π Construction Bonding Guide
Bonding is your ticket to larger projects. This guide covers how bonds work, how to get bonded, and how to increase your bonding capacity.
Your bonding capacity is based on trust. Sureties bet on your ability to complete work. Build that trust over time.
Types of Construction Bondsβ
Bid Bondβ
- Guarantees you'll honor your bid if selected
- Usually 5-10% of bid amount
- Ensures you'll provide performance/payment bonds
- Forfeited if you withdraw after bid opening
Performance Bondβ
- Guarantees you'll complete the contract
- Usually 100% of contract value
- Protects owner if you default
- Surety may complete work or pay owner
Payment Bondβ
- Guarantees you'll pay subs and suppliers
- Usually 100% of contract value
- Required on public projects (Miller Act)
- Allows subs/suppliers to make claims
Maintenance Bondβ
- Guarantees work for a period after completion
- Usually 1-2 years
- Covers defects in workmanship or materials
- Sometimes called warranty bond
How Bonding Worksβ
The Three-Party Agreementβ
- Principal (You) - The contractor getting bonded
- Obligee (Owner) - Who the bond protects
- Surety - The insurance company backing the bond
If Things Go Wrongβ
When you can't perform:
- Surety investigates the situation
- Surety may provide financing to help you finish
- Surety may hire another contractor to complete
- Surety may pay the owner directly
Important: You must repay the surety for any losses. Bonds are not insuranceβthey're a guarantee backed by your assets.
Getting Bondedβ
What Sureties Evaluate (The 3 C's)β
1. Character
- Your reputation and track record
- Personal credit history
- References from owners, subs, suppliers
- History of claims or defaults
2. Capacity
- Experience with similar project types
- Organizational capabilities
- Key personnel qualifications
- Equipment and resources
3. Capital
- Financial statements (CPA-prepared)
- Working capital
- Net worth
- Bank relationships
Minimum Requirements (Typical)β
To get bonded, you generally need:
- 3+ years in business
- Profitable track record
- Working capital = 10% of desired bond
- Net worth = 10% of desired bond
- Clean personal credit
- CPA-reviewed or audited financials
The Application Processβ
- Find a bond producer (agent/broker)
- Complete application with financials
- Provide supporting documents:
- Financial statements (2-3 years)
- Work-in-progress schedule
- Personal financial statements
- Bank reference letter
- Resume of key personnel
- List of completed projects
- Surety underwrites your account
- Receive bonding line and rate
Bonding Capacityβ
How It's Calculatedβ
Single Job Limit - Largest single project you can bond Aggregate Limit - Total bonded work at one time
Typical formulas:
- Single = 10x working capital (varies by surety)
- Aggregate = 15-20x working capital
Example:β
Working Capital: $500,000
- Single Job Limit: ~$5,000,000
- Aggregate Limit: ~$7,500,000
Increasing Your Capacityβ
Short-term:
- Reduce underbillings (increase WIP)
- Collect receivables faster
- Pay down debt
Long-term:
- Retain profits (don't distribute everything)
- Build net worth over time
- Establish track record on larger jobs
- Develop relationships with sureties
Bond Costsβ
Premium Ratesβ
Typical rates: 1-3% of contract value
Factors affecting rate:
- Your experience and financials
- Project type and risk
- Contract terms
- Competition among sureties
Example:β
$1,000,000 project at 2%:
- Performance bond: $10,000
- Payment bond: $10,000
- Total cost: $20,000
Reducing Bond Costsβ
- Shop multiple sureties through your broker
- Build a track record - rates drop with experience
- Improve financials - better ratios = better rates
- Maintain relationships - loyalty can help pricing
- Complete projects well - no claims = lower rates
Working with Your Suretyβ
What They Want to Seeβ
Quarterly:
- Work-in-progress reports
- Accounts receivable aging
- Backlog report
Annually:
- CPA-prepared financial statements
- Personal financial statements
- Updated equipment list
- Organizational chart
Red Flags for Suretiesβ
- Declining working capital
- Overdue receivables
- Job losses or fade
- Owner disputes
- Subcontractor complaints
- Rapid growth without capital
Maintaining Trustβ
- Communicate proactively about problems
- Submit financials on time
- Don't surprise them with bad news
- Pay sub and suppliers promptly
- Complete jobs profitably
Common Bonding Problemsβ
"I can't get bonded"β
Solutions:
- Start with smaller bonds to build track record
- Improve financial statements
- Consider SBA bond guarantee program
- Find a surety specializing in newer contractors
"My capacity is too low"β
Solutions:
- Partner with bonded contractor on larger jobs
- Joint venture to share bonding
- Reduce work-in-progress to free up capacity
- Grow capital through retained earnings
"My rate is too high"β
Solutions:
- Shop your account to other sureties
- Improve your financial ratios
- Complete current work profitably
- Reduce risk profile (avoid problem projects)
SBA Surety Bond Guarantee Programβ
For contractors who can't get bonded conventionally:
- SBA guarantees 80-90% of surety's loss
- Bonds up to $6.5 million per project
- $10 million aggregate
- Faster approval through certified sureties
Who qualifies:
- Small businesses meeting SBA size standards
- Can't obtain bonding on reasonable terms
- Have necessary skills and experience