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Subcontractor Guide · 2026

Bonding and Insurance Requirements for Public-Works Subcontractors (2026)

Public construction work requires three types of bonds — bid, performance, and payment — each serving a different risk purpose. Federal contracts over $150,000 trigger the Miller Act, requiring 100% performance and payment bonds from prime contractors, which frequently flows down to subcontractors. If you cannot obtain bonds through standard commercial channels, the SBA Surety Bond Guarantee Program can backstop coverage for eligible small businesses up to $500,000 per contract (and sometimes higher).

Key Takeaways

  • Three bond types protect different parties: bid bond (you'll sign if awarded), performance bond (you'll finish), payment bond (you'll pay your subs/suppliers).
  • Miller Act requires 100% performance + payment bonds on federal contracts over $150,000 — this frequently flows to subs.
  • Bond premiums for small contractors typically run 1%–1.7% of contract value for projects under $1M.
  • SBA's QuickApp program can get you bonded on projects up to $500K when commercial sureties decline.
  • Standard public works insurance: $1M/$2M GL, $1M auto, statutory workers comp — verify agency-specific requirements.

The Three Bond Types Explained

Bid Bond

Typically 5–10% of bid

A bid bond guarantees that if you are awarded the contract, you will actually execute it at your submitted bid price. If you win and then decline the contract (or are unable to perform), the surety pays the owner the difference between your bid and the next lowest bidder's bid, up to the face amount of the bid bond.

Who holds it: Submitted with your bid to the owner or prime contractor. Released after contract execution (if you win) or return of bid bonds to unsuccessful bidders.

Performance Bond

100% of contract value

A performance bond guarantees that the contract will be completed according to its terms. If you default — abandon the project, fail to meet specifications, or go out of business mid-project — the surety must either complete the project, hire another contractor to complete it, or pay the owner the cost to complete, up to the bond amount.

Who holds it: Owner (on prime contracts) or prime contractor (on subcontracts). Remains in force through final acceptance and any warranty period.

Payment Bond

100% of contract value

A payment bond guarantees that all subcontractors, laborers, and material suppliers will be paid. As a subcontractor, this is your legal backstop if a prime contractor fails to pay you — you can make a claim on the prime's payment bond. At the federal level, Miller Act payment bond claims have strict notice and filing deadlines.

Miller Act claim timeline: You must provide written notice to the prime within 90 days of last furnishing labor or materials. Suit must be filed within 1 year of last furnishing. State "Little Miller Acts" have different deadlines.

Federal Bond Thresholds (Miller Act and FAR Part 28)

Contract ValuePerformance BondPayment Bond
Under $25,000Not requiredNot required
$25,000 – $150,000Contracting officer discretionContracting officer discretion
Over $150,000Required — 100% of contractRequired — 100% of contract

FAR 28.102-1 establishes the above thresholds. The contracting officer may require bonds below $150,000 if the project carries higher risk (remote location, specialized work, financially weak contractor). FAR 28.103 covers performance and payment bonds for non-construction contracts.

State Threshold Examples ("Little Miller Acts")

StateBond ThresholdNotes
California$25,000+Public Contract Code § 20160; both bonds required
Texas$100,000+Tex. Gov't Code § 2253; both bonds required
New York$250,000+State Finance Law § 137; public school contracts: $100,000
Florida$200,000+Fla. Stat. § 255.05; performance bond only below $200K at CO discretion
Illinois$50,000+30 ILCS 550/1; both bonds required

SBA Surety Bond Guarantee Program

If you cannot qualify for bonds through standard commercial surety companies, the SBA Surety Bond Guarantee (SBG) Program can bridge the gap. The SBA guarantees 70%–90% of the surety's loss, enabling approved sureties to bond small contractors they would otherwise decline.

QuickApp Program

Streamlined application for bonds up to $500,000 (and in some cases up to $1,000,000). Available for contracts in construction, services, and supply. Application can often be completed in 1–2 business days through an SBA-approved surety agent. Best for established small firms with clean financials but limited bonding history.

Standard Program

For larger contracts requiring more underwriting. Requires submission of financial statements, work-in-progress schedule, personal financial statement of owners, and bank references. No upper contract limit, but the SBA reviews each bond request individually.

Prior Approval vs. Guarantee Basis

Prior approval: the surety submits the application to SBA before issuing the bond; SBA reviews and approves. Guarantee basis: the surety issues the bond without prior SBA approval and is eligible for the guarantee if a loss occurs (faster but requires the surety to meet specific criteria).

SBA Premium

The SBA charges a guarantee fee of approximately 0.729% of the contract price for its portion of the guarantee. You still pay the commercial surety's premium on top of this. Total effective premium with SBA involvement may be 1.5%–2.5% of contract value for small contractors.

Sample Bond Cost Scenario: $500,000 Project

Contract Value$500,000
Performance Bond required (100%)$500,000
Payment Bond required (100%)$500,000
Typical annual premium — established contractor (1%–1.7%)$5,000 – $8,500
Typical annual premium — newer firm via SBA (1.5%–2.5%)$7,500 – $12,500
Bid bond (if separate from performance bond)$200 – $600 flat

Premiums quoted above are illustrative. Actual rates depend on your firm's financial strength, experience, credit score, and the surety's current underwriting appetite. Build bond cost into your bid estimate — it is a direct project cost, not overhead.

Insurance Requirements for Public Construction

Beyond bonds, public construction contracts require several insurance policies. Minimum limits vary by agency, but these are the typical baselines you will encounter:

GL

Commercial General Liability

Typically $1,000,000 per occurrence / $2,000,000 aggregate. The owner and prime contractor will usually be named as Additional Insureds. Projects involving underground work, blasting, or demolition may require higher limits or specific endorsements.

Auto

Commercial Auto Liability

$1,000,000 combined single limit covering owned, non-owned, and hired vehicles. Required if any company vehicles or employee personal vehicles are used to travel to the project site.

WC

Workers Compensation

Statutory limits per state law — required in virtually every state for employers with one or more employees. Employer's Liability sublimit typically $500,000–$1,000,000 per accident. A waiver of subrogation in favor of the owner is commonly required.

UMB

Umbrella / Excess Liability

Many public agencies and large primes require $1M–$5M umbrella/excess over the GL and auto primary policies. This is increasingly standard on projects above $500,000. The umbrella follows form on the underlying policies and typically adds minimal cost relative to the coverage increase.

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