Surety Bonds
How Surety Bond Claims Work for Contractors
How Surety Bond Claims Work for Contractors — everything contractors need to know about surety bonds.
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What Happens When a Bond Claim Is Filed — And How to Protect Yourself
Surety bonds are a required part of doing business for most licensed contractors. Whether you need a license bond to operate legally, a bid bond to compete for public projects, or a performance bond to secure a major contract — Trade Safe helps contractors get bonded fast at competitive rates.
How a Bond Claim Starts
A bond claim begins when the obligee (licensing board, project owner, or subcontractor) notifies the surety that the principal (you) has failed to fulfill the bonded obligation. The obligee submits documentation of the default — termination notices, payment demands, or licensing violations — and requests the surety fulfill its guarantee.
The Surety’s Investigation
The surety doesn’t simply pay claims on demand. They investigate: reviewing contract documents, payment records, correspondence, site conditions, and your response to the default allegation. You have the right — and obligation — to cooperate and provide your defense. Many claims are disputed or reduced through this process.
The Principal’s Role in Defense
Notify your surety immediately when any claim or potential claim arises. Provide all documentation supporting your position. Engage legal counsel experienced in surety matters. The surety’s attorney represents the surety’s interests — you need your own counsel to represent yours. Cooperation with the surety is required under the indemnity agreement.
When the Surety Pays
If the claim is valid and you’ve defaulted, the surety pays the obligee. On a performance bond: typically arranges for project completion or pays completion costs. On a payment bond: pays the unpaid sub or supplier. On a license bond: pays damages to the consumer or licensing board. Regardless of type — the surety then seeks full reimbursement from you.
Consequences of a Paid Claim
A paid bond claim is among the most serious events in a contractor’s business life. Consequences: full reimbursement demanded from you; potential license suspension or revocation; permanent notation in surety industry databases; severely reduced or eliminated future bonding capacity; and often, civil litigation on top of the bond claim process.