Construction Bonding Guide
Document Type: Reference Guide
Version: 1.0
Last Updated: February 2026
Distribute To: Estimating, Project Managers, Executives
Purpose
Provide guidance on construction bonds, requirements, and how to obtain and manage bonding capacity.
Types of Construction Bonds
1. Bid Bond
Purpose: Guarantees contractor will enter contract if awarded
When Required:
- Most public projects
- Some private projects
- Bid documents will specify
Typical Amount: 5-10% of bid
If Contractor Refuses Award:
- Surety may pay difference to next bidder
- Up to bond amount
- Affects bonding capacity
2. Performance Bond
Purpose: Guarantees contractor will complete work per contract
When Required:
- Public projects (usually mandatory)
- Private projects (owner discretion)
- Lender requirements
Typical Amount: 100% of contract value
If Contractor Defaults:
- Surety may complete work
- Or pay owner to hire replacement
- Up to bond amount
3. Payment Bond
Purpose: Guarantees contractor will pay subs and suppliers
When Required:
- Public projects (protects claimants, no lien rights)
- Private projects (often with performance bond)
Typical Amount: 100% of contract value
Claimants Protected:
- Subcontractors
- Suppliers
- Laborers
- (Usually first and second tier)
4. Maintenance/Warranty Bond
Purpose: Guarantees correction of defects during warranty
When Required:
- Some projects
- Typically 1-2 years
Typical Amount: 10-25% of contract value
5. Subdivision/Site Improvement Bond
Purpose: Guarantees completion of public improvements
When Required:
- Land development
- Municipal requirements
How Bonds Work
OWNER
│
│ Contract
│
CONTRACTOR ←──── BOND ←──── SURETY
(Principal) (Guarantor)
│
If default...
│
▼
SURETY STEPS IN
- Completes work, OR
- Pays for completion, OR
- Pays damages up to bond amount
Key Relationships:
- Principal: Contractor (you)
- Obligee: Owner (protected party)
- Surety: Bond company (guarantor)
Bond Costs
Typical Rates:
| Contractor Class | Rate per $1,000 |
|---|---|
| Excellent | $5-$15 |
| Good | $15-$25 |
| Average | $25-$35 |
| Marginal | $35-$50+ |
Example:
$5,000,000 contract × $15/$1,000 = $75,000 bond cost
Factors Affecting Rate:
- Company financials
- Experience
- Work in progress
- Project type
- Bond amount
- Surety relationship
Obtaining Bonding
What Sureties Evaluate:
The 3 C's:
-
Character
- Management experience
- Reputation
- Track record
- References
-
Capacity
- Technical ability
- Equipment
- Personnel
- Experience with project type
-
Capital
- Financial strength
- Working capital
- Net worth
- Profitability
Financial Requirements:
| Metric | Typical Expectation |
|---|---|
| Working Capital | 10-15% of backlog |
| Net Worth | Support bonding limit |
| Debt/Equity | Below 3:1 |
| Profitability | Consistent profits |
Documentation Required:
- Audited financial statements (CPA)
- Work in progress schedule
- Organizational documents
- Bank references
- Trade references
- Personal financial statements (principals)
- Resume/experience of key personnel
Bonding Capacity
Single Job Limit:
Maximum bond for one project
Aggregate Limit:
Maximum total bonds outstanding
Example:
- Single: $10,000,000
- Aggregate: $30,000,000
Factors:
- Net worth
- Working capital
- Experience
- Current backlog
- Surety appetite
Increasing Bonding Capacity
Strategies:
-
Strengthen Financials
- Retain earnings
- Increase working capital
- Reduce debt
- Get audited statements
-
Build Relationship
- Work with established broker
- Consistent surety relationship
- Timely reporting
- No claims
-
Demonstrate Performance
- Complete projects successfully
- Maintain profitability
- Build experience
- Get good references
-
Provide Collateral
- Personal guarantees
- Bank letters of credit
- Cash collateral
Bond Claims
Payment Bond Claim Process:
For Claimants:
- Determine if bond exists
- Verify you're protected class
- Meet notice requirements
- File claim within deadline
For Contractor (Principal):
- Notify surety of claim
- Investigate validity
- Resolve if legitimate
- Dispute if not
California Payment Bond Deadlines:
| Claimant | Notice | Suit |
|---|---|---|
| Direct sub/supplier | None | 6 months |
| Sub-sub/supplier | 30 days prelim notice | 6 months |
Bond Indemnity
General Indemnity Agreement (GIA):
What You're Signing:
- Personal guarantee of principals
- Pledge of company assets
- Right of surety to take over
- Obligation to hold surety harmless
Key Terms:
- Indemnification
- Collateral security
- Assignment of contract
- Books and records access
Working with Your Surety
Best Practices:
- Communicate regularly
- Provide timely financials
- Notify of issues early
- No surprises
- Build relationship
What to Share:
- WIP reports (quarterly)
- Annual financials
- Large project opportunities
- Problems (before they escalate)
Related Documents
- Prequalification Procedure
- Contract Review
- Financial Reporting
- Project Setup
Template provided by support.construction. Work with a qualified surety broker.