HVAC owners face a payroll and benefits puzzle most generic PEOs aren't built for: seasonal demand that doubles overtime in Q2 and Q4, EPA-certified techs who churn for $2/hour at the shop down the street, on-call rotations that complicate every overtime calculation, and a workers comp class high enough that pool placement matters. This page walks through what actually matters when you're shopping providers — written for HVAC owners, not insurance underwriters.
Three things tend to push HVAC owners off generic payroll software and into a PEO conversation, often in this order:
The first is tech retention. The skilled-HVAC labor market is tight nationally — apprenticeship completions don't keep up with industry growth. When your senior service tech leaves for the shop across town that offers group health, dental, and a 401(k) match, you're suddenly recruiting from a candidate pool that doesn't exist. The PEO pull here is mostly about benefits depth: small-group health quotes price 30–50% worse than what a PEO pool delivers, and that gap is usually why you're losing techs you don't want to lose.
The second is workers comp. HVAC sits in the moderately-high band of the NCCI manual, and pool placement through a quality PEO often beats what a standalone broker can do — when the PEO actually writes trades. Not all do. The math matters most when your mod is unfavorable; less so when you've had a clean three years.
The third is time. On-call/standby pay, emergency overtime, multi-state crews, EPA 608 tracking, OSHA documentation — by 15–20 employees you or your office manager are losing 8+ hours a week to admin that a PEO eats whole. The admin fee starts looking like the cheapest hour-buying you've ever done.
HVAC owners who run payroll themselves usually lose money in three places at once — they overpay for workers comp because their class code is set to the highest-risk role on staff, they pay retail benefits rates because their group is too small, and they spend Saturdays on FLSA classification and overtime math. A clean PEO comparison usually surfaces a fix for each within the first 90 days.
Your HVAC techs are probably classified under NCCI 5183 (service/repair) or 5537 (sheet-metal install for ductwork). Your office staff should be on 8810 (clerical). These codes are public — what's not public is how those codes are priced varies wildly by carrier, by state, and by how the PEO handles your experience modifier. Three providers can quote the same code mix at meaningfully different rates for the same business.
What actually drives your premium:
Mod handling. The PEO can carry your existing mod (cleanest if you're below 1.0), blend it with their pool (vague math, get the formula in writing), or replace it with pool rate (helps if your mod is above 1.0). Most generic PEOs default to whatever's easiest for them, not what's best for you.
Class-code splits. Your office manager shouldn't be on a service-tech code. Owners and supervisors who spend most of their week on dispatch, estimating, or selling may qualify for executive-supervisor (5606) codes — often substantially cheaper than field labor codes. A trades-experienced PEO will ask. A generic one usually won't.
Claims management. A single bad strain-injury or fall claim, handled badly, spikes your mod for three years. PEO claims-management quality — same-day adjuster, return-to-work program, reserve discipline — often matters more than the headline rate. Specialist PEOs are worth more here than anywhere else.
Replacing an EPA 608-certified service tech with 3+ years of experience costs $15K–$30K when you total recruitment, the ramp-up period, and the customer-experience hit during the gap. Replacing an install crew lead runs $20K–$40K with direct project-schedule impact.
The PEO pull on retention is mostly about benefits depth — group health, dental, vision, 401(k) match, short-term disability — at pool pricing that an independent HVAC operator can't access standalone. For most shops in the 10–60 employee range, the benefits-pool access alone covers the PEO admin fee before you count workers comp savings or HR offload.
Bonus: most modern PEO HRIS systems track EPA 608 and state HVAC license renewals with auto-alerts — small thing, but it's one less spreadsheet for your office manager.
Honest sizing:
| Where you are | Honest answer |
|---|---|
| Owner-operator + 1–3 helpers, residential service only | Premature. Payroll software (Gusto, ADP RUN) + standalone broker is usually cheaper. Revisit at 5+ techs or when you start losing people to competitors with benefits. |
| 5–15 employees, group health desired | Worth quoting. Benefits-pool pricing + comp pool placement typically cover the admin fee at this size. |
| 15–50 employees, multi-state or commercial work | Usually clear PEO case. Compliance, multi-state SUTA, and OSHA documentation compound; PEO admin offload pays back fast. |
| 50+ employees, established shop | Mixed. Standalone benefits become competitive. PEO viable; some shops transition to in-house HR + ASO at this scale. |
| High-mod or recent serious claim | Specialist PEO required. Pool placement and claims-management infrastructure are worth more than rate. We match providers who actually write your situation. |
The questions worth getting written answers to — not verbal — before you commit:
Sometimes — and we won't promise it until we've seen your mod and three years of loss runs. Pool placement helps most when your mod is unfavorable or when carrier appetite for HVAC is competitive. For a clean-mod, low-claim operator, a strong standalone broker might price equivalently. The honest answer is that you need real quotes side-by-side. That's what our matching does.
Percentage-of-payroll PEO pricing tends to compound seasonal OT — your peak-season months get expensive fast. PEPM (per-employee per-month) admin pricing stays flat regardless of OT load and almost always wins for HVAC. Make sure any PEO quote you receive is normalized to total annual cost per employee, not headline rate.
Most modern PEO HRIS systems track certifications, renewal dates, and CE credits — though they don't issue the credentials. Confirm during the demo that the system handles the specific renewal cycles your techs work under.
No. We're an independent buyer-side advisory. We compare PEOs against each other for your specific situation and recommend the fit — or recommend you stay with payroll software if a PEO isn't actually the right move at your stage. See our methodology for the seven criteria we score.
The three mod-handling models, how class codes drive your premium, why claims management often matters more than the rate.
Workers comp deep divePEPM vs. percentage-of-payroll, what drives your quote, hidden fees worth asking about.
Pricing deep diveSeven-dimension comparison framework, questions to ask, red flags that should give you pause.
Read the buyer's guideIf you're shopping PEOs for the topic on this page, these adjacent verticals share workforce, regulatory, or buyer dynamics worth comparing alongside it.
Our team has helped 500+ businesses across SaaS, service trades, professional services, and healthcare evaluate PEO options and place them with the right provider. We are paid only by PEO partners after a fit, never marked up to you.
Tell us about your business — headcount, states, current comp class and mod, biggest operational pain — and we'll match you to PEO providers with HVAC experience that actually fits. Free, no obligation, no markup.
Compare PEOs for HVAC