If you build in Alaska, the rules that govern your business sit in three places: the state licensing authority, the state lien statute, and the state prevailing-wage law. Cost bands, permit timelines, and common project types layer on top. Get any of these wrong and you bid the wrong number, miss the lien deadline, or lose the certificate of occupancy. Here’s what Alaskacontractors need to know in 2026, plus how BuildCrux fits into your daily workflow.
BuildCrux runs AI estimating, scheduling, change-order management, lien-aware invoicing, mileage tracking, and customer communication in one place. Every screen is built for the field, not the back office. The numbers below come from current state law, published cost references, and 2026 market data. Verify specific project rules with your AHJ before bidding.
Alaska contractor licensing
Alaska Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development - Construction Contractors Section
Contractor license required for any contracting work above $10,000. General Contractor with Residential, Commercial, Specialty endorsements available. Exam, bond, insurance, and workers comp required.
- Application + first-year fees
- $200 application + $200 license fee + $25,000 bond
- Renewal period
- 2 years
Mechanics liens in Alaska
Filing deadline: 120 days after last work for original contractors. Lien is filed with the recorder of the recording district where the property is located. Lawsuit within 6 months.
Preliminary notice: Alaska requires sub-tier claimants to give Notice of Right to Lien to the owner. The owner can require a Notice of Right to Claim Against Construction Contract from claimants on demand.
Lien rights are how you actually get paid when an owner stops paying. Missing the deadline forfeits the security entirely. The mechanics lien is the contractor’s primary security; the preliminary notice is the prerequisite that protects it. Read the lien waiver entry too — that’s the document you’ll exchange for every progress payment.
BuildCrux tracks your last-work date per project and surfaces lien-deadline reminders so the math doesn’t happen on the back of an envelope at month-end.
Prevailing wage in Alaska
Alaska has a strong state prevailing-wage law (Little Davis-Bacon) covering all public construction. The Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development publishes wage rates by region and trade.
For background on how prevailing-wage rules work, see our prevailing wage glossary entry and the Davis-Bacon Act explainer. The federal U.S. Department of Labor wage determinations site publishes prevailing rates on federally funded projects.
Typical Alaska cost bands
Market tier: Coastal / union (premium). Numbers below are $/sqft for typical 2026 conditions. Use them to sanity-check estimates, not as the basis for a final bid. For a personalized range based on your specific scope, run our free buildout cost calculator.
For medical-office TI work, see our medical office cost guide covering OSHPD requirements, infection-control protocols, and per-department cost drivers.
| Project Type | Range ($/sqft) |
|---|---|
| Residential new construction | $325-$625 (typical $450) |
| Residential remodel | $250-$500 (typical $350) |
| Commercial new construction | $395-$750 (typical $545) |
| Commercial tenant improvement | $220-$530 (typical $345) |
| Restaurant buildout | $445-$855 (typical $625) |
Permit review in Alaska
- Residential additions and remodels: 4-10 weeks
- New commercial construction: 10-20 weeks
Common project types
Alaska contractors commonly build:
- Anchorage municipal and federal
- Oil and gas (North Slope)
- Remote village construction
- Healthcare (Providence, Alaska Native)
- Cruise terminal and tourism
- Energy and Arctic infrastructure
The BuildCrux Method, applied to Alaska
The BuildCrux Method is the same five-pillar framework everywhere. State-specific application:
- Accurate Estimating. AI takeoff from Alaska plan sets, anchored to the cost bands above plus your own historical job-cost data.
- Structured Planning. Schedule that respects Alaska permit timelines (10-20 weeks on commercial) and long-lead procurement.
- Controlled Execution. Daily logs, photo capture, and crew scheduling from the field.
- Change Order Management.Customer-portal change orders the homeowner or owner’s rep signs from a phone before work proceeds.
- Financial Visibility. Lien-deadline tracking against the Alaska statute (120 days after last work for original contractors), real-time job-cost variance, AR aging.
Read the full BuildCrux Method for the universal framework.
Alaska contractor software: the honest comparison
Most Alaska contractors evaluate three or four tools when they shop. We publish honest, side-by-side comparisons against the most common alternatives: vs Buildertrend, vs JobTread, vs JobNimbus, vs Houzz Pro, and vs Contractor Foreman. We name the cases where competitors win, not just where we do.
| Capability | Spreadsheets | Generic SaaS | BuildCrux |
|---|---|---|---|
| AI takeoff from plans | No | Limited | Yes |
| Alaska lien deadline tracking | Manual | Generic | State-aware |
| Mileage with IRS-rate tracking | No | Add-on | Built-in |
| Customer-portal change orders | No | Limited | Built-in |
| Per-user pricing | N/A | Yes | No |
Frequently asked questions: Alaska contractors
When is a contractor license required in Alaska?
For any contracting work above $10,000. Alaska issues General Contractor licenses with Residential, Commercial, and Specialty endorsements. Exam, bond, insurance, and workers comp required.
How long do I have to file a mechanics lien in Alaska?
120 days after last work for original contractors. Filed with the recorder of the recording district where the property is located. Lawsuit to enforce within 6 months. Sub-tier claimants must also give Notice of Right to Lien to the owner.
Why is Alaska construction so expensive?
Materials must be shipped from Lower 48 (typically Seattle), short construction season due to extreme cold, specialized cold-climate construction methods (frost protection, vapor barriers, Arctic-rated building envelopes), and remote-village logistics drive costs 50-150% above Lower 48 baseline.
Bottom line for Alaska contractors
Alaska has its own license rules, lien deadlines, and cost realities. The contractors who win in this market track those rules tightly and use software built for construction, not generic SaaS adapted from another industry. BuildCrux is the platform contractors run their business on.
Built for Alaska contractors
30-day money-back guarantee. No setup fees, no per-user pricing. Get your first AI estimate running today.