
These New Yorkers are working themselves to death, literally.
Sure, earning an honest living is laudable, but it can also be lethal depending on the occupational hazards that come with the job.
And, unfortunately, in and around NYC, the hard workers who wear hard hats have the highest rates of work-related fatalities, per grisly new data.
“The construction and extraction occupational group had 55 fatal workplace injuries,” revealed a March 2026 report from the US Bureau of Statistics and Labor, in part, of employee deaths throughout New York State in 2024. “Falls, slips and trips resulted in 24 of the 55 construction and extraction fatalities.”
The outcomes were similarly grim for construction workers of the Big Apple.
Guys and gals on the grind suffered a total of 20 fatal accidents in ‘24 — down from the staggering 30 deaths recorded in 2023, the most tallied in a decade — making construction work the deadliest gig in the city.
The accommodation and food services industry secured the second place position in the grim ranking with seven casualties, followed by the protective service industry with six passings.
Ten of the construction deaths were a result of slips and falls, while four were caused by exposure to harmful substances. The other six remain unspecified, according to the findings.
Ligia Guallpa, executive director of the Workers’ Justice Project, an advocacy group aimed at improving low-wage workplace conditions in NYC, noted the impact of the losses, saying, “behind every number in this report is a worker who never made it home, in a statement.
She, too, lamented over the disproportionately high number of job-related deaths endured by local workers of color, namely folks identified in the Hispanic and Asian demographics.
“This data also makes clear that Latino workers are overrepresented among those killed on the job, especially in construction, pointing to deep inequities in who is exposed to the most dangerous work,” said Guallpa.
“We know how to prevent these deaths,” she continued. “That is why Worker’s Justice Project continues to advocate for sustained investment in rigorous safety training, particularly for Latino workers in construction, strong and proactive oversight of worksites, and real accountability for contractors who violate the law, so that every worker can do their job and make it home safely.”
Tragically, construction work isn’t just dangerous across the boroughs. Of the 5,070 workplace deaths that occurred nationwide in 2024, 1,034 of those recorded deaths were in construction, per reports.
But New York’s 2026 numbers are already troubling.
A 47-year-old construction worker was fatally injured, and a 40-year-old man was left in critical condition after a trench collapsed at a Brooklyn jobsite on February 27.
The alarming incident closely trailed the death of a construction worker who fell 60 feet into a massive ditch at Hudson Yards last October.
“The Gateway Development Commission, Amtrak and Related Companies extend our profound condolences to the family of the worker who suffered a fatal injury on the Hudson Yards Concrete Casing project,” the developers said in a statement following the tragedy. “Our thoughts are with his loved ones during this difficult time.”


