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Lien Waiver Template by State: The 4 Types and Which Form to Use

A lien waiver is a release. When you sign it, you're giving up your right to file a mechanic's lien for the amount covered. Sign the wrong one — or sign before the check clears — and you've handed away your legal protection for free.

Most contractors sign whatever the GC puts in front of them. That works fine until a GC goes under mid-project and you're holding a conditional waiver that covers payment you never actually received.

This guide covers the four types, which states require their own statutory forms, and what to watch for before you put pen to paper.


Why Lien Waivers Exist

Mechanic's liens let unpaid contractors, subs, and suppliers place a claim against a property. This protects you — but it creates a problem for property owners and GCs who need to demonstrate clear title (to sell a property, refinance, or close out a construction loan).

The solution is a lien waiver: you sign off on your lien rights for work covered by a specific payment, the GC or owner can show the property is clean, and everyone moves on.

The catch: a lien waiver is only fair if it matches the payment you received. The four types of waivers exist to handle different situations — and using the wrong one is how contractors lose their leverage.


The 4 Types of Lien Waivers

Conditional vs. Unconditional

ConditionalUnconditional
When effectiveOnly after payment clearsEffective immediately upon signing
Risk levelLow — protects youHigh — dangerous if check bounces
Use whenGetting a progress paymentCheck has already cleared your account

Partial vs. Final

PartialFinal
CoversWork through a specific date or milestoneAll work on the project, forever
Use whenTaking a draw or progress paymentGetting your final payment
Future claimsPreserves your right to future claimsReleases all future claims

Combining these gives you four specific document types:


1. Conditional Partial (Waiver and Release Upon Progress Payment)

Use this for progress payments you haven't cashed yet.

This waiver becomes effective only when you actually receive payment. It covers work through a stated date. It preserves your rights for any work not covered.

This is the safest version to sign mid-project when someone hands you a check with the waiver attached. If the check bounces, the waiver never activated. Your lien rights remain intact.

Recommended for: All draw payments before final close-out.


2. Unconditional Partial (Waiver and Release of Lien Upon Progress Payment)

Only sign after the payment has cleared.

This one is effective immediately. If you sign it and the check bounces, you've released your lien rights without receiving anything. This is the waiver GCs push because it's cleaner for their paperwork.

Don't sign until the funds are in your account.

Recommended for: Progress payments where payment has already cleared.


3. Conditional Final (Waiver and Release Upon Final Payment)

Use this when submitting your final invoice, before the check clears.

Covers all work on the project. Becomes effective only when payment clears. Preserves your rights until you actually have the money.

On large final payments, always use conditional — not unconditional — until the wire hits or the check clears your bank. ACH clears in 1–3 days. Checks clear in 2–5 business days.

Recommended for: Submitting final paperwork before receiving final payment.


4. Unconditional Final (Final Waiver and Release of Lien)

Only sign after your final payment has cleared, in full.

This is a complete and immediate release of all your lien rights on the project. Once signed, you cannot file a mechanic's lien regardless of what happens after.

Do not sign this until: (a) you've received everything owed, (b) all checks have cleared, and (c) you've resolved any disputed items.

Recommended for: After final payment is confirmed cleared. Keep a copy.


States With Statutory Lien Waiver Forms

Most states let you use any written lien waiver. But roughly a dozen states either require you to use a state-prescribed form or make the state form the legally preferred version. Using a non-compliant form in these states can make your waiver unenforceable — or worse, still bind you to it while leaving you no recourse.

States with statutory lien waiver requirements or state-prescribed forms:

StateNotes
CaliforniaMandatory. Four specific forms required (Civil Code §8132–8138). Using a non-statutory form voids the waiver in your favor — the lien right survives — but creates uncertainty. Always use the CA statutory form.
TexasMandatory. Separate forms for prime contracts vs. subcontractors. Must follow Tex. Prop. Code §53.281–53.284.
FloridaMandatory statutory forms under Fla. Stat. §713.20. Must match exactly or waiver may not be valid.
GeorgiaStatutory forms prescribed. Non-compliant waivers enforceable but create disputes. Use the O.C.G.A. §44-14-366 form.
ArizonaStatutory forms under A.R.S. §33-1008. Required for residential projects.
MississippiStatutory forms required. Miss. Code §85-7-405 prescribes the language.
MissouriStatutory forms under Mo. Rev. Stat. §429.005.
NevadaMandatory statutory forms. NRS §108.2457.
UtahStatutory forms required under Utah Code §38-1a-802.
WyomingStatutory lien waiver language required. Wyo. Stat. §29-1-311.

For all other states: A properly drafted conditional/unconditional + partial/final waiver will hold up. The language needs to be clear, the payment amount specified, the project identified, and the effective date stated.


What to Watch for Before You Sign

GCs and property owners often hand you their own waiver forms. Before you sign anything:

1. Check conditional vs. unconditional

If you're signing at the same time they're handing you a check — that check hasn't cleared yet. Insist on conditional language. Any form that says "effective immediately" or doesn't include conditional payment language is an unconditional waiver.

2. Check what period or work it covers

The waiver should state: "Through [date]" for a partial, or "all work" for a final. If the period is vague or blank, you may be signing away more than you intend.

3. Check the payment amount

The waiver should reference the specific payment amount. If it says "full and final settlement" without specifying the dollar amount, that's a red flag.

4. Check for extra releases

Some GC forms include a release of claims beyond lien rights — delay claims, change order disputes, defect claims. If you're signing a lien waiver and there's language releasing "any and all claims," you may be waiving much more than a lien.

5. Never sign a final waiver on a partial payment

If you're getting progress payment #3, sign a partial waiver — not a final. A final waiver on a project where you still have work to do (and invoices to send) forfeits your future lien rights on that project.


Lien Waiver + Invoice Workflow

The cleanest way to handle waivers:

  1. Send your invoice with lien rights notice included (see our Contractor Invoice Template →)
  2. GC or owner sends payment + asks for waiver
  3. You return a conditional waiver — covers through the invoice date
  4. Payment clears (wait for it)
  5. If they need an unconditional, send it after funds clear
  6. At project close: conditional final on your last invoice, unconditional final after the wire/check clears

This workflow protects you at every stage.

GET THE CONTRACTOR PACK — $49

Includes all 4 lien waiver types for your state, state-compliant language for CA, TX, FL, GA, AZ, and 6 more — plus your contract, change order, and invoice. One pack, every document.

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State-by-State Compliance

If you work in California, Texas, or Florida, your lien waiver language must match the statutory form exactly. If you're not sure whether your current waiver template is compliant, the safest move is to use a form built for your state.

The Contractor Pack includes state-specific waiver language reviewed for statutory compliance in all 50 states.


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