A surety bond is a three-party financial guarantee: a bonding company (surety) guarantees to a project owner or government entity (obligee) that your business (principal) will fulfill a specific obligation - whether that's completing a construction project, paying subcontractors, or complying with a license requirement. Unlike insurance, if the surety pays a claim on your bond, you owe them back. Bonds are required for many contractor licenses, government contracts, and professional licenses.
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Who needs surety bonds?
Surety bonds are required across a wide range of situations. Contractors bidding on public works projects need bid bonds, performance bonds, and payment bonds - state law typically requires these on most state and municipal construction contracts. Contractors applying for a contractor's license in certain categories often need a license bond. Notaries public must carry a surety bond in most states. Auto dealers, mortgage brokers, collection agencies, and other licensed professionals are required to post bonds with the state. Beyond legal requirements, private project owners increasingly require performance and payment bonds on larger commercial construction projects to protect themselves against contractor default. In our experience, contractors are often surprised at how affordable bond premiums are when they have decent credit. We work with multiple surety markets and can help contractors build their bond program from the ground up.
What does surety bonds cover?
- Bid bonds - guarantees you'll enter into a contract at the bid price if awarded the project
- Performance bonds - guarantees you'll complete the project per contract terms
- Payment bonds - guarantees you'll pay your subcontractors, suppliers, and laborers
- License and permit bonds - guarantees compliance with state and local licensing requirements
- Court bonds - judicial bonds required for legal proceedings (appeal bonds, fiduciary bonds)
- Notary bonds - required for notaries public in most states
- Fidelity bonds - protects against employee dishonesty (technically different from surety but often grouped together)
What surety bonds does NOT cover
- Bonds are NOT insurance - if the surety pays a claim, you must reimburse them in full
- Does not cover your own losses - only pays the obligee (project owner or government entity)
- Does not cover negligence or accidents - that's general liability insurance
- Does not pay for cost overruns you caused - it covers the obligee's cost to complete if you default
- Does not replace workers comp, auto, or liability coverage
- Personal guaranty is almost always required - your personal credit and finances are on the hook
What does surety bonds cost?
Bond premiums typically run 1% to 3% of the bond amount for principals with strong credit (700+ score and solid financials). A $25,000 contractor's license bond might cost $250–$750 per year. Performance and payment bonds on a $500,000 construction project might cost $5,000–$15,000. For applicants with weaker credit or limited experience, premiums can reach 5–15% of the bond amount through specialty surety markets. The biggest factors are your personal credit score, business financial statements, industry experience, and project size. We work with multiple surety companies and can often find competitive rates even for contractors who've been turned down elsewhere.
Frequently asked questions
Insurance transfers risk to the carrier - when a claim is paid, the insurance company absorbs the loss. A surety bond is a guarantee backed by your own finances - if the surety pays a claim on your bond, you owe them back every dollar plus expenses. Think of a bond as a credit arrangement with a guarantee attached, not as an insurance policy.
For most contract bonds, sureties look at three things: your personal credit score (typically 680+), your business financial statements (balance sheet strength and working capital), and your industry experience and track record. For smaller license bonds under $50,000, credit score alone may be sufficient. We help contractors understand what sureties are looking for and how to strengthen their bond capacity over time.
It depends on the license type and locality. Many cities and counties require contractor license bonds. State-level specialty licenses may also require bonds. Public works projects generally require bid bonds, performance bonds, and payment bonds by law. We can tell you exactly which bonds your specific license or project requires.
Small license and permit bonds (under $50,000) can often be issued in 24–48 hours based on a credit check alone. Larger contract bonds - performance and payment bonds on construction projects - require financial underwriting and typically take 3–10 business days depending on the surety's review of your financials. For time-sensitive bid bonds, we work with sureties who can provide quick-turn approvals for established contractors.
Yes, though it costs more. Standard surety markets prefer credit scores above 680, but specialty and high-risk surety programs work with scores down to 500 or below. Expect to pay 5–15% of the bond amount instead of 1–3%. These programs are useful for contractors rebuilding credit or newer businesses without a financial track record. We have access to multiple surety markets specifically for these situations.
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Related coverage to consider
- General Liability - Covers your business if a customer, vendor, or visitor is injured at your location, or if your work damages someone else's property.
- Builders Risk - Covers a building under construction, renovation, or addition - including the structure, materials, and equipment on site - against fire, wind, theft, and other covered perils during the construction period.
- Commercial Property - Protects your business's physical assets: the building you own or lease, equipment, inventory, furniture, and business income lost during a covered event.
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Reviewed by
Sheilia Royal, Agency Principal / Licensed Agent
Licensed in KY, IN & TN | 20 years experience | Last reviewed: March 2026