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Contractor License Bonds & Surety for professional contractors

Contractor license bonds, performance bonds, payment bonds, and surety bonds for professional contractors — required by state licensing boards, project owners, and government agencies as a condition of contracting.

Contractor License Bonds & Surety — professional contracting

What it covers

  • Contractor license bonds required for state licensing
  • Performance bonds guaranteeing project completion
  • Payment bonds guaranteeing subcontractor and supplier payment
  • Bid bonds securing project bids for owners
  • Supply and maintenance bonds for ongoing obligations
  • Federal, state, and commercial surety bond programs

Who it's for

  • Licensed contractors required to carry a state bond
  • Contractors bidding public or government projects requiring bonds
  • Design-build contractors required to provide performance and payment bonds
  • Any contractor whose clients or licensing board requires a surety bond

Why CCA

  • Direct surety relationships for both admitted and specialty surety markets
  • Bond programs available for contractors with challenging credit or financial history
  • Fast bond issuance for licensing requirements and bid deadlines
Contractor License Bonds & Surety — FAQ

Common questions about contractor license bonds & surety

A contractor license bond is a surety bond required by most states as a condition of contractor licensing. It guarantees that the contractor will comply with state licensing laws and protect the public — if the contractor violates licensing rules, affected parties can make a claim on the bond.

A performance bond guarantees that you will complete a project according to the contract terms. If you fail to complete the work, the bond pays the project owner to complete it using another contractor. Performance bonds are commonly required on public projects and large commercial contracts.

A payment bond guarantees that you will pay subcontractors, suppliers, and labor for work on a project. It protects subcontractors and suppliers from non-payment — and protects the project owner from mechanics' liens if you fail to pay your supply chain.

No. Insurance pays losses when something goes wrong. A surety bond is a guarantee — if you fail to perform, the surety (bond company) pays on your behalf, then seeks reimbursement from you. Bonds protect the obligee (owner, licensing board), not the contractor.

Often yes. We have surety markets for contractors with challenged credit, limited financial history, or prior project issues. Bond availability depends on your specific financial situation — bring us your background and we'll find a path.

Cost is driven by services performed, annual revenue, contract types, and professional liability claims history. We quote your actual firm in about 15 minutes — never a ballpark from a generic business form.

Yes. Contractors Choice Agency is licensed in all 50 states and writes professional contractor programs nationwide — Arizona, Texas, California, the Northeast, Pacific Northwest, and everywhere contractors operate.

Typically 15 minutes on a call. Larger or more complex programs may take a day or two to place with the right markets, but we move fast and set expectations up front.

Often yes. We have admitted and E&S markets for professional contractors declined over prior claims, loss runs, or complex project types. Bring us your situation and we'll find a market.

Usually yes. A coordinated program closes gaps between policies and is typically cheaper than separate policies from separate carriers — and far easier to manage at claim time.

A.M. Best ratings reflect a carrier's financial strength and ability to pay claims. We place coverage with A-rated (and A+ where possible) carriers so the coverage is there when a professional liability claim, contract dispute, or construction defect suit hits.

Yes. Design-build firms carry both professional and trade liability; project managers carry significant professional services exposure; specialty contractors have unique E&O profiles. We tailor each program to the specific services your firm provides.

Claims are evaluated based on the alleged harm — cost overruns tied to professional errors, project delays, design defect remediation costs, and client financial losses. We work with carriers that handle contractor professional liability claims efficiently and fairly.

Services performed, annual revenue, contract types (fixed-price, cost-plus, design-build), largest single project, professional liability history, current coverage, and loss history. More detail means a more accurate quote.

If you're the responsible contractor and a subcontractor's error leads to a professional liability claim against you, your policy covers your exposure as the directing or coordinating party — including defense costs and resulting liability.

Yes. Project-based contractors can obtain project-specific professional liability policies for individual large contracts, while ongoing firms carry annual programs. We match the program structure to how your firm actually operates.

That's a professional liability (E&O) claim. Your policy covers your defense costs, legal fees, and any resulting judgment or settlement — up to your policy limits. Without E&O coverage, you'd pay out of pocket.

Yes. If you operate through multiple entities, joint ventures, or have separate design and construction arms, we build one coordinated program covering all entities with no gaps between them.

Yes. Contractors who provide consulting, inspection, commissioning, or advisory services carry professional liability exposure beyond their construction activities. We add professional liability tailored to those services.

Ready to protect your contracting firm?

Get a 15-minute quote from specialists who understand professional contractor liability — E&O, design-build, contract disputes, and professional services exposure.