The Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex is one of the fastest-growing data center markets in North America. With over 700 megawatts of operational capacity and another 300+ MW under construction, DFW has become a top-five US data center hub — and demand for qualified data center contractors continues to surge.
This guide covers the contractor landscape in DFW: what specialties are most in demand, how to find and vet contractors, and what rates to expect in the Texas market.
Why DFW Has Become a Data Center Powerhouse
Several factors have made Dallas–Fort Worth a magnet for data center investment:
- Deregulated electricity market: Texas operates its own ERCOT grid with competitive electricity pricing (often $0.03–$0.06/kWh for large industrial users)
- Fiber connectivity: DFW sits at a major intersection of transcontinental fiber routes
- No state income tax: Favorable for data center operators and the technology companies they serve
- Land availability: Abundant suburban industrial land in Allen, Garland, Lewisville, and Irving
- Population growth: 7+ million metro population creates enterprise demand
Major operators in DFW include CyrusOne (Allen, TX headquarters), Equinix, Digital Realty, QTS, Vantage, and dozens of regional colos and enterprise data centers.
Most In-Demand Contractor Specialties in DFW
Critical Power (UPS and Generator)
DFW’s data centers run on high-density power — 10–30 kW per rack is increasingly common. UPS maintenance contractors who can service large-scale Vertiv, Eaton, and Schneider systems are in constant demand. Generator maintenance is equally critical given Texas’s grid volatility (see: Winter Storm Uri, 2021).
Mechanical/HVAC Cooling
Texas summers push cooling systems hard. CRAC/CRAH maintenance, chiller service, and cooling tower contractors with data center-specific experience (not just commercial HVAC) are chronically short-staffed.
Electrical Contractors
With continuous expansion and retrofit projects across the metroplex, licensed electrical contractors with data center experience (NFPA 70E certified, experienced with live-work environments) are in high demand year-round.
Structured Cabling / Low-Voltage
BICSI-certified cabling contractors for fiber and copper deployments support both hyperscale builds and enterprise retrofits.
Key DFW Submarkets for Data Centers
- Allen/McKinney (north suburbs): CyrusOne campus, hyperscale development
- Las Colinas/Irving: Enterprise and colo facilities near DFW Airport
- Garland: Large power capacity, older legacy data centers plus new builds
- Lewisville/Carrollton: Mid-market colo concentration
- Plano: Enterprise data centers serving the Legacy business corridor
Contractor Licensing in Texas
Texas has specific licensing requirements for contractors working in data centers:
- Electrical contractors: Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) Master Electrician license required; Electrical Contractor license for the company
- Air conditioning / HVAC: TDLR Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Contractor license
- Low voltage / cabling: TDLR Alarm Systems Contractor (for structured cabling with monitoring) or Electrical (A class) for data/comm
Always verify license status at tdlr.texas.gov before engaging a contractor.
What DFW Data Center Contractors Charge
Labor rates in the DFW market (2026 estimates):
- Master electrician: $95–$140/hour
- Journeyman electrician: $65–$90/hour
- HVAC/mechanical technician: $85–$120/hour
- UPS service technician (factory-certified): $120–$180/hour
- Low-voltage / BICSI technician: $65–$95/hour
Emergency/after-hours rates typically carry a 1.5x–2x premium. Tier III/IV data centers should build these into their maintenance budget assumptions.
Find DFW Data Center Contractors
DataCenterUPS.com lists verified data center contractors across the Dallas–Fort Worth metro area. Search by specialty (UPS, HVAC, electrical, cabling) and location to find pre-screened vendors serving the DFW market.
