In the Seattle construction market — where project timelines are tight, labor is competitive, and the cost of a callback can wreck a schedule — picking the right framing subcontractor is one of the most important decisions a GC makes on any build. The wrong sub means call-backs, delays, inspection failures, and hard conversations with the owner. The right sub? You stop thinking about framing and focus on everything else.
Here's exactly what to look for when vetting a framing contractor in the Seattle/Eastside market — and the red flags that should end the conversation immediately.
Licensing, insurance, and references are table stakes. What separates good framing subs from great ones is schedule reliability, inspection pass rate, and communication with your site super.
The 6-Point Checklist Every GC Should Run
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1
Washington State Contractor's License — Verified
Look up their license at the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) contractor verification tool. The license should be active, bonded, and in good standing. Never skip this step, even for referrals.
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2
Current COI — General Liability + Workers' Comp
Request a certificate of insurance naming your company as an additional insured. Make sure GL coverage is adequate for your project scale (minimum $1M per occurrence on most commercial projects). Workers' comp is non-negotiable in WA — if they don't carry it and a worker gets hurt, you could be liable.
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3
Crew Size vs. Project Scope — Do They Have the Capacity?
A two-man crew cannot frame a 50-unit apartment building on your schedule. Ask directly: how many carpenters do they run, how many active projects do they have right now, and what's their peak crew size? A sub that over-commits is worse than one that declines the bid.
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4
Multifamily & Commercial References — Not Just Houses
If you're building a 4-story wood frame apartment, don't accept references from single-family remodels. Ask for GC references on projects similar in type and size to yours. Call those references. Ask specifically about schedule compliance and callbacks.
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5
Inspection Pass Rate and Callback History
The best framing subs in Seattle pass inspection on the first try — every time. Ask your prospective sub: "Do you have callbacks?" If they can't answer the question or deflect, that's your answer. Ask your references the same question directly.
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6
Communication Protocol — Who's My Contact On Site?
On a commercial or multifamily build, you need a dedicated lead carpenter or superintendent who communicates directly with your site super. Vague answers about who's in charge on the job site are a warning sign.
Red Flags That Should End the Conversation
Slow insurance documentation usually means coverage gaps. In WA, this is a hard stop.
You found out before they started. This is the easy version — the hard version is finding out after an accident.
GC-to-sub relationships are different from sub-to-sub. You want references from GCs who managed them on commercial builds.
In Seattle's labor market, framing labor costs what it costs. A bid significantly below market either means they're undercounting hours, under-credentialed crew, or planning to cut corners. All three cost you more than the savings.
On anything larger than a single-family, diffuse accountability is how things fall through the cracks. Get a name. One person your super can call.
How a sub handles the bid process tells you everything about how they'll handle your project. If they take 2 weeks to return a bid, they'll take 2 weeks to call you back when there's a problem on site.
Questions to Ask Any Framing Sub Before You Award
- How many active projects are you running right now, and what crew size are you committing to mine?
- Who is my day-to-day point of contact on the job site?
- Can you give me three references from GCs on multifamily or commercial projects in the last 18 months?
- What's your inspection pass rate? Any callbacks in the last year?
- What does your schedule look like for my start date — are you available?
- How do you handle conflicts with the structural engineer or plan changes mid-project?
What Makes the Seattle/Eastside Market Different
The Seattle framing market has unique pressure points that GCs from other regions sometimes underestimate:
Labor availability is tight. The experienced framing crews in the Eastside and greater Seattle area are in demand. A quality sub who is already booked is worth waiting for — chasing the cheapest available option in a hot market is usually how a project ends up with callbacks.
Permitting in King and Snohomish counties moves on its own timeline. A good framing sub in this market knows the inspection process, knows what inspectors want to see, and frames to pass — not to cut corners and fix later. That knowledge is worth real money on a commercial or multifamily schedule.
Multifamily volume is high. The 5-over-1 podium builds, the townhome infill, the build-to-rent apartments along East Link — Seattle's multifamily market is one of the most active in the country. A sub who's done 30 of these buildings frames differently than one who's done three. The production efficiency shows up in your schedule.
Twin Brothers Group has been framing commercial, multifamily, and custom residential in the Bellevue/Seattle market since 2017. We carry full WA licensing, current COI, and a crew sized for your project scope. We respond to bid requests within 48 hours — usually same day. Request a bid here or call 425-829-5660.
How to Get a Bid From Twin Brothers Group
If you're a GC or developer with a project in the Seattle/Eastside market, here's how working with us typically goes:
- Send us your plans — plan sheets, square footage, and your target start date.
- We turn around a bid within 48 hours — detailed, line-item, no surprises.
- We show up on time and frame to spec — one dedicated lead, direct communication with your super.
- Inspection-ready framing — we frame to pass the first time. If there's ever an issue, we're back on site same day.
We serve Bellevue, Kirkland, Redmond, Everett, Renton, Bothell, Lynnwood, and Seattle. Call 425-829-5660 or use the form below.