How GCs can cope with problem subs

5 construction legal trends to watch in 2026

This feature is a part of “The Dotted Line” series, which takes an in-depth look at the complex legal landscape of the construction industry. To view the entire series, click here.

Contractors have plenty of legal issues to ponder in 2026. 

Whether they’re confronting immigration, tariffs, the opportunities — and risks — of the data center construction boom or how artificial intelligence is winding its way into every aspect of business, builders need to make sure their contracts can meet today’s shifting legal landscape.  

First and foremost among those concerns is immigration and increased enforcement during President Donald Trump’s second term, said attorney Trent Cotney, construction team leader for Adams & Reese in Tampa, Florida.

“ICE raids and I-9 audits have severely impacted crews,” Cotney said. “Nobody wants illegal workers, but as you remove the potential workforce, whether voluntarily because they’re leaving or involuntarily because they’re being detained and deported, it shrinks the total number of workers available.”

Here’s a look at five of the top construction legal issues attorneys say contractors need to track in 2026. 

Labor cost increases

With fewer workers on jobsites due to immigration enforcement, the workers who remain can demand higher pay, Cotney said. Among his clients, he’s seeing labor pay rates increase anywhere from 4% to 10%. He advises builders to push for strong language in their contracts to recoup that increased overhead. 

Trent Cotney

Courtesy of Adams and Reese LLP

 

“I’m always a big advocate of including a price escalation provision in your contract,” Cotney said. “It’s simple and it will work regardless of what the basis is for escalating the price. I’ve used it during hurricanes. I’ve used it during COVID. I’ve used it during fires. I’ve used it and it works.”

Along with price, contractors should write provisions into their contracts to get more time on projects for delays caused by labor constraints, said construction attorney Carol Sigmond. 

“What happens if I can’t get enough labor in a particular area?” said Sigmond, a partner and member of the Infrastructure Group in the New York City office of Nossaman. “I need a time extension because I need everybody to recognize I can’t control the labor market.”

Tariff impacts

The tariffs Trump has imposed in his second term will also need careful consideration. A pending U.S. Supreme Court ruling will determine whether those tariffs are constitutional. If they’re struck down, billions of dollars in rebates would be owed by the government. Contractors should prepare regardless of the outcome, Sigmond said.  

“People are starting to try to adjust for that both ways,” Sigmond said. “In other words, if there are new tariffs, what do they do? And what do they do if the tariffs go down?”

From a contractual perspective, the key is determining who bears the costs of tariffs that are in place and who would get any refunds via a rebate clause.

“Owners are starting to ask the contractors, if these costs go away, can they get their money back?” Sigmond said. In that case, owners and contractors are putting clauses in contracts to say “this has to be rebated back to us,” Sigmond said.

A headshot of construction attorney Carol Sigmond.

Carol Sigmond

Courtesy of Carol Sigmond

 

 She cautions that the chain of owed refunds from the government could get complicated fast, however. The process will likely involve importers, contractors and owners, all of whom may try to claw back a piece of the pie.

Data center construction

With $3 trillion in projected global spending for data center development by 2030, builders have an opportunity to profit from the boom around these facilities. 

“Right now, there’s money to be made,” Cotney said. “If you’re a contractor, it’s definitely worth pursuing.”


“Usually the first sign that you’ve got a problem is they start to fight about change orders or they start to slow the payments down. Make sure if you’re seeing those triggers, you’re reacting appropriately.” 

Carol Sigmond

Partner, Nossaman


But as with any development cycle, contractors need to look at that opportunity with wary eyes, attorneys say, and be prepared to cope with a downturn should the music suddenly stop. At the end of 2025, fears around an AI bubble forming similar to the dot-com bust of the early 2000s roiled the stock market. 

Although those concerns seem to have subsided in early 2026 — observers say demand for data centers seems healthy through at least next year — contractors should make sure they have language in their contracts to protect them should things go sideways. 

One way to do that is to limit the scope of the termination for convenience clause, a contractual catchall that usually lets either party walk for almost any reason. While these clauses are common in construction contracts, contractors should make sure they can recover as much as possible, should a deal go belly up due to funding or lending hurdles, for example. 

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