Accounting for Construction Companies: 2026 Tax and Finance Strategies
Christopher Cowan, CPA, CCIFP, Wiss & Company –
March 9, 2026
The construction industry is undergoing a financial transformation. For construction CFOs and CPAs in the New Jersey/New York City metro area, the most significant shift is occurring in the back office where tax strategy, accounting policy and financial reporting standards are evolving at unprecedented speed. Accounting for construction companies now requires convergence of new legislation, technology adoption and data-driven stakeholder expectations.
In 2026, construction finance teams face the following seven major priorities:
- One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) tax changes
- Pass-through entity tax (PTET) multi-state complexity
- Artificial intelligence (AI) transforming accounting functions
- Cybersecurity governance
- Heightened Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) 606 scrutiny
- Material volatility management
- Real-time stakeholder reporting
Each represents both opportunity and operational challenge for contractors operating throughout New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Connecticut.
How the OBBA Changes Accounting for Construction Companies
The OBBBA has created structural tax changes that permanently impact construction planning. With 100% bonus depreciation restored, contractors can fully expense major equipment and technology investments, turning capital budgeting into a multi-year strategic exercise.
CFOs report that construction companies in the tri-state area must now integrate tax optimization directly into project bidding, equipment replacement cycles and technology investment decisions. Data shows that contractors who model OBBBA scenarios at the project level achieve 12% to 18% better after-tax returns than those treating bonus depreciation as a year-end adjustment.
Combined with OBBBA incentives, contractors now have tools to offset material volatility. Tariffs on steel, aluminum and electrical components continue to influence pricing. Accountants are refining escalation clauses, evaluating early-buy decisions and ensuring fluctuations are captured appropriately in job estimates and ASC 606 judgments.
Year-Round PTET Planning for Multi-State Contractors
PTETs remain highly effective for mitigating the federal state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap. For contractors operating across state lines, short-term jobsite presence may trigger unexpected nexus; multi-state payroll creates withholding complexity; and ASC 606 revenue recognition can distort income apportionment if not monitored carefully.
Business impact: Contractors with projects spanning multiple states report 15% to 22% annual tax savings when PTET planning is integrated with project scheduling. A mechanical contractor based in Newark might simultaneously maintain jobsites in Manhattan, Stamford and Philadelphia — each triggering different withholding requirements and PTET optimization opportunities.
ASC 606 and WIP Transparency Under Scrutiny
Sureties, lenders and auditors want clearer insight into cost-to-complete assumptions, contract cost allocations and alignment between internal work in progress (WIP) and Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) projections. AI-enhanced analytics strengthen revenue recognition by identifying fade patterns early and reconciling field performance with financial outcomes. Contractors who demonstrate disciplined WIP practices enjoy stronger bonding confidence and lender trust.
AI-Powered Accounting Transforms Finance Teams
AI has rapidly moved from experimental to essential. Automated accounts payable processing, job-cost coding and anomaly detection reduce manual workload by 35% to 40%, allowing CFOs to reallocate time from transactional processing to strategic advisory work.
Data shows that construction companies using AI-powered accounting technology complete month-end close 40% faster. Real-time project profitability dashboards replace retrospective WIP, giving project managers immediate visibility into job performance. Return on investment averages 200% to 300% within the first year through reduced labor costs and faster close cycles.
Cybersecurity is Now a Finance Responsibility
With enterprise resource planning (ERP) and AI systems housing sensitive financial data, construction finance teams have become frontline defenders against payment diversion schemes and vendor impersonation fraud. CFOs now have oversight of digital workflows, vendor onboarding controls, ACH and wire safeguards, and verification of AI-generated financial outputs. Construction companies report that formal cybersecurity protocols reduce payment fraud incidents by 60% to 75%.
Stakeholders Expect Real-Time Financial Insight
Banks and sureties increasingly expect near real-time visibility into financial performance. Monthly WIP detail, backlog margin projections and evidence of proactive tax planning all influence credit and bonding capacity. CFOs report that construction companies providing enhanced financial transparency secure 15% to 20% higher bonding capacity than those treating financial reporting as compliance overhead.
What Construction CFOs Should Prioritize
The convergence of OBBBA tax planning, PTET multi-state complexity, AI-powered operations, cybersecurity oversight, ASC 606 scrutiny and stakeholder transparency requirements demands construction companies fundamentally rethink their accounting infrastructure. The modern construction CFO delivers project-level financial forecasting, integrated tax strategy and real-time stakeholder communication.
The question facing construction companies is not whether to modernize accounting infrastructure, but how quickly to implement these capabilities before competitive disadvantage becomes insurmountable.
 | Christopher CowanChristopher Cowan, CPA, CCIFP, is a partner at Wiss & Company LLP, where he leads the Construction & Engineering Services practice. |
This article appeared in the spring 2026 issue of New Jersey CPA magazine. Read the full issue.