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RESOURCE

Construction Contract Types
& Key Clauses Guide

Everything you need to know about the five main contract types, critical clauses, risk allocation, and negotiation strategies for construction projects.

Last updated: March 23, 2026
This guide is for general informational purposes. Laws and requirements vary by jurisdiction. Always consult with local legal or industry professionals before making decisions based on this content.

Why Contract Type Matters

The contract type you choose determines how risk, cost, and control are distributed between owner and contractor. Choosing wrong can erode margins or kill a project.

53%
Of construction disputes originate from contract ambiguities or misunderstood clauses
Source: Arcadis Global Construction Disputes Report, 2025
$42.8B
Total value of construction claims filed in the U.S. in 2025, driven by contract misalignment
Source: FMI Capital Advisors, Construction Claims Analysis 2025
14.2 mo
Average time to resolve a major construction contract dispute through litigation
Source: American Arbitration Association, 2025 Report

The 5 Main Construction Contract Types

Each contract type distributes risk differently. Understanding the trade-offs is essential for choosing the right structure for your project.

Type 1

Lump Sum (Fixed Price)

The contractor agrees to complete all work for a single, predetermined price. The most common contract type in commercial construction, accounting for roughly 45% of all projects.

Pros
  • + Budget certainty for the owner
  • + Simple administration
  • + Incentivizes contractor efficiency
Cons
  • All cost risk on the contractor
  • Risk premiums inflate the price
  • Change orders can become contentious
Best for: Well-defined projects with complete plans and specifications, short timelines, competitive bid environments.
Type 2

Cost Plus (Cost Reimbursable)

The owner pays the contractor for actual costs incurred plus an agreed fee (percentage or fixed). Provides flexibility but requires rigorous cost tracking and open-book accounting.

Pros
  • + Flexibility for evolving designs
  • + Faster project start (no complete plans needed)
  • + No inflated risk premiums
Cons
  • No budget certainty for the owner
  • Requires heavy cost auditing
  • Less incentive for contractor efficiency
Best for: Design-build projects, emergency work, complex renovations, projects with incomplete scope at contract signing.
Type 3

Guaranteed Maximum Price (GMP)

A hybrid of cost-plus and lump sum. The contractor is reimbursed for actual costs plus a fee, but the total cannot exceed a guaranteed ceiling. Savings below the GMP are typically shared between parties.

Pros
  • + Cost ceiling protects the owner
  • + Shared savings align incentives
  • + Transparency through open-book accounting
Cons
  • GMP may be padded conservatively
  • Disputes over what falls inside/outside GMP
  • Requires detailed cost tracking
Best for: CM-at-risk delivery, large commercial projects, owners wanting cost transparency with a safety cap.
Type 4

Time & Materials (T&M)

The owner pays for actual labor hours at agreed rates plus material costs (often with a markup). Commonly used for small projects or when scope is impossible to define upfront.

Pros
  • + Maximum flexibility
  • + Quick to start — no detailed estimates needed
  • + Fair pay for actual work performed
Cons
  • Zero budget predictability
  • No incentive for efficiency
  • Requires constant oversight and documentation
Best for: Repair work, investigation/demolition, small tenant improvements, change order work on larger projects.
Type 5

Unit Price

The contractor bids a price per unit of work (e.g., per cubic yard of concrete, per linear foot of pipe). Final cost is determined by multiplying unit prices by actual quantities installed. Common in heavy civil and infrastructure.

Pros
  • + Fair payment for actual quantities
  • + Easy to adjust for scope changes
  • + Transparent pricing per item
Cons
  • Final cost unknown until completion
  • Quantity disputes are common
  • Requires accurate field measurement
Best for: Earthwork, paving, piping, utilities, any project where quantities are estimated but uncertain.

Critical Contract Clauses

These seven clauses carry the most financial risk. Every contractor should review these carefully before signing any construction contract.

1

Indemnification

Defines who pays when things go wrong. Broad-form indemnification shifts all liability to the contractor, even for the owner's negligence. Many states now prohibit this.

"Contractor shall indemnify and hold harmless Owner from any and all claims arising out of or related to Contractor's performance of the Work..."

Negotiate for: Intermediate-form indemnification that limits your liability to your own negligence.

2

Liquidated Damages

Pre-set daily or weekly penalties for late completion. Typically ranges from $500 to $50,000 per day depending on project size. Must be a reasonable estimate of actual damages to be enforceable.

"For each calendar day that the Work remains incomplete after the Substantial Completion date, Contractor shall pay $2,500 as liquidated damages, not as a penalty."

Negotiate for: Caps on total LDs, mutual LDs (bonus for early completion), and clear force majeure carve-outs.

3

Change Order Procedures

Defines how scope changes are documented, priced, and approved. Poorly written change order clauses lead to more disputes than any other contract provision.

"No change in the Work shall be performed without prior written authorization. Contractor shall submit a Change Order Request within 7 days of becoming aware of the changed condition."

Negotiate for: Clear pricing methods (unit rates, T&M caps), reasonable notice periods, and the right to proceed under protest.

4

Dispute Resolution

Specifies how disagreements are resolved: negotiation, mediation, arbitration, or litigation. Multi-tiered resolution (negotiate → mediate → arbitrate) is considered best practice.

"Disputes shall first be submitted to the Project Executive for resolution. If unresolved within 15 days, parties shall engage in mediation before a mutually agreed mediator."

Negotiate for: Binding arbitration over litigation (faster, cheaper), and continuation of work during dispute resolution.

5

Termination Clauses

Two types: termination for cause (breach/default) and termination for convenience (owner can cancel without reason). The convenience clause is particularly dangerous for contractors.

"Owner may terminate the Contract for convenience upon 14 days' written notice. Contractor shall be compensated for Work performed plus reasonable demobilization costs."

Negotiate for: Fair compensation upon convenience termination including lost profits on remaining work, and clear cure periods for cause termination.

6

Pay-When-Paid / Pay-If-Paid

"Pay-when-paid" means the GC pays the sub after receiving payment from the owner (timing provision). "Pay-if-paid" means the GC only pays the sub if the owner pays (condition precedent). The distinction is critical.

"Subcontractor payment is due within 7 days of Contractor's receipt of payment from Owner for the corresponding Work."

Negotiate for: Pay-when-paid (not pay-if-paid), reasonable payment windows (30 days max), and lien rights preservation.

7

Retainage

A percentage (typically 5–10%) withheld from each progress payment until project completion. Retainage ties up contractor cash flow and has been increasingly regulated by state legislatures.

"Owner shall retain 10% of each progress payment. Upon Substantial Completion, retainage shall be reduced to 5%. Final retainage released within 30 days of Final Completion."

Negotiate for: Retainage reduction at 50% completion, release upon substantial completion, and retainage held in escrow with interest.

Risk Allocation by Contract Type

Understanding where risk falls is the key to choosing the right contract structure and pricing it correctly.

Risk Factor Lump Sum Cost Plus GMP T&M Unit Price
Cost Overrun Contractor Owner Shared (capped) Owner Shared
Scope Changes Change orders Owner absorbs May adjust GMP Owner absorbs Qty adjustments
Material Price Volatility Contractor Owner Contractor (within GMP) Owner Contractor
Design Errors Change orders Owner May adjust GMP Owner Change orders
Schedule Delays Contractor (LDs) Shared Shared Owner Contractor (LDs)
Administrative Burden Low High High Medium Medium
Budget Certainty High Low Medium-High Low Medium

Contract Negotiation Tips for Contractors

These strategies can save hundreds of thousands of dollars over the life of a project.

1

Never Sign the First Draft

Owner-drafted contracts are written to protect the owner. Every clause is negotiable. Red-line aggressively on indemnification, liquidated damages, and termination provisions. According to the AGC, contractors who negotiate contracts reduce claim exposure by an average of 35%.

2

Match Contract Type to Project Reality

Do not accept a lump-sum contract when the design is only 60% complete. Push for GMP or cost-plus until documents are finalized. The wrong contract type on an incomplete scope is the leading cause of construction disputes.

3

Define “Substantial Completion” Precisely

Vague completion definitions trigger liquidated damages disputes. Specify exactly what constitutes substantial completion, who determines it, and what punch list items are excluded. Include objective criteria, not subjective judgment.

4

Add Escalation Clauses for Long Projects

For any project exceeding 12 months, include material and labor escalation provisions tied to published indexes (BLS PPI, CRU). Without escalation protection, a 2–3% monthly price increase on steel can destroy margins on a 24-month project.

5

Protect Your Payment Rights

Ensure the contract preserves your mechanic's lien rights. Refuse pay-if-paid clauses where legally permissible. Negotiate prompt payment terms (net 30 or less) and ensure retainage is released at substantial completion, not final completion.

6

Use AI to Review Before You Sign

Manual contract review misses subtle risk-shifting language. AI-powered contract analysis can identify unfavorable clauses, benchmark terms against industry standards, and flag deviations from AIA or ConsensusDocs templates in minutes.

Review Your Construction Contracts with AI

Upload any contract and get an instant risk analysis — flagged clauses, missing provisions, and recommendations aligned with AIA and ConsensusDocs standards.

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