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State Lien Law Quick Reference

Quick reference for mechanics lien deadlines and requirements by state. California is covered in detail first since that's our primary audience.

Always Verify Current Law

Lien laws change frequently. This reference is current as of February 2026. Always consult with a construction attorney familiar with your state's laws before relying on any deadline.


California (Primary Reference)โ€‹

California is governed by Civil Code ยงยง8000-9566. This is the most comprehensive section since most of our users work in Silicon Valley.

Deadlinesโ€‹

ActionDeadlineCode Section
Preliminary Notice20 days from first furnishingยง8200
Notice of Completion (owner)15 days after completionยง8182
Mechanics Lien (no NOC)90 days from completionยง8412
Mechanics Lien (with NOC - GC)60 days from NOC recordingยง8412
Mechanics Lien (with NOC - Sub)30 days from NOC recordingยง8412
Serve lien copy on owner15 days from recordingยง8416
Foreclosure lawsuit90 days from recording lienยง8460
Stop Payment Notice (private)Before lender disbursesยง8500
Stop Payment Notice (public)30 days after NOC (or 90 days)ยง9356
Payment Bond suit (public)6 months after stop notice periodยง9558
Design Professional Lien90 days from recordationยง8319

Who Must Send Preliminary Noticeโ€‹

PartyRequired?
SubcontractorsYes
Material suppliersYes
Equipment lessorsYes
LaborersYes
General contractorsNo (recommended)
Design professionalsNo

Lien Waiver Formsโ€‹

California requires use of statutory waiver forms (Civil Code ยงยง8132-8138). Non-statutory forms are void.

FormCode SectionWhen Used
Conditional Progressยง8132Before receiving progress payment
Unconditional Progressยง8134After progress payment clears
Conditional Finalยง8136Before receiving final payment
Unconditional Finalยง8138After final payment clears

Prompt Paymentโ€‹

RequirementRuleCode Section
GC to Sub (private)7 days after receiving owner paymentยง8812
Retention release (private)7 days after owner pays GC retentionยง8814
Late payment penalty (private)2% per monthยง8818
GC to Sub (public)10 days after receiving paymentPCC ยง10262
Retention release (public)60 days after project acceptancePCC ยง7107

Special California Rulesโ€‹

  • No-lien clauses are void (ยง8120)
  • Tenant improvements: AB 2466 (2025) โ€” lien attaches to leasehold interest
  • Design professional liens available pre-construction (ยง8302)
  • Bonded stop payment notice: Lender MUST withhold funds (ยง8532)
  • Retention cap: 5% on public works (PCC ยง9203)
  • E-recording: Available in most Silicon Valley counties

Silicon Valley County Recordersโ€‹

CountyPhoneWebsite
Santa Clara(408) 299-5688clerkrecorder.sccgov.org
San Mateo(650) 363-4500smcacre.org
Alameda(510) 272-6362acgov.org/recorder
Santa Cruz(831) 454-2800sccoclerk.com
San Francisco(415) 554-4950sfassessor.org/recorder

Texasโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Preliminary Notice (residential)15 days from first furnishNot required for commercial
Preliminary Notice (commercial)Not requiredโ€”
Notice of Intent to Lien10 days before filingRequired
Lien Filing15th day of 4th month after last workCalendar months
Lien Foreclosure2 years from filingAbsolute deadline

Special Rules:

  • Different rules for residential vs. commercial โ€” commercial is more lenient on notice
  • Retainage lien available
  • "Fund trapping" notice to owner available
  • Must send monthly notices on residential projects

Floridaโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Notice to Owner45 days from first furnishRequired for subs/suppliers
Notice of Intent to Lien45 days before filingSpecific form required
Lien Filing90 days from last workCalendar days
Lien Foreclosure1 year from filingAbsolute deadline

Special Rules:

  • Notice to Owner must include specific statutory language
  • Must serve on owner and contractor
  • "Contractor's Final Payment Affidavit" process
  • Fraudulent lien penalties exist โ€” don't overstate your claim

New Yorkโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Preliminary NoticeNot requiredโ€”
Lien Filing8 months from last workFiled with county clerk
Lien Foreclosure1 year from filingCan extend once

Special Rules:

  • No preliminary notice required
  • Trust fund statute (Article 3-A) โ€” construction funds are trust funds
  • Public improvement liens have different rules
  • Lien can be bonded off by owner/GC

Arizonaโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Preliminary Notice20 days from first furnishRequired except for laborers
Lien Filing120 days from completionCalendar days
Lien Foreclosure6 months from filingAbsolute deadline

Special Rules:

  • Must include statutory language in preliminary notice
  • Lien attaches to lot and building
  • Homeowner protection: must include "Notice of Lien Rights" in certain contracts
  • No stop notice statute โ€” use payment bonds on public work

Nevadaโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Notice of Right to Lien31 days from first furnishAll claimants
Lien Filing90 days from completionCalendar days
Lien Foreclosure6 months from filingAbsolute deadline

Special Rules:

  • Called "Notice of Right to Lien" (not preliminary notice)
  • Must be served on owner, GC, and construction control
  • Nevada has strong lien protections for contractors
  • Public works: NRS Chapter 339 payment bond statute

Washingtonโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Notice to Owner60 days from first furnishRequired for subs/suppliers
Lien Filing90 days from completion or cessationCalendar days
Lien Foreclosure8 months from filingAbsolute deadline

Special Rules:

  • Called "Notice to Owner" or "Pre-Claim Notice"
  • Professional services (architects, engineers) have different rules
  • "Retainage" statute limits retention to 5% on public works
  • Must provide lien release bond information upon request

Oregonโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Notice of Right to a Lien8 days from first furnishVery short window
Lien Filing75 days from completionCalendar days
Lien Foreclosure120 days from filingShort window

Special Rules:

  • Extremely short 8-day preliminary notice window โ€” send immediately
  • Called "Notice of Right to a Lien"
  • Must be in specific statutory form
  • 120-day foreclosure deadline is one of the shortest in the nation

Coloradoโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Preliminary NoticeNot requiredโ€”
Notice of Intent to Lien10 days before filingRequired
Lien Filing4 months from last workCalendar months
Lien Foreclosure6 months from filingAbsolute deadline

Special Rules:

  • No preliminary notice required
  • Notice of intent to lien required 10 days before filing
  • Must serve notice of intent on owner and GC
  • Lien statement must include specific statutory elements

Illinoisโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Notice to Owner60 days from first furnishSubs only, not GCs
Lien Filing4 months from completionCalendar months
Lien Foreclosure2 years from filingAbsolute deadline

Special Rules:

  • Subcontractors must send notice to owner within 60 days
  • GCs do not need to send notice
  • "Waiver of lien" forms are common but must comply with statute
  • Lien covers interest of owner who authorized the improvement

Georgiaโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Preliminary NoticeNot requiredโ€”
Notice of CommencementFiled by ownerOwner obligation
Lien Filing90 days from completionCalendar days
Lien Foreclosure365 days from filingAbsolute deadline

Special Rules:

  • No preliminary notice required
  • Owner may file "Notice of Commencement" โ€” if filed, you must send a "Notice to Contractor"
  • Lien must be filed in Superior Court clerk's office
  • "Interim lien" available during construction

North Carolinaโ€‹

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Preliminary NoticeNot requiredโ€”
Lien AgentDesignated on projects over $30KMust file notice with lien agent
Lien Filing120 days from last furnishingCalendar days
Lien Foreclosure180 days from filingAbsolute deadline

Special Rules:

  • "Lien Agent" system โ€” owner designates agent for receiving notices
  • Must file "Notice to Lien Agent" within 15 days of first furnishing (projects over $30K)
  • No traditional preliminary notice
  • Subrogation rights available

General Principles Across All Statesโ€‹

Preliminary Noticeโ€‹

  • Most states require notice within 20-60 days of first work
  • Some states (NY, CO, GA) don't require preliminary notice
  • Late notices typically only protect recent work
  • Always send via certified mail with return receipt

Lien Filingโ€‹

  • Typically 60-120 days from last work or completion
  • Must include accurate property description
  • Must be recorded with county recorder or clerk
  • Verify correct legal description before filing

Foreclosureโ€‹

  • Usually 90 days to 2 years from lien filing
  • Missing foreclosure deadline makes lien unenforceable
  • Owner can petition to remove expired lien
  • Foreclosure is a lawsuit โ€” requires attorney

Public Worksโ€‹

  • Cannot lien government property in any state
  • Payment bonds (Miller Act federal, state equivalents) are the remedy
  • Stop payment notices available in many states
  • Preliminary notice requirements often still apply


Last updated: February 2026. Always verify current law with legal counsel.