in the 2025 BLS OEWS release. That is 5% above the national average (national mean $65,630 per year). Connecticut employs about 5,160 carpenters statewide. Related trades that price into a typical framing job include construction laborers ($59,250/yr), first-line supervisors of construction trades ($93,030/yr). Because labor is the largest variable cost on most framing projects, these published state wage levels are the biggest single reason framing costs differ between Connecticut and other states. Every figure here is a mean value published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and is refreshed automatically when BLS releases new OEWS data.

Across the trades that touch a typical framing job in Connecticut, BLS reports mean wages of carpenters at $68,680 per year ($33.02/hr); construction laborers at $59,250 per year ($28.49/hr); first-line supervisors of construction trades at $93,030 per year ($44.73/hr). The spread between first-line supervisors of construction trades ($93,030) and construction laborers ($59,250) reflects differences in skill, certification, and supervisory responsibility on Connecticut job sites, and it is why a detailed, line-item estimate beats a single blended rate when you are budgeting framing work.

Half of Connecticut carpenters earn less than the median of $64,060 per year — below the $68,680 mean, which a smaller number of higher earners pulls upward. For budgeting, the median is often the more realistic figure for routine framing crews. BLS counts roughly 5,160 carpenters, 7,360 construction laborers, 6,980 first-line supervisors of construction trades employed across Connecticut, a measure of how deep the local framing-trade labor pool is and how much competition for crews you can expect when scheduling work.

When you budget a framing job in Connecticut, treat these BLS wage levels as the labor-rate floor: a crew's billed rate adds overhead, insurance, equipment, and margin on top of the $33.02/hr mean wage shown above. Because Connecticut's carpenters wages sit 5% above the national average, a framing quote that comes in far below these published rates is worth a second look — labor that cheap usually signals a different scope, materials, or crew experience. Use the calculator on this page to combine these Connecticut labor rates with your project's material quantities for a complete estimate.

Connecticut construction wages by occupation — U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS), 2025. Retrieved 2026-06-20.
Occupation (SOC)Mean hourlyMean annualMedian annualEmployed in CT
Carpenters 47-2031$33.02/hr$68,680$64,0605,160
Construction Laborers 47-2061$28.49/hr$59,250$58,2907,360
First-Line Supervisors of Construction Trades 47-1011$44.73/hr$93,030$92,2606,980

Wages are statewide means published by BLS and reflect labor cost only — not the total installed cost of a project. Use the calculator below for a full materials-and-labor estimate, and always obtain written bids from licensed Connecticut contractors.

Calculate Your Framing Costs in Connecticut

Our free framing calculator provides detailed estimates tailored to Connecticut pricing. Enter your project dimensions and specifications to get an instant breakdown of materials, labor, and total costs.

Loading calculator…

Sources & Methodology

These figures come from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) program — the official federal wage survey — for the 2025 reference release, the latest available. Wages shown are statewide mean values for Connecticut; actual pay varies by metro area, employer, union status, and experience. CostFlowAI re-checks the BLS public API on a quarterly recheck cadence and stamps each figure with the date it was last verified (2026-06-20). We publish the exact BLS series ID behind every number so any figure on this page can be independently confirmed at the source.

BLS series IDs behind every figure on this page12

Each ID resolves to the live U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics public-API record for that exact figure.

Frequently Asked Questions: Framing in Connecticut

What do framing crews cost in Connecticut in 2026?

Carpenters — the core framing trade — earn a mean wage of $33.02/hr ($68,680 per year) in Connecticut, per 2025 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS data, 5% above the national average. Labor is the largest variable cost on most framing jobs, so this is the single biggest driver of how Connecticut framing pricing compares with other states. Use the free framing calculator on this page for a full materials-and-labor estimate for your specific project.

Do I need a permit for framing work in Connecticut?

Permit requirements for framing work in Connecticut vary by municipality and project scope. Most cities and counties in Connecticut require building permits for structural work and projects exceeding certain cost thresholds. Contact your local Connecticut building department for specific requirements — always verify before starting work.

What factors affect framing costs in Connecticut?

Key factors include local labor rates (carpenters average $33.02/hr in Connecticut per BLS OEWS), material availability and regional pricing, permit and inspection fees, site conditions specific to Connecticut, and project complexity. Wages are the largest variable cost on most framing jobs, which is why Connecticut pricing tracks its published trade-wage levels. Getting multiple written quotes from licensed Connecticut contractors is recommended for the most accurate pricing.

What This Estimate Includes

  • Materials: lumber, studs, plates, headers, fasteners at regional pricing
  • Labor: Carpenters in Connecticut earn a mean wage of $33.02/hr (BLS OEWS 2025)
  • Waste factor: 10% standard waste allowance included

Not included: permits, demolition, site preparation beyond standard grading, inspections, or unforeseen site conditions.

Framing Calculator by State

Get state-specific framing cost estimates for any US state: