To find a qualified sitework subcontractor in Charleston SC, general contractors should prequalify on five criteria: an active South Carolina LLR contractor's license with the correct subclassifications, general liability coverage of at least $2M per occurrence and $4M aggregate, an Experience Modification Rate (EMR) below 1.0, demonstrated CSI Division 31, 32, and 33 self-perform capacity, and a verifiable backlog of Lowcountry commercial references. This guide walks estimators and civil leads through the qualification checklist we see on every serious bid package coming out of Berkeley, Dorchester, and Charleston counties, and explains why the regional pipeline is forcing GCs to rebuild their sub lists right now.
The Lowcountry is in the middle of a capacity squeeze. Between the $3.5B Redwood Materials battery recycling plant at Camp Hall Commerce Park, the 1.3M square feet of Altus spec warehouse shells moving through permitting, the Novant/Roper medical expansion at Nexton, and the ongoing vertical build-out at Carnes Crossroads, every credible site utility sub in the region is carrying a backlog. If your standard sub list was built before 2023, it is almost certainly out of date. The GCs winning work right now are the ones who have quietly rebuilt their Division 31/32/33 bench with subs who can actually mobilize.
Start With the License, Not the Logo
Every prequalification conversation should begin with the SC LLR Contractor's Licensing Board record. Pull the sub's license number and confirm the subclassifications match the scope you intend to buy. A General Contractor license alone is not sufficient for self-performed utility work. For a typical commercial sitework package you want to see Grading (GR), Asphalt Paving (AP), and Water and Sewer Lines (WL, SL) at a minimum, with the monetary limit high enough to cover your subcontract value. Cross-check the license against any SCDOT prequalification the project requires. If the job touches a state right-of-way, your sub needs to be on the SCDOT prequalified list before the bid opens, not after award.
Insurance, Bonding, and EMR: The Numbers That Kill Deals
Owner requirements across the Lowcountry commercial market have tightened significantly. Healthcare and industrial owners are routinely requiring $2M per occurrence and $4M aggregate on general liability, $1M auto, $1M/$1M workers comp with a waiver of subrogation, and umbrella coverage of $5M or higher. Pollution liability is now standard on any scope involving dewatering, spoil haul-off, or fuel tank removal. Confirm the sub's bond capacity single and aggregate before you issue a letter of intent. A sub who can only bond $2M single is a real problem on a $4M utility package, regardless of how sharp their number is.
The single most predictive number is the Experience Modification Rate. Below 1.0 is table stakes for healthcare, federal, and most Class A industrial work. Below 0.85 puts you in the top tier. Ask for the NCCI worksheet, not a verbal figure.
Prequalification Benchmarks at a Glance
| Criterion | Minimum | Preferred | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| SC LLR License | Active, correct subclass | GR + AP + WL + SL | Legal authority to self-perform |
| General Liability | $1M / $2M | $2M / $4M | Owner contract compliance |
| EMR (3-year avg) | Below 1.0 | Below 0.85 | OSHA recordables, owner gates |
| Bond Capacity | $5M single | $10M+ single, $25M aggregate | Performance and payment security |
| OSHA Training | OSHA 10 field, OSHA 30 super | OSHA 30 all foremen | Site safety orientation access |
| SCDOT Prequal | As required by scope | Current fiscal year | Right-of-way and utility tie-ins |
| DBE / MBE / WBE | Optional | Certified | Federal, municipal, institutional goals |
Self-Perform Capacity Across CSI 31, 32, and 33
The Lowcountry sub market splits into two tiers. Tier one subs self-perform across Division 31 (Earthwork: clearing, mass excavation, structural fill, erosion control), Division 32 (Exterior Improvements: curb and gutter, concrete flatwork, asphalt paving, site concrete), and Division 33 (Utilities: storm, sanitary, domestic water, fire service, wet and dry utility coordination). Tier two subs broker one or more of those divisions to a second-tier vendor, which introduces schedule risk, markup, and coordination failure points at every interface.
Ask the sub directly: what percentage of the proposed scope is self-performed? For a healthy commercial sitework sub the answer should be 75 percent or higher. Ask for the equipment list by owned versus rented. Owned iron is a proxy for commitment and mobilization speed, which is the variable that actually blows up schedules in a tight market.
Platform Presence and Bid Hygiene
Modern GC estimators run bid coverage through BuildingConnected, iSqFt, ConstructConnect, Procore, and Dodge. A sub who is not invitable on at least three of those platforms is a sub who will miss bid days, miss addenda, and submit on the wrong drawing revision. Confirm the sub's profile is current, their trade codes are accurate, and their service radius actually covers your project site. For Lowcountry commercial projects, that radius should explicitly name Summerville, Goose Creek, Moncks Corner, North Charleston, Mount Pleasant, and the Camp Hall / Nexton / Carnes Crossroads submarkets.
Expert Insight: "Ninety percent of the estimators who find us now are looking for a sub who can self-perform Division 31, 32, and 33 on one subcontract without brokering the utility scope. That is the single biggest pain point in this market right now. When your utility sub is a sub-sub, your schedule is not your own."
- Nikki Walker, Commercial Division Lead, JSW Construction
References: Get Specific, Get Recent
Generic reference lists are worthless. Ask for three projects completed in the last 18 months inside Berkeley, Dorchester, or Charleston counties, with the GC project manager's direct contact and the original contract value versus final billed value. Delta over 8 percent on a lump sum package is a yellow flag. Ask about change order behavior, RFI turnaround, and whether the sub self-reported quality issues or waited for the GC to catch them. The Lowcountry market is small enough that two phone calls will tell you everything you need to know.
Add JSW to Your Next Bid Package
JSW Construction's commercial division self-performs across CSI Divisions 31, 32, and 33 throughout the SC Lowcountry, carries the insurance and bonding capacity required by Class A industrial and healthcare owners, and maintains active profiles on the major buyer-side bid platforms. If you are rebuilding your Lowcountry sub list for the 2026 pipeline, review our commercial capabilities and add JSW to your sub list so we are invitable on your next bid.