Performance bonds are among the most frequently misunderstood financial instruments in the construction and contracting industries. They’re often confused with bid bonds, payment bonds, or even general insurance — but they serve a very specific and important purpose: guaranteeing that a contractor will complete a project according to the contract terms.
This guide explains performance bonds clearly — how they work, what they cost, who needs them, and how to get approved even with credit challenges.
Table of Contents
What Is a Performance Bond?
A performance bond is a three-party surety agreement between a contractor (the principal), a project owner (the obligee), and a surety company. The bond guarantees that if the contractor fails to complete the project according to the contract — whether due to financial failure, abandonment, or inability to perform — the surety company will either complete the project or compensate the project owner for their losses.
The Performance Bond Guarantee Chain
- Contractor wins a project and is required to post a performance bond
- Surety company investigates the contractor’s financial strength and issues the bond
- If contractor defaults, project owner files a claim
- Surety investigates the claim — either funds project completion or compensates owner
- Surety then seeks full repayment from the defaulting contractor
Performance Bond vs. Bid Bond vs. Payment Bond
| Bond Type | What It Guarantees | Typical Cost |
| Bid Bond | Contractor will sign contract if awarded | Free or small flat fee |
| Performance Bond | Contractor will complete the project | 1-3% of contract value annually |
| Payment Bond | Subs and suppliers will be paid | 1-3% of contract value annually |
| License Bond | Contractor follows licensing laws | $50-$750/year regardless of project size |
Performance and payment bonds are almost always issued together for significant projects, often called a ‘P&P bond package.’ The combined cost is typically 2-4% of the total contract value.
When Are Performance Bonds Required?
Federal Government Projects (Miller Act)
The Miller Act mandates performance bonds on all federal construction contracts exceeding $150,000. No exceptions — any contractor working on a federal project above this threshold must post a performance bond.
State and Local Projects (Little Miller Acts)
Most states have ‘Little Miller Act’ equivalents requiring performance bonds on state and local government projects. Thresholds vary — typically $25,000 to $100,000 depending on the state.
Private Projects
Project owners on large private construction projects increasingly require performance bonds as risk management. This is common for commercial developers, institutional clients (hospitals, schools), and large property owners.
What Does a Performance Bond Cost?
Performance bond premiums are calculated as a percentage of the contract value, primarily driven by the contractor’s financial strength and credit profile:
| Contractor Profile | Typical Rate | Cost on $500K Contract | Notes |
| Strong financials, 700+ credit | 0.5-1% | $2,500-$5,000 | Best market rates |
| Good financials, 650-699 | 1-2% | $5,000-$10,000 | Standard underwriting |
| Fair financials, 600-649 | 2-3% | $10,000-$15,000 | Full financial review required |
| Challenged financials, <600 | 3-5%+ | $15,000-$25,000+ | Specialist surety needed |
The Underwriting Process for Performance Bonds
Performance bonds require more underwriting scrutiny than license bonds because the potential liability is much larger. Underwriters evaluate:
Financial Statements
Sureties typically require 2-3 years of business financial statements for performance bonds over $500,000. CPA-reviewed or audited statements are preferred. Key metrics include working capital, net worth, cash flow, and debt ratios.
Work-in-Progress Schedule
A WIP schedule shows all current projects, their contract values, percent completion, and estimated profit. This helps underwriters assess whether you’re overextended relative to your bonding capacity.
Experience and Track Record
Project completion history is critically important. Sureties want to see that you’ve successfully completed projects of similar size and complexity. Detailed project lists with references strengthen your application significantly.
Equipment and Resources
Owned equipment, skilled personnel, and established subcontractor relationships all demonstrate capacity to perform on the bonded project.
Can You Get a Performance Bond with Bad Credit?
Yes, but it requires working with the right provider. Performance bonds for credit-challenged contractors typically involve:
- Higher premium rates (3-5% or more of contract value)
- Collateral requirements for larger bonds
- Indemnitor arrangements with a creditworthy business partner
- More detailed documentation of financial capacity and project history
Specialized surety providers have developed programs specifically for contractors who don’t qualify through standard markets. BondsExpress has placed performance bonds for contractors across all credit profiles since 1965.
For a free quote, visit BondsExpress.com.
Building Your Bonding Capacity Over Time
Performance bond capacity — the total value of projects you can bond simultaneously — grows as you build financial strength and a track record of successful project delivery. Strategies to increase bonding capacity:
- Maintain a clean bond claims history — every completed project strengthens your record
- Build working capital — sureties look for a ratio of at least 10:1 (working capital to bond amount)
- File timely and accurate financial statements
- Communicate proactively with your surety — don’t let them learn about problems from claims
- Develop relationships with reliable subcontractors and suppliers who can provide references
For context on how bonds work as financial instruments, USFinanceMarket.com offers a useful primer:
Need a performance bond?
BondsExpress provides performance bonds for contractors at all stages. All credit profiles. Same-day quotes available. Get bonded and bid on bigger projects today.
