
Florida construction employment: what the 2024 BLS tape actually says
AGC's read on Florida job growth isn't marketing—it's tied to BLS CES tables. Here is how we use those prints when we plan yard inventory.
Everyone in our orbit quotes "Florida construction is on fire." Sometimes that is true; sometimes it is lazy. When we plan which compact lines to over-stock before hurricane season, we reach for the same boring PDFs you can download from the Associated General Contractors: state fact sheets built on Bureau of Labor Statistics Current Employment Statistics—not vibes.

We are a used heavy-equipment dealer based out of Hilliard, Florida—not an economist's office. But the macro numbers matter to us because they predict phone traffic six to eight weeks ahead of when shovels hit dirt. A highway bond package that passes in Tallahassee doesn't move iron the next morning. It moves iron after the GC wins the bid, hires the sub, and that sub calls us looking for a low-hour dozer or a CTL with a forestry package. Understanding the lag between policy and demand is how we avoid getting stuck with the wrong mix of machines in the yard.
If you are a fleet manager or an owner-operator, you might not think you need to read BLS tables. But if you are financing a machine and planning to keep it busy for thirty-six months, the macro employment trend is a rough proxy for how many competing crews will be chasing the same jobs—and therefore how many hours you can realistically book.
The headline figures we actually pinned on the wall
In the AGC's 2024 Florida/US construction fact sheet (sourced from BLS CES), Florida's construction employment was roughly 667,700 workers in August 2024—up about 5.7% year-over-year (≈36,200 jobs) versus August 2023, and up sharply versus pre-pandemic February 2020. A separate AGC national release covering the September 2023–September 2024 window reported Florida adding 37,100 construction jobs (+5.9%), second only to Texas in raw job count.
Translation for a yard like ours: demand for iron stays noisy, but it is not evenly distributed. Highway-heavy corridors burn dozers and pans; residential infill burns compact track loaders and small excavators. When those BLS prints accelerate, we see phone traffic for used SSL/CTL units about six weeks later—roughly the lag from job awards to dirt moving.
What really jumped out this cycle was the residential-to-commercial pivot. Through 2021 and into 2022, residential permits in Duval, Clay, and St. Johns counties were white-hot—everyone needed mini excavators and small skid steers for lot clearing. By mid-2023, the music shifted toward commercial site-work: warehouse pads, distribution centers, and mixed-use infill projects that demanded heavier iron. We watched our inquiry mix swing from Cat 259D3 compact track loaders to Deere 544K wheel loaders in less than two quarters. The BLS data confirmed what our call logs already showed, but having the official numbers let us justify bringing in heavier consignment stock. Browse our current heavy-iron inventory at https://equipmentsupplyservice.com.
Regional pockets that move the needle
Florida's construction employment is not a single monolith. The I-4 corridor between Tampa and Orlando drives a huge share of commercial and theme-park-adjacent work. Southeast Florida (Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach) remains permit-heavy on residential towers and infrastructure rehab. And then there is our backyard—the Jacksonville MSA—where port expansion, JaxPort container terminal work, and the steady drumbeat of logistics-park grading keep mid-size equipment cycling through the market.
The Panhandle tells its own story. Hurricane recovery spending can spike local demand for compact equipment in ways that do not register cleanly in statewide BLS prints. If you are shopping for a skid steer or a mini excavator to run disaster-recovery contracts, you are competing with FEMA-adjacent crews for the same used units. That is another reason to keep your eye on the employment data by metro area, not just the state aggregate. We publish machines as they land in our yard at https://equipmentsupplyservice.com, so if you are watching for a specific class of machine in the northeast Florida corridor, bookmark the page and check often.

How employment data shapes our buying at auction
When BLS prints show sustained job growth in a region, we get more aggressive at auction on machines that fit that region's dominant work type. For example, if Hillsborough County shows a two-quarter acceleration in specialty-trade employment, we know flatwork and utility contractors will be restocking. That means compact track loaders with smooth buckets and trenching attachments move fast, so we are willing to pay a little more and turn them quickly.
Conversely, when the data softens—say, a quarter of flat-to-negative revisions in a coastal metro—we slow down on consigning big-ticket items from that region. We have learned the hard way that holding a $180,000 wheel loader for five months because the local pipeline dried up is a very expensive education. The BLS data does not eliminate risk, but it gives us a cheap leading indicator that supplements our own phone-traffic logs.
Every machine we bring through the yard gets a IRON+ inspection before it lists. Pairing that pre-sale mechanical diligence with macro demand intelligence is how we try to offer fair prices without leaving ourselves underwater on slow-moving stock. It is not glamorous work—reading government spreadsheets at 6 a.m.—but it keeps the lights on.
What we do not do with the data
We do not day-trade machines off a single month's revision. We do use the trend to justify holding another low-hour CTL when lenders get chatty about rate cuts and developers get brave again. If you are buying for a fleet, pair the macro print with your own backlog—then use https://equipmentsupplyservice.com to hunt iron that matches the work you already won.
We also do not pretend the BLS numbers capture the full picture. They do not measure the underground cash economy, owner-operator sole-prop crews, or the machines that change hands in private-party deals at truck stops. Those transactions are real, but they are invisible to payroll surveys. So when we say "Florida added 37,000 construction jobs," understand that the actual labor moving dirt is probably larger—and the demand for used equipment that supports it is proportionally underestimated.
Practical takeaways for buyers
If you are financing a machine over thirty-six or forty-eight months, check the BLS trend for your metro before you sign. Not because one month's number matters, but because a sustained direction gives you a rough ceiling on utilization. A machine that sits idle costs you maintenance, insurance, and depreciation whether or not it is turning a bucket.
If you are a fleet buyer adding three to five units at a time, talk to us about staggered delivery tied to your backlog schedule. We can hold a machine for a reasonable period if you are committed—and that lets you match iron arrival to contract start dates instead of warehousing equipment you are paying on but not billing for. Reach out through https://equipmentsupplyservice.com or call us directly.
And if you are a one-truck operator trying to decide whether this is the year to buy your second machine, the employment data gives you a gut-check. Is your metro adding jobs in your trade? Are the permits you are chasing funded and scheduled, or speculative? Those answers, combined with honest machine pricing, are what separate a good purchase from a repo.
Looking ahead: 2025 and beyond
Interest rates remain the wild card. The Fed's path will either unlock a backlog of shelved commercial projects or keep them parked. Florida's population growth is not slowing, which means infrastructure—roads, water, sewer—has to follow. The IIJA (Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act) money is still flowing into state DOT budgets, and Florida DOT has a pipeline that will keep highway iron busy through at least 2027 based on current letting schedules. That is good news for dozer and scraper operators, and it is why we continue to source mid-size Deere and Cat dozers through our IRON+ program.
We will continue publishing market notes like these at https://equipmentsupplyservice.com because we think transparent data makes for better buyers—and better buyers make for smoother transactions. If you have questions about how macro trends affect the specific class of machine you are shopping, call us. We would rather spend twenty minutes on the phone helping you think it through than sell you something that does not fit your backlog.
Permalink: https://equipmentsupplyservice.com /blog/florida-construction-employment-by-the-numbers-2024
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