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Kentucky Lien Waiver Forms — Generate in 60 Seconds

Generate Kentucky lien waivers that follow best practices under KRS Chapter 376 and the Kentucky Fairness in Construction Act (KRS 371.400 et seq.). Kentucky doesn't mandate statutory waiver forms, but the Fairness in Construction Act adds real protection: advance waivers of lien rights are void, and retainage is capped by statute. All four waiver types available with free preview.

Which Type Do You Need?

Kentucky accepts all four standard waiver types. Two factors determine which form you need: (1) whether payment has cleared your bank, and (2) whether this covers a progress payment or the entire project. Kentucky's Fairness in Construction Act (KRS 371.405) provides strong protection — advance waivers are void, and only partial waivers tied to actual progress payments are enforceable.

Decision Tree

1
Mid-project draw and payment has NOT cleared?
2
Mid-project draw and payment HAS cleared?
3
Final payment and check has NOT cleared?
4
Final payment and check HAS cleared?

Generate Your Kentucky Lien Waiver

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Kentucky Lien Waiver Rules at a Glance

No statutory form required

Kentucky does not prescribe mandatory waiver language. Any form clearly expressing intent to waive lien rights is enforceable. This makes using a well-drafted form critical.

Notarization NOT required

Lien waivers don't need notarization in Kentucky. Note: mechanics lien statements filed with the county clerk DO require notarization under KRS 376.080.

Advance waivers are void

KRS 371.405(2)(b) voids contract provisions that waive lien rights under KRS Chapter 376, except partial waivers for actual progress payments.

Tiered notice deadlines for subs

Subs must notify the owner of intent to lien within 75 days (under $1,000) or 120 days (over $1,000) after last furnishing. Owner-occupied homes: 75 days regardless (KRS 376.010(3)).

Retainage caps: 10% then 5%

10% max until 50% complete, then 5% of total contract amount (KRS 371.410). Late retainage payments accrue 12% annual interest.

6-month filing deadline

Lien statement must be filed within 6 months of last furnishing and mailed to the owner within 7 days of filing, or the lien dissolves (KRS 376.080).

Kentucky Lien Waiver Legal Requirements

Kentucky is a non-statutory waiver state. KRS Chapter 376 governs mechanics liens but does not prescribe specific lien waiver forms, language, or exchange procedures. Any written document showing a clear intention to waive lien rights is enforceable. The Kentucky Fairness in Construction Act (KRS 371.400 et seq.), effective for contracts entered after June 26, 2007, adds significant protections. KRS 371.405(2)(b) voids any contract provision that purports to waive, release, or extinguish lien rights under KRS Chapter 376 — except partial waivers for progress payments actually made to the contractor or subcontractor. This effectively prohibits advance waivers and blanket lien waivers in Kentucky construction contracts. Kentucky's lien system requires strict compliance. Lien statements must be filed within 6 months of last furnishing (KRS 376.080), signed under oath with notarization, and mailed to the property owner within 7 days of filing. Subcontractors not in direct contract with the owner face additional notice requirements under KRS 376.010(3) — 75 days for claims under $1,000 and 120 days for claims over $1,000, with a flat 75-day window for owner-occupied single or double family homes. An action to enforce must be filed within 12 months of the lien statement (KRS 376.090).

Recent Law Changes

  • 2023 Ky. Acts ch. 177 (effective June 29, 2023): amended notice requirements under KRS 376.010(3).
  • 2024 amendment to KRS 371.410: requires retainage escrow for private projects $2M+ (effective June 27, 2025). KRS 371.405(2)(c) voids contract provisions waiving escrow requirements.

Kentucky Conditional Progress Waiver

What It Is

Waives lien rights for a progress payment, effective only when the check clears the bank. If the check bounces, your lien rights are preserved.

When to Use

When exchanging a waiver for a progress payment you haven't received yet, or when the check hasn't cleared.

Key Legal Points

  • Effective only upon receipt and clearance of the specified payment amount.
  • Covers work through a specific date — excludes retainage, pending change orders, and work performed after the covered period.
  • Permitted under KRS 371.405(2)(b) as a partial waiver for an actual progress payment.
  • Kentucky doesn't mandate waiver language, so review the form carefully for clauses that expand scope beyond the intended payment.
  • Should reference the specific project, property location, and payment amount.

Tips

  • This is the safest waiver to exchange at draw time — your lien rights survive if payment fails.
  • Always specify the exact payment amount and the through-date for work covered.
  • If you're a sub, confirm your notice to the owner was sent within the required 75-day or 120-day window (KRS 376.010(3)).

Kentucky Unconditional Progress Waiver

What It Is

Immediately waives lien rights for a progress payment upon signing. Takes effect whether or not you've actually been paid.

When to Use

Only after you've received the progress payment and it has cleared your bank.

Key Legal Points

  • Effective immediately upon signing — no conditions, no take-backs.
  • Permitted under KRS 371.405(2)(b) as a partial waiver for an actual progress payment.
  • Kentucky doesn't prohibit requiring unconditional waivers before payment the way Texas and California do — you must protect yourself by refusing to sign until payment clears.
  • Covers work through a specific date — should exclude retainage and pending extras.
  • Because Kentucky doesn't regulate waiver forms, an unconditional waiver with broad language could waive more rights than you intend.

Warning

Kentucky has no statute prohibiting a GC from requiring this form before payment. Unlike Texas, there's no bold notice on the form protecting you. Don't sign until the money is in your account.

Tips

  • Verify the exact deposit amount before signing — compare your bank statement to the waiver amount.
  • Kentucky's Fairness in Construction Act protects your lien rights broadly, but an unconditional waiver tied to a specific payment is still enforceable.

Kentucky Conditional Final Waiver

What It Is

Waives lien rights for ALL work on the project, conditioned on receipt of final payment including retainage.

When to Use

When submitting a request for the final payment (including retainage) and you haven't received it yet.

Key Legal Points

  • Covers the entire project — not just a progress period. This is a complete release conditioned on payment.
  • Final payment amount should include all retainage and approved change orders.
  • Conditional protection: if the final check bounces, your lien rights for the entire project are preserved.
  • Kentucky's 6-month lien filing deadline (KRS 376.080) still applies — don't let a conditional final waiver lull you into missing it.
  • List any disputed amounts separately. Anything not carved out is waived once payment clears.

Tips

  • Make sure the final payment amount includes ALL retainage. Kentucky caps retainage at 10% (pre-50% completion) and 5% (post-50% completion) under KRS 371.410.
  • Use Kentucky's 12% interest penalty (KRS 371.410) as leverage if retainage release is delayed past 30 days after substantial completion.
  • If disputes remain, list them with dollar amounts as exceptions.

Kentucky Unconditional Final Waiver

What It Is

Immediately and irrevocably releases ALL lien rights for all work performed on the entire project. The most consequential waiver type.

When to Use

Only after ALL payment — including final payment and retainage — has been received and cleared your bank.

Key Legal Points

  • Complete, immediate, and irrevocable release of all lien rights on the project.
  • No conditions — signing this means you're done. Period.
  • Kentucky courts will enforce this even if you haven't actually been paid, because Kentucky doesn't regulate waiver exchange timing for specific transactions.
  • Unlike statutory form states, Kentucky provides no built-in bold warning notice. The form language is all you get.
  • Once signed, your only recourse for non-payment is a breach of contract claim — not a lien.

Warning

This is permanent. Kentucky's lack of waiver form regulation means there's no statutory safety net for unconditional waivers. Verify every dollar has cleared before signing. If ANY amount is outstanding, use a conditional final waiver instead.

Tips

  • Triple-check that all retainage and final payment have cleared your bank.
  • If disputes remain, don't sign — use a conditional final and resolve separately.
  • Keep a complete paper trail: all progress waivers, pay apps, and this final waiver.

Common Kentucky Lien Waiver Mistakes

  1. 1

    Signing a blanket lien waiver in the original contract

    KRS 371.405(2)(b) voids contract provisions that broadly waive lien rights. Only partial waivers for actual progress payments are enforceable. If a GC's contract includes a blanket lien waiver, that clause is void — but you need to know that to push back.

  2. 2

    Missing the tiered notice deadline as a sub

    Subcontractors not in direct contract with the owner must notify the owner within 75 days (claims under $1,000) or 120 days (claims over $1,000) after last furnishing. For owner-occupied single/double family homes, it's 75 days regardless of amount. Miss this and your lien rights dissolve (KRS 376.010(3)).

  3. 3

    Signing an unconditional waiver before payment clears

    Kentucky has no statute specifically prohibiting this (unlike Texas and California). If a GC hands you an unconditional waiver and says the check is in the mail, push back. Once you sign, your lien rights are gone regardless of whether you get paid.

  4. 4

    Failing to mail the lien statement to the owner within 7 days

    Filing a lien statement with the county clerk isn't enough. KRS 376.080 requires mailing a copy to the property owner within 7 days of filing. Skip this step and the lien automatically dissolves — even if the filing itself was timely.

  5. 5

    Confusing lien waiver notarization with lien statement notarization

    Lien waivers don't require notarization in Kentucky. Mechanics lien statements DO — they must be signed under oath and notarized when filed with the county clerk (KRS 376.080). Different documents, different rules.

Kentucky Lien Waiver FAQ

Does Kentucky require statutory lien waiver forms?
No. Kentucky does not prescribe mandatory waiver forms or language. Any written document that clearly expresses the intention to waive lien rights is enforceable. The state's lien laws are in KRS Chapter 376, but they address liens — not waiver forms.
Do lien waivers need to be notarized in Kentucky?
No. Kentucky lien waivers don't require notarization. Don't confuse this with mechanics lien statements, which DO need to be signed under oath and notarized when filed with the county clerk (KRS 376.080). Different documents, different rules.
What's the difference between a conditional and unconditional lien waiver in Kentucky?
Conditional: lien rights are waived only when payment clears the bank. If the check bounces, your rights are preserved. Unconditional: lien rights are waived immediately upon signing, regardless of whether you've been paid. Kentucky doesn't restrict when unconditional waivers can be required, so conditional waivers are your main protection before payment clears.
Are advance lien waivers enforceable in Kentucky?
No. The Kentucky Fairness in Construction Act (KRS 371.405(2)(b)) voids contract provisions that purport to waive lien rights, except partial waivers for progress payments actually made. A blanket lien waiver in the original contract is unenforceable.
What are the notice requirements for subcontractors in Kentucky?
Subs not in direct contract with the property owner must send written notice of intent to lien to the owner within 75 days (claims under $1,000) or 120 days (claims over $1,000) after last furnishing labor or materials. For owner-occupied single or double family homes, the deadline is 75 days regardless of amount (KRS 376.010(3)).
What is Kentucky's mechanics lien filing deadline?
6 months after the last item of labor or materials is furnished (KRS 376.080). You must also mail a copy of the lien statement to the property owner within 7 days of filing, or the lien dissolves. An action to enforce the lien must be filed within 12 months of the lien statement (KRS 376.090).
What are Kentucky's retainage caps?
Under KRS 371.410, retainage is capped at 10% of undisputed payments until the project is 50% complete, then drops to 5% of the total contract amount. Retainage must be released within 30 days of substantial completion. Late retainage payment accrues 12% annual interest. A 2024 amendment requires retainage escrow for projects $2M+ (effective June 27, 2025).
Does the Fairness in Construction Act affect lien waivers?
Yes. KRS 371.405(2)(b) voids any contract provision waiving lien rights under KRS Chapter 376, except partial waivers tied to actual progress payments. The Act also prohibits waiving the right to litigate disputes and waiving delay damages. It applies to all construction contracts entered after June 26, 2007.
Can a GC require an unconditional waiver before payment in Kentucky?
There's no Kentucky statute specifically prohibiting this (unlike Texas, where it's illegal under Section 53.283). Protect yourself: insist on a conditional waiver until payment clears, or at minimum verify funds have been received before signing an unconditional form.
What happens if the owner didn't get the required notice?
If a subcontractor fails to send the required notice to the property owner within the 75-day or 120-day window under KRS 376.010(3), the lien rights dissolve. Kentucky courts require strict compliance with notice requirements — there's no substantial compliance exception.