I got a good question from a contractor a few weeks ago. I didn’t have an answer. There may not be an answer. But there are good choices and bad choices. Here’s the question:
“I’ve got a good payment schedule in my contract. But the lender won’t pay on my schedule. They have their own schedule. What should I do?”
Background
Any fixed price job that requires weeks of work needs a payment schedule. When are payments due and how much? Most contracts for larger residential jobs specify an initial payment plus progress payments based on completion of job phases. For example:
- 10% when Breaking Ground
- 10% when Foundation is Complete
- 15% when Rough Framing is Complete
- 10% when Rough Plumbing is Complete
- 10% when Doors and Windows are Installed
- 10% when Exterior Wall Finish is Installed
- 10% when Cabinets and Counters are Installed
- 10% when Mechanical and Electrical Pass Inspection
- 10% when Interior Finish is Complete
- 5% when passing Final Inspection
Contractors commonly front load payments – bigger payments during early job phases and smaller payments as the job nears completion. That bumps up working capital during construction. Lenders are leery of front loading. For obvious reasons, some lenders prefer their own back loaded payment schedule -- giving the contractor an incentive to finish work.
Black letter law: Lenders don’t have to pay on your contract schedule. That leaves owners caught in the middle – eager to see the job completed but with little leverage to pry money out of the lender.