If you run a contracting business, you have probably thought about hiring a receptionist. Someone to answer the phones, schedule estimates, follow up with leads, and keep the office running while you are out on job sites. It sounds like a straightforward hire. But the real cost of putting a person behind that desk is far more than most contractors realize.

In this article, we are going to break down every dollar that goes into hiring a receptionist for a small contracting business. Then we will compare it to the alternative that a growing number of contractors are choosing instead: outsourced operations.

The Salary Is Just the Starting Point

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the median annual salary for a receptionist in the United States is approximately $33,960. For a contracting business in a mid-sized market, you are likely looking at $30,000 to $40,000 per year depending on experience and location.

But salary is only the beginning of the story. It is the most visible line item, and it accounts for only about 60 to 70 percent of the true cost of employment.

Payroll Taxes

As an employer, you are responsible for the employer portion of FICA taxes (Social Security and Medicare), which adds 7.65 percent on top of wages. For a $35,000 salary, that is an additional $2,678 per year. You also pay federal and state unemployment taxes (FUTA and SUTA), which can range from $500 to $1,500 annually depending on your state.

Benefits

To attract and retain a good receptionist, most businesses offer some combination of health insurance, paid time off, and retirement contributions. Here is what those typically cost:

Overhead Costs

A receptionist needs a workspace, a computer, a phone system, and supplies. For a small contracting office, those costs look something like this:

The Total Real Cost: $52,000 to $68,000 Per Year

When you add it all up, here is what a receptionist actually costs a small contracting business:

ExpenseAnnual Cost
Base salary$33,000 - $40,000
Payroll taxes (FICA, FUTA, SUTA)$3,200 - $4,500
Health insurance$7,000 - $8,500
PTO and sick days$1,350 - $2,000
Retirement match$1,000 - $1,200
Workers' comp$500 - $1,200
Equipment and software$1,700 - $4,100
Office space allocation$2,400 - $6,000
Total$50,150 - $67,500

That is a significant investment for any small business. And it does not account for the costs that are harder to quantify.

The Hidden Costs Nobody Talks About

Recruitment and Training

Finding the right receptionist takes time. Between writing job postings, reviewing applications, conducting interviews, and onboarding, most small business owners spend 20 to 40 hours on the hiring process. If your time is worth $100 per hour (a conservative estimate for a contractor generating revenue), that is $2,000 to $4,000 in opportunity cost.

Training a new receptionist to understand your services, your pricing, your scheduling software, and your customer communication style takes another two to four weeks. During that ramp-up period, they are less productive and more likely to make mistakes that cost you leads.

Turnover

Receptionist positions have notoriously high turnover. The national average tenure for administrative and office support roles is approximately 2.4 years. That means you can expect to go through the recruitment and training cycle multiple times over a five-year period. Each time costs you money, productivity, and lost leads during the transition.

Coverage Gaps

A receptionist works roughly 2,000 hours per year. Your business receives leads 8,760 hours per year. That means your receptionist covers only 23 percent of the hours when potential customers might be trying to reach you. During lunch breaks, sick days, vacations, evenings, weekends, and holidays, your phone goes unanswered or rolls to a voicemail that most callers will never leave.

Research from the Lead Response Management Study shows that 78 percent of customers buy from the first company to respond to their inquiry. Every hour your phones go unanswered is revenue walking to your competition.

Capacity Limits

Even the best receptionist can only handle one call at a time. During peak hours when multiple leads come in simultaneously, callers get put on hold or sent to voicemail. For a busy contracting company running ads or getting referrals, those peak periods are exactly when you cannot afford to miss calls.

The Alternative: Outsourced Operations

A growing number of contractors are choosing a different approach entirely. Instead of hiring a receptionist, they partner with an operations team that handles lead response, scheduling, follow-up, and customer communication — 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Here is how the comparison typically looks:

FactorIn-House ReceptionistOutsourced Operations
Annual cost$52,000 - $68,000$9,000 - $18,000
Hours of coverage~2,000 (business hours)8,760 (24/7/365)
Response timeMinutes to hoursUnder 60 seconds
Sick days / PTO15-20 days/yearZero gaps
Turnover riskHighNone
Simultaneous leads1 at a timeUnlimited
Training required2-4 weeks your timeHandled for you

The math is stark. You get more coverage, faster response, zero downtime, and no management burden — for roughly one-fifth the cost.

When Hiring a Receptionist Still Makes Sense

To be fair, there are situations where an in-house receptionist is the right choice:

For most contracting businesses, though — especially those in the $500K to $2M range — the phone calls, scheduling, and follow-up can be handled more effectively and affordably through outsourced operations.

What to Look for in an Operations Partner

If you are considering outsourcing your front-desk operations, here are the key factors to evaluate:

The Bottom Line

Hiring a receptionist for your contracting business is not a $35,000 decision. It is a $52,000 to $68,000 decision with coverage gaps, turnover risk, and capacity limits baked in.

For the majority of small contracting businesses, outsourced operations deliver better results at a fraction of the cost. You get 24/7 coverage, instant lead response, automated follow-up, and zero management overhead — starting at a price point that is less than one month's salary for a traditional hire.

The question is not whether you can afford an operations partner. The question is whether you can afford to keep losing leads while you wait for your receptionist to come back from lunch.