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Surety Bonds for contractors

License bonds, performance bonds, and payment bonds — explained in plain English. What they guarantee, when they're required, and how they differ fundamentally from insurance.

Surety Bonds — contractor insurance

What it covers

  • Contractor license bonds (required by state/municipal licensing)
  • Performance bonds guaranteeing project completion
  • Payment bonds guaranteeing payment to subs and suppliers
  • Bid bonds for competitive project bidding
  • Maintenance bonds for post-completion warranties
  • Court bonds and other judicial surety needs

Who it’s for

  • Contractors who need a license bond to obtain or renew their state license
  • GCs and specialty contractors bidding on public projects (Miller Act / Little Miller Act)
  • Contractors whose private project contracts require performance and payment bonds
  • Contractors who want to understand bonds before buying them

Why CCA

  • Plain-English explanation of how each bond type works
  • License bonds issued quickly — often same-day
  • Performance and payment bond programs for contractors with clean financial statements
Surety Bonds — FAQ

Common questions about surety bonds

Insurance pays the insured when covered losses occur. A bond guarantees to a third party (the project owner, the licensing authority) that you'll perform your obligations. If you fail, the bonding company pays the third party — and then comes after you for reimbursement. Insurance doesn't seek reimbursement from the insured; bonds do.

A contractor license bond is required by most states and municipalities as a condition of obtaining or maintaining a contractor's license. The bond amount is set by the licensing authority. If you violate licensing laws, the bond compensates injured parties. Without it, you can't legally operate as a licensed contractor in most jurisdictions.

A performance bond guarantees to the project owner that you'll complete the project per the contract terms. If you default, the bonding company either steps in to complete the project or compensates the owner for the cost of completion. Performance bonds are required by federal law for public contracts over $100K (Miller Act) and increasingly required on large private projects.

Cost depends on trade, revenue, payroll, crew size, and loss history. We quote your actual operation in about 15 minutes — never a generic ballpark from a standard commercial form.

Yes. Contractors Choice Agency is licensed in all 50 states and writes contractor programs nationwide across every trade.

Typically 15 minutes on a call. We ask about your trade, revenue, payroll, loss history, and coverage needs — then come back with real quotes from specialty contractor markets.

Often yes. We have admitted and E&S markets for contractors with prior GL claims, workers' comp losses, or difficult project types. Tell us your situation and we'll find a market.

Usually yes. A coordinated program closes gaps between policies and is typically cheaper and cleaner than separate policies from separate carriers — especially at claim time.

A.M. Best ratings reflect a carrier's financial strength and ability to pay claims. We place coverage with A-rated carriers so the coverage is there when a completed-ops claim, a workers' comp injury, or a tools theft hits.

Occurrence covers claims from work done during the policy period, whenever filed. Claims-made covers only claims filed while the policy is active. For contractors with completed-operations exposure, occurrence-based GL is strongly preferred.

Yes. Some GCs require blanket AI endorsements; others specify specific endorsement forms (CG 20 10, CG 20 37). We review your subcontract requirements and build the AI endorsements to match exactly what's required.

Trade type, annual revenue, payroll and crew size, vehicles, tools value, project types, current coverage, and loss history. The more detail, the more accurate the quote.

Yes — and you should if you provide design-build, specifications, project management, or consulting services. GL doesn't cover errors in professional services; E&O/professional liability is a separate policy that does.

Request a copy of your GL policy form and look for endorsements titled 'exclusion — work performed by subcontractors' or 'independent contractor exclusion.' If you're not sure, send us the policy and we'll review it.

Your GL policy has two aggregates: the general aggregate covers premises/operations claims; the products-completed operations aggregate covers completed-operations claims. These are separate pools — check both limits, not just the general aggregate.

Yes. Most of our carrier programs offer monthly or quarterly installment payment options. We can structure your program payments to match your project billing cycle when possible.

New ventures are insurable — often at the same rates as established operations with clean loss histories. Some carriers require more information for startups; we know which markets are new-venture friendly.

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