adjusterjack
Senior Member
Every contractor (there have been many) that I have dealt with in the last 40 years has waived the deposit to get the work.Many if not most contractors will require a deposit.
The contractor has more protection against the consumer than the consumer has against the contractor. He file a lien on the house, easily win a lawsuit for his money, the homeowner can't just disappear. The consumer, on the other hand, has to chase down the contractor who may have an LLC with no assets, pay a lawyer, engage in a protracted lawsuit while the work still needs to get done. Even licensed and bonded contractors often exist by robbing Peter to pay Paul.It works both ways. Just as a consumer does not want to get stuck paying for work that is not done or completed,
The customer can pay the supplier for the materials (as I do) then pay the contractor when the work is done.contractor does not want to get stuck with materials for a job that they can’t use, especially when the materials ordered are ordered to size for a specific project.
I look at it this way. Builders don't pay contractors up front, I'm not going to either.