Your Home Building Coach with Bill Reid

Cost Plus Contract Explained: 3 Types + California Law

40 min · 9. Mai 2026
Episode Cost Plus Contract Explained: 3 Types + California Law Cover

Beschreibung

A cost plus contract means your contractor gets reimbursed for every project cost plus a profit margin — but it comes in three flavors, and the structural differences determine who carries the financial risk. Download Your Free Cost-Plus Reality Check Tool [https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/cost-plus-reality-check] Bill Reid explains cost plus percentage (most dangerous for homeowners), cost plus fixed fee (better protection), and cost plus with guaranteed maximum price (safest hybrid). You'll discover why California banned pure cost plus contracts for residential remodels under Business and Professions Code 7159.5, the industry-standard markup range (15-25%, or $75K-$125K on a $500K project), and the five drift triggers that push projects into cost plus territory. Bill shares seven critical questions to ask yourself before signing, the narrow band of homeowners for whom cost plus genuinely works, and why disaster rebuilds almost always require this structure. This is part one of a two-part series — the decide episode. Episode 57 next week covers tactical execution. Related: Episodes 50, 53. Section 3.202 of The Awakened Homeowner book. Free download: Tale of Two Homeowners story + Fixed Price vs Cost Plus micro-tool. BuildQuest beta at buildquest.co Understanding time and materials contracts, markup percentages, legal restrictions, and when to walk away from cost plus deals A cost plus contract reimburses your contractor for every project cost plus a profit margin — but it comes in three distinct flavors, and the difference between them determines who carries the financial risk. In this episode, Bill Reid breaks down cost plus percentage (the most dangerous for homeowners), cost plus fixed fee (better protection), and cost plus with a guaranteed maximum price (the safest hybrid). You'll learn why California banned pure cost plus contracts for residential remodels under Business and Professions Code 7159.5, the five drift triggers that push projects into cost plus territory, and the narrow band of homeowners for whom this structure actually works. Bill shares the industry-standard markup range (15-25%, meaning $75K-$125K in fees on a $500K project), explains when disaster rebuilds require cost plus by necessity, and provides seven critical questions to ask yourself before signing. This is the decide episode — Episode 57 next week covers execution. If you're staring at a contract right now, this episode will give you the clarity to make the right call for your project. **What You'll Discover:** - The three flavors of cost plus contracts and why cost plus percentage creates backwards incentives that reward contractor inefficiency - Why California Business and Professions Code 7159.5 makes pure cost plus illegal for residential home improvement — and what the exemptions are - How industry-standard markup of 15-25% translates to real dollars on your project - The five drift triggers that land projects in cost plus territory: incomplete plans, missing specs, scope changes, rushing to start, deprioritizing price - Why disaster rebuilds (fire, flood) almost always require cost plus structures - The three narrow audiences for whom cost plus genuinely works — and why most homeowners don't fit that profile - Seven go/no-go questions to ask yourself before signing anything **Related Episodes:** - Episode 50: The Two Estimating Windows Every Homeowner Must Understand - Episode 53: The Complete Bid Package — What Must Be In It - Episode 57: Cost Plus Contracts Part 2 — The Execution Checklist (Next Week) **Resources:** - Section 3.202 of *The Awakened Homeowner* book covers the full cost plus framework - Free download: *The Tale of Two Homeowners* story - Free micro-tool: Fixed Price vs Cost Plus Decision Framework - BuildQuest planning platform — reserve your beta spot at buildquest.co This is part one of a two-part series. This episode helps you decide whether cost plus is right for your project. Next week's Episode 57 covers tactical execution — the nine items that must be in your contract, double-dipping warnings, and the three moves that bend cost plus toward fixed price protection. Bill Reid is a residential construction expert with 35+ years of experience and the author of *The Awakened Homeowner*. His mission: enlighten, empower, and protect homeowners planning custom builds and major remodels. --- Get the book — The Awakened Homeowner: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0F1MDRPK7 Also available on all platforms: https://books2read.com/u/bpxj76 Free Download — The Tale of Two Homeowners: https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/09608e1727 BuildQuest Planning Platform: https://buildquest.co More resources: https://www.theawakenedhomeowner.com/ Questions? Email Bill directly: wwreid@theawakenedhomeowner.com Listen on all podcast platforms: https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/listen Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theawakenedhomeowner/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theawakenedhomeowner/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheAwakenedHomeowner Mentioned in this episode: The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book] The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book]

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Episode Contractor Insurance Requirements That Protect Your Home Investment Cover

Contractor Insurance Requirements That Protect Your Home Investment

Contractor insurance requirements protect you from the financial catastrophe most homeowners never see coming: when a worker gets hurt on your property and there's no valid insurance coverage to catch it. Those six-figure medical bills and lost wages don't disappear. They land on whoever forgot to check. And under premises liability law, that person can be you. GET YOUR FREE INSURANCE PROTECTION CHECKLIST [https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/insurance-protection-checklist] Bill Reid walks you through the two insurance policies that stand between you and disaster — general liability and workers compensation — and gives you the exact four-step verification process to confirm coverage is real and current, not just claimed. WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER Most homeowners assume if someone gets hurt during construction, that's the contractor's problem. They've got insurance. And when everything is in order, that's true. But construction has a hard rule underneath it: when something goes wrong and there's no valid coverage to catch it, the law goes looking for the person with the assets. On your project, that person is you. This episode picks up directly from Episode 62, the Cash Trap conversation that struck a nerve with listeners. The contractor who offers to knock 10 percent off if you pay cash is funding that discount partly by skipping insurance. The discount felt like found money. Today is the day that bill actually comes due. Bill breaks down why you're exposed in the first place. Premises liability means as the property owner, you owe a basic duty of care to workers on your land. The more you micromanage the crew, the more responsibility you can quietly pull onto yourself. But step back and let a competent general contractor run the site — which is their job — and you genuinely lower your own exposure. Then there's the prime contractor rule. When a worker gets hurt and there's no workers comp standing behind them, the responsibility rolls uphill. If there's no insured contractor in the chain, the injured worker's claim can roll all the way up to you. Your homeowners insurance often won't help. Many policies specifically exclude injuries tied to construction work, and even when personal liability coverage kicks in, the limits are usually modest against claims that can run well past six figures. Bill introduces the two policies built to stand in front of all of it. General liability insurance covers the damage and injury the contractor's work causes to other people and their property. It commonly starts at one million dollars of coverage — that's the floor for a serious operation, not a luxury add-on. It responds to accidents, contractual liability, events caused by employees or subs, and the products and work the contractor produces. The part most homeowners never think to ask about: completed operations coverage. Some failures don't show up for months. A brand new deck looks gorgeous at the final walkthrough, then collapses at a backyard party six months later. Completed operations coverage is the thing that answers for that. Here's the catch: most states do not require general liability as a condition of holding a contractor's license. It's a patchwork, and you cannot count on the rules to protect you. If your state won't require it, you require it. Make written proof of liability coverage a flat condition of getting the job. Workers compensation is the policy that ends up protecting you the most, even though it's got the worker's name on it, not yours. Workers comp pays an injured worker's medical bills and lost wages when they get hurt on the job, and nobody has to prove whose fault it was. It just pays. And in exchange, that worker gives up the right to sue. Take that comp away and there's nothing keeping that worker or their attorney from looking straight at your house as the next deepest pocket. A serious fall, a bad cut, a back injury — those run into six figures fast. Workers comp is the wall that keeps that number from ever becoming yours. Most states require contractors to carry it. Texas is the well-known exception for private work. But knowing the law is worth exactly nothing if you just take the contractor's word for it. Bill walks you through the dodges contractors use to skip coverage, starting with the oldest: the no employees claim. When you check a contractor's status with the state board, you'll sometimes see they've claimed they have no employees. That can be legitimate. But a lot of the time, it's a contractor paying workers cash off the books so he doesn't have to carry a comp policy at all. That unpaid risk is sitting on your property wearing a tool belt and standing on a ladder. California's 2026 rule just closed that loophole. The state now requires every licensed contractor to carry workers comp on file, even the ones who claim they have no employees. Bill treats this as the direction of travel for the whole country. The I have no employees answer is no longer something you nod along to. It's a cue to ask one more question. Bill gives you four moves that turn everything into actual protection. None of them are hard. Any contractor running a real business will pass every one without blinking. Move one: ask three questions. Do you subcontract all of your work? Do you carry workers comp on all of your employees? If I select you, can you have your agent put your policy on an insurance certificate for me? Move two: get a certificate of insurance that names you as additionally insured with your property address. The certificate must come directly from the contractor's insurance agent, not a screenshot they text you. Being listed as additionally insured triggers automatic notification if the policy lapses mid-project. Move three: confirm the subs carry the same coverage. Every subcontractor on your site needs the same liability and workers comp. A good general contractor collects a certificate from every sub automatically. Ask plainly: are all of your subcontractors properly insured, and can I get copies of their certificates? Move four: call the carrier yourself. You confirm the policy is active and you confirm who it actually covers. Not just that a policy exists, but that it reaches the people on the ladder. Bill tells the story of a homeowner who got a real certificate that only covered the office staff, not the subcontracted crew on the roof. One of them fell badly. The homeowner got sued. The certificate was completely real. It just wasn't covering the one person who actually got hurt. That is why you call the carrier. A certificate you got from your contractor proves they own a printer. A certificate you confirm with a carrier proves they own a policy. Bill wraps with the direction for the next episode. Today was all about making sure they're covered. Next time: the insurance you carry. Your homeowner's policy may not cover your home in the middle of a renovation. There's language about vacancy and business activity that can leave you exposed at the worst possible moment. That's builder's risk and your own coverage. The other half of protecting yourself. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE Episode 62 [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/episode/construction-schedule-control-project-timeline-budget/] — The Cash Trap: why paying a contractor cash costs you more than taxes Episode 51 [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/episode/budget-checkpoint-vs-formal-estimate-/] — Two Estimating Windows and the Cost Clarity Spectrum Episode 48 [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/episode/-how-to-hire-a-contractor-what-theyre-really-thinking-/]— Real Contracts: The Kind We Spent Episodes Building Enlighten, empower, protect. Now go make it happen. * Free Story: The Tale of Two Homeowners [https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/09608e1727] * Watch: YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TheAwakenedHomeowner] * Listen: Podcast [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/listen] * Read: AMAZON [https://www.amazon.com/Awakened-Homeowner-Orchestrate-Construction-Success-ebook/dp/B0F1MDRPK7] , All Book Stores [https://books2read.com/u/bpxj76] * Visit: Homepage [https://www.theawakenedhomeowner.com/] * Follow: Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/theawakenedhomeowner/]: Facebook: [https://www.facebook.com/theawakenedhomeowner/] * Learn: BuildQuest Planning Platform: [https://buildquest.co] * Contact: Email: wwreid@theawakenedhomeowner.com Mentioned in this episode: The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book]

27. Juni 202631 min
Episode Cash Discount Construction Scams: The Real Cost Homeowners Pay Cover

Cash Discount Construction Scams: The Real Cost Homeowners Pay

Cash discount construction scams destroy homeowners every year — and the offer always feels like a gift. Your contractor leans in at the kitchen table and says if you pay cash, he can take 10% off the whole job. On a $130,000 kitchen remodel, that's $13,000. Your brain lights up. But that discount isn't coming out of thin air. It's coming out of something the contractor just decided he's no longer going to pay for. GET YOUR CASH-TRAP PROTECTION CHECKLIST [https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/cash-trap-protection-checklist] FOR FREE WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER Bill Reid breaks down exactly why contractors can offer cash discounts — and it has nothing to do with doing you a favor. To hand you 10%, they're skipping roughly 30% worth of obligations: income tax, payroll tax, workers compensation insurance, and liability coverage. You get the leftover 10%. You also inherit every dollar of catastrophic risk they just shed. The workers comp liability alone is financially devastating. Construction is genuinely dangerous work — more than one in five worker injuries in this country happen in construction. When an uninsured worker gets hurt on your property, many state laws treat you as the employer. A man falls off your roof and breaks his back. He can't work for two years. Medical bills climb into six figures. His lost wages stack on top. Because your contractor never carried workers comp, you're the one on the hook. Your homeowner's insurance policy likely won't cover it because you knowingly hired an uninsured crew. Cash deals also destroy your paper trail. No written contract because a contract creates the record the contractor desperately doesn't want. No receipt because writing you a receipt would be evidence against him. Just you and the contractor and your memory — and memory is a terrible contract. Three months later when there's a disagreement about what was paid for, it's your word against his with zero documentation to settle it. No warranty recourse either. When work fails six months later and you have a signed contract, you can point to the document. With a cash handshake in the driveway, you have nothing to enforce. The tax problem haunts you years later when you sell. Every dollar of documented improvements you made to your home gets added to your basis — and a higher basis means a lower taxable gain. That $130,000 kitchen could save you thousands when you sell. But only if you can prove it. The government wants receipts, invoices, canceled checks, permits. Cash deals are specifically designed to never create that documentation. The 10% you saved at the start quietly costs you far more when you can't prove you spent anything. Bill walks through the four-step protection system. First, verify license and insurance before anyone lifts a finger. Call the insurance carrier listed on the certificate and confirm the policy is actually active right now. Second, insist on a written contract with a documented payment schedule tying every payment to completed work. Pay by check or card so there's a clean traceable record. Third, when there's a deposit for special materials, ask who the supplier is and get acknowledgement they were actually paid. Fourth, if a contractor pushes the cash idea hard, let that pressure be your answer. The push itself is the red flag. Smile, thank them, and walk. When you choose the contractor who bids honestly, carries insurance, and puts it all in writing, you're protecting your family and casting a vote with your dollars for the kind of contractor who deserves to stay in business. Every time a homeowner says no to the cash trap, the whole industry gets a little more honest. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE Episode 59 [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/episode/construction-contract-basics-what-to-check-before-you-sign/]— Payment Schedules: How to Structure Your Construction Contract Episode 57 [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/episode/cost-plus-contract-protection-system-saves/] — How to Verify a Contractor's License and Insurance Episode 51 [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/episode/budget-checkpoint-vs-formal-estimate-/] — Understanding Construction Cost Estimates KEY TAKEAWAYS Contractors who offer 10% cash discounts are saving 30% by skipping taxes and insurance — you get the leftover 10% and all the risk Workers comp liability transfers to you in many states when the contractor is uninsured — a single injury can cost six figures Cash deals eliminate your paper trail, voiding warranty protection and preventing you from claiming tax basis when you sell Verify license and insurance by calling the carrier directly, then insist on written contracts with traceable payments The honest contractor isn't more expensive — they're telling you the truth about the real cost of doing business legally Enlighten, empower, protect. Now go make it happen. * Free Story: The Tale of Two Homeowners [https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/09608e1727] * Watch: YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TheAwakenedHomeowner] * Listen: Podcast [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/listen] * Read: AMAZON [https://www.amazon.com/Awakened-Homeowner-Orchestrate-Construction-Success-ebook/dp/B0F1MDRPK7] , All Book Stores [https://books2read.com/u/bpxj76] * Visit: Homepage [https://www.theawakenedhomeowner.com/] * Follow: Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/theawakenedhomeowner/]: Facebook: [https://www.facebook.com/theawakenedhomeowner/] * Learn: BuildQuest Planning Platform: [https://buildquest.co] * Contact: Email: wwreid@theawakenedhomeowner.com --- Mentioned in this episode: The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book] The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book]

20. Juni 202631 min
Episode Construction Schedule: Control Timeline & Budget Cover

Construction Schedule: Control Timeline & Budget

Construction schedule mistakes are one of the most common reasons projects finish late and run over budget. Most homeowners never see a real construction schedule before they sign a contract—and that missing document ends up costing them thousands in delays, rushed decisions, and money that runs ahead of completed work. GET YOUR CONSTRUCTION SCHEDULE CHECKLIST [https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/construction-schedule-checklist]FOR FREE! In this episode, Bill Reid explains why the construction schedule is the keystone of your entire construction contract. It is not just a start date and an end date. A real construction schedule is five things at once: foresight, planning, material ordering at the right time, getting the right people on site in the right order, and communication so everybody knows what is coming next. Pull that keystone out, and the project falls apart. WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER Bill walks you through how expert contractors actually build construction schedules using real scheduling software. You will learn how the software works backward from install dates to calculate order-by dates for every special-order item on your job—windows, cabinets, tile, stone, fixtures. That February thirteenth order-by date is not a guess. It is the schedule thinking. You will see why material procurement is one of the biggest causes of construction delays—and how a real construction schedule prevents the panicked Thursday phone call where your contractor asks what tile you picked because they need it on site Monday. When the schedule maps out every order-by date weeks or months in advance, you know your decision deadlines and you are never the reason your own project stalls. Bill explains the critical path—the concept that some things have to happen before other things can happen. You cannot set countertops until cabinets are in. You cannot close walls until wiring and plumbing pass inspection. The construction schedule maps that order out. When the critical path breaks, something always gives: timing slips, cost goes up, or quality drops. Sometimes all three at once. You will learn exactly what to look for when you read a construction schedule before signing a contract. Four things: the completion date, order-by dates for your selections, inspection milestones, and whether the whole thing hangs together or looks like three lines somebody typed to make you feel better. Bill shows you what a weak schedule looks like versus a real one—and why a contractor who can show you a detailed schedule has actually estimated your job, while a contractor who cannot has mostly guessed at it. PAYMENT SCHEDULES AND CONSTRUCTION SCHEDULES ARE THE SAME DOCUMENT The second half of the episode reveals the part most homeowners miss: your payment schedule and your construction schedule are not two separate things. They are the same document wearing two different hats. Once you see that connection, you will never look at a contract the same way. Bill walks through the golden rule: you pay for work that has been completed, not work that is promised. In a fixed-price contract, the milestones on your construction schedule become your payment triggers. Demolition complete—payment one. Concrete underfloor done—payment two. Framing up, rough-in inspection passed, cabinets installed—each milestone is tied to a payment. You can walk in, see the work is done, and write the check knowing exactly what you paid for. In a cost-plus contract, the construction schedule plays a different but equally important role. It becomes your monitoring tool, your dashboard. You line up the money you have paid out against where you are on the schedule. If you have paid forty percent of the budget but the schedule says you are only a quarter of the way through, that is your early warning light. The schedule tells you whether your money is moving too fast—before it gets too far ahead of the work. Bill explains the work breakdown structure, the tool that breaks the cost of the job down the way the project actually flows: site prep, demolition, foundation, framing. Each piece of work becomes its own line with its own dollar amount following the same order as the construction schedule. You are never arguing about what the work is worth. You just look at what is done and pay for it. You will learn why holding retention back until final acceptance is your leverage at the finish line—and why deposits for special-order materials are fair when they align with the schedule's order-by dates, but deposits just to buy lumber are a red flag. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE Episode 53 - The Bid Package - Bill explains the complete specifications and plans that make a real construction schedule possible. A schedule is only as good as the plans it is built on. Vague plans mean a fictional schedule. Episode 57 - Cost-Plus Contracts - Bill walks through cost-plus agreements and the not-to-exceed number. The construction schedule is your dashboard for keeping cost-plus budgets from running away. Episode 60 - Change Orders - Every change order moves the construction schedule. This episode shows you how to track those shifts so time and money stay aligned. * Free Story: The Tale of Two Homeowners [https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/09608e1727] * Watch: YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TheAwakenedHomeowner] * Listen: Podcast [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/listen] * Read: AMAZON [https://www.amazon.com/Awakened-Homeowner-Orchestrate-Construction-Success-ebook/dp/B0F1MDRPK7] , All Book Stores [https://books2read.com/u/bpxj76] * Visit: Homepage [https://www.theawakenedhomeowner.com/] * Follow: Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/theawakenedhomeowner/]: Facebook: [https://www.facebook.com/theawakenedhomeowner/] * Learn: BuildQuest Planning Platform: [https://buildquest.co] * Contact: Email: wwreid@theawakenedhomeowner.com Mentioned in this episode: The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book] The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book]

13. Juni 202640 min
Episode Change Orders: The $15K Surprise & How to Stop It Cover

Change Orders: The $15K Surprise & How to Stop It

Get Your Change Order Tracker Tool [https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/change-order-tracker?_gl=1*1mouqi2*_gcl_au*MjExNjgwNjQ1My4xNzc5OTMxMDQwLjMzNzU3Mjc3MS4xNzgwMTU0NDg3LjE3ODAxNTQ1Njc.] - For FREE! Change orders start more arguments on job sites than anything else. You're three weeks into your remodel when the contractor mentions an extra $15,000 for work you thought was included. Bill Reid explains the critical distinction most contracts ignore: change orders versus extra work orders. A change order is something already in your plans that you changed. An extra work order is brand new work never in the original scope. The number one source of both is incomplete plans and specifications. Things never addressed during design or discussed but never written down. Bill covers how change orders work in cost-plus versus fixed-price contracts, how to verify fair pricing by checking markup consistency, the danger zone where unauthorized work breaks relationships, and the iron rule that protects both sides: no signed order, no work, no payment. Prevention strategies include finalizing decisions before construction starts, investing in complete plans, building contingencies, and tracking running totals. Same surprises, wildly different outcomes — separated by planning work done before anyone picked up a hammer. * Free Story: The Tale of Two Homeowners [https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/09608e1727] * Watch: YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TheAwakenedHomeowner] * Listen: Podcast [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/listen] * Read: AMAZON [https://www.amazon.com/Awakened-Homeowner-Orchestrate-Construction-Success-ebook/dp/B0F1MDRPK7] , All Book Stores [https://books2read.com/u/bpxj76] * Visit: Homepage [https://www.theawakenedhomeowner.com/] * Follow: Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/theawakenedhomeowner/]: Facebook: [https://www.facebook.com/theawakenedhomeowner/] * Learn: BuildQuest Planning Platform: [https://buildquest.co] * Contact: Email: wwreid@theawakenedhomeowner.com Mentioned in this episode: The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book] The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book]

6. Juni 202626 min
Episode Construction Contract Basics: What to Check Before You Sign Cover

Construction Contract Basics: What to Check Before You Sign

That construction contract sitting on your kitchen table is the single most important document in your entire project. You've earned your way to this moment—months in design, weeks comparing bids, careful contractor selection. Now there's just one piece of paper between you and breaking ground. After 35+ years as a residential construction expert, Bill Reid has seen what goes wrong when homeowners treat this signing moment as a formality instead of the protection it's meant to be. WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER In this episode, Bill slows down the contract signing moment and walks you through three critical checks every homeowner must complete before picking up that pen. First, understand exactly who you're contracting with. You sign with one entity—the general contractor. The GC then contracts with subcontractors independently. You don't contract with subs, but here's the wrinkle most homeowners miss: mechanics liens mean unpaid subs or suppliers can still file claims against your house even when you've paid your general contractor in full. Bill explains the simple lien waiver discipline that prevents double-payment nightmares. Second, confirm what must be inside the document. Rule number one sounds obvious but gets violated constantly: have a contract. Verbal agreements and handshakes fall apart six months into construction when everyone remembers the version that favors them. Real contracts point to your actual plans, your specific scope of work, and your spec list—not generic boilerplate. Bill explains why the best projects include a supplemental scope of work document that gathers every email decision and conversation into one central reference the contract can point to. The payment section deserves your closest attention. Healthy contracts structure progress payments tied to completed milestones—foundations in and inspected, framing up and inspected, money follows work. Bill shares California's legal cap on down payments: cannot exceed the lesser of one thousand dollars or ten percent of contract price. On a fifty thousand dollar remodel, the legal maximum down payment is one thousand dollars, not five thousand. Every payment after that cannot exceed the value of work actually completed. Never let your money get ahead of the work—that's your steering wheel for the entire project. Bill addresses the contractor financing challenge directly. Sometimes materials like windows or cabinetry must be ordered well ahead of construction start. There are legal ways to handle this through draw requests tied to the project schedule after crews deploy on site, but this requires consultation with a construction law attorney or your architect to structure properly. With each progress payment, you ask for a lien release from the general contractor and from major subs and suppliers. Money goes out, signed release comes back—that discipline closes the loop on mechanics lien exposure. Third, verify the company name and license number on the contract are legitimate. Bill shares real examples from Northern California where state investigators arrested a dozen people for unlicensed contracting, including one caught using a license number that had already been revoked. Here's the scam: an individual who can't get work legitimately partners with someone who holds a license, so the name on the truck and the person you've been talking to don't match the license number on the paper. The protection is simple and free. Every state that licenses contractors has an online lookup tool. In California, it's the Contractor State License Board at CSLB.ca.gov. Search by name, business, or license number. You'll see status, classification, bond, workers comp, and disciplinary history. Check three things: Is it active and in good standing? Does the classification match the work you're hiring for? Does the name on the license match the company on your contract? Bill gives you a line to remember: A contractor saying "we're licensed" is a sales statement. A license number you looked up yourself is a fact. Don't take the claim, get the fact. At the signing table, ask to see the contractor's pocket license card and compare it against a photo ID. Confirm the person signing has genuine authority to bind the company. Bill also recommends asking each contractor candidate for their standard contract template weeks before you're choosing anyone. This move buys you calm review time at your own kitchen table with no pressure, gives you a baseline to catch changes when the real contract arrives, and serves as a free background check—how quickly they respond and how complete the document is tells you how they run their business. KEY TAKEAWAYS - You contract with one entity, the general contractor—subs contract with the GC, not with you, but unpaid subs can still lien your house - Every construction project legally requires a written contract in most states—California requires it for any project over five hundred dollars - Progress payment schedules tied to completed milestones keep your money from getting ahead of the work and preserve your leverage - California caps down payments at the lesser of one thousand dollars or ten percent of contract price—every payment after that cannot exceed value of work completed - Lien waivers collected with each progress payment prevent mechanics lien claims from unpaid subs or suppliers - Verify contractor license numbers yourself using free state lookup tools—active status, correct classification, name match required - Request the standard contract template early in the selection process for calm review and baseline comparison MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE Episode 57 - Cost Plus Contracts: Understanding the True Cost Structure [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cost-plus-contract-protection-the-4-part-system-that-saves/id1809880743?i=1000768125107] Episode 58 - Fixed Price Contracts: When Certainty Matters Most [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/fixed-price-contracting-4-components-that-decide-your/id1809880743?i=1000769234932] Episode 51 - The Two Estimating Windows Every Homeowner Must Understand [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/budget-checkpoint-or-formal-estimate-what-you-need/id1809880743?i=1000759268419] * Free Story: The Tale of Two Homeowners [https://the-awakened-homeowner.kit.com/09608e1727] * Watch: YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@TheAwakenedHomeowner] * Listen: Podcast [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/listen] * Read: AMAZON [https://www.amazon.com/Awakened-Homeowner-Orchestrate-Construction-Success-ebook/dp/B0F1MDRPK7] , All Book Stores [https://books2read.com/u/bpxj76] * Visit: Homepage [https://www.theawakenedhomeowner.com/] * Follow: Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/theawakenedhomeowner/]: Facebook: [https://www.facebook.com/theawakenedhomeowner/] * Learn: BuildQuest Planning Platform: [https://buildquest.co] * Contact: Email: wwreid@theawakenedhomeowner.com Mentioned in this episode: The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book] The Awakened Homeowner Book [https://podcast.theawakenedhomeowner.com/home-building-book]

30. Mai 202625 min