Nebraska Lien Waiver Forms — Generate in 60 Seconds
Generate Nebraska-compliant lien waivers that follow best practices under the Nebraska Construction Lien Act (Sections 52-125 to 52-159). Nebraska doesn't prescribe statutory form language, but Section 52-144 sets the rules: waivers must be in writing, signed by the claimant, and ambiguities are construed against the signer. All four waiver types available with free preview.
Which Type Do You Need?
Nebraska uses the standard 4-type framework but has no statutory form requirement — our templates are custom-designed following Section 52-144 and industry best practices. One critical Nebraska quirk: advance waivers are enforceable here, so read your contract for no-lien clauses before signing anything.
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Sign Up FreeNebraska Lien Waiver Rules at a Glance
No mandatory statutory form
Section 52-144 requires only a written waiver signed by the claimant. No prescribed language or format. Our templates follow industry best practices.
Advance waivers ARE enforceable
Section 52-144 states waivers are valid "whether signed before or after the materials or services were contracted for or furnished." No-lien clauses in contracts are binding.
Ambiguities construe against the claimant
Nebraska law interprets unclear waiver language against the person who signed it. Use precise, well-drafted forms to avoid waiving more than you intended.
Notarization NOT required
Only the claimant's signature is needed. Notarization may be required if you're recording the waiver with the register of deeds.
Retainage caps apply
10% cap (or contractual amount, whichever is lower). Drops to 5% after project is 50% complete with satisfactory assurances under the Prompt Pay Act.
120-day lien filing deadline
Claimants must record a construction lien within 120 days of last furnishing services or materials (Section 52-137). Miss it and lien rights are gone.
Nebraska Lien Waiver Legal Requirements
Nebraska does not prescribe mandatory lien waiver form language. Section 52-144 of the Nebraska Construction Lien Act (Sections 52-125 to 52-159) governs waivers and requires only three things: (1) the waiver must be in writing, (2) it must be signed by the claimant, and (3) no consideration is needed for the waiver to be binding. A written waiver covers all construction lien rights for the improvement unless specifically limited to a particular lien right or portion of work. Nebraska is one of the few states where advance waivers are affirmatively permitted by statute — meaning your contract can waive lien rights before work begins or payment is made. This makes contract review critical in Nebraska. Ambiguities in waiver language are construed against the claimant (the signer), so vague or poorly drafted waivers can result in giving up more rights than intended. The Prompt Pay Act (Sections 45-1201 to 45-1212) caps retainage at 10% (dropping to 5% after 50% completion) and requires retainage release within 45 days of substantial completion.
Recent Law Changes
- Nebraska Construction Prompt Pay Act (Sections 45-1201 to 45-1212): Establishes retainage caps, requires retainage release within 45 days of substantial completion, and mandates payment to subs within 10 days of GC receiving payment.
Nebraska Conditional Progress Waiver
What It Is
Custom template waiving lien rights for a progress payment, conditioned on receipt and clearance of payment. Designed to comply with Section 52-144.
When to Use
When exchanging a waiver for a progress payment you haven't received yet or that hasn't cleared.
Key Legal Points
- No statutory form — our template follows Section 52-144 requirements and industry best practices.
- Conditional on payment clearance — protects you if the check bounces.
- Explicitly limited to the specified progress payment amount and period — doesn't waive rights for other work or retainage.
- Written and signed as required by Section 52-144. No consideration needed.
- Ambiguities construed against the claimant — our template uses precise language to protect you.
Tips
- Because Nebraska construes ambiguities against the signer, clear and specific language matters more here than in most states.
- Keep a copy with proof of the payment amount and period covered.
- Check your contract for advance waiver or no-lien clauses — they're enforceable in Nebraska.
Nebraska Unconditional Progress Waiver
What It Is
Immediately and irrevocably waives lien rights for the specified progress payment amount upon signing.
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 recourse if payment fails.
- Under Section 52-144, ambiguities in the waiver are construed against you. Our template minimizes ambiguity.
- Explicitly limited to the specified payment amount — retainage and future work excluded.
- Does not affect your contract rights outside of lien rights (Section 52-144(3)).
Warning
Nebraska doesn't prohibit requiring unconditional waivers before payment (unlike Texas or California). If a GC pressures you to sign before payment clears, push back and offer a conditional waiver instead — you have no statutory protection here.
Tips
- Document that payment cleared before signing. Keep bank records.
- Nebraska's ambiguity rule means a poorly worded unconditional waiver could waive more than you intended.
Nebraska Conditional Final Waiver
What It Is
Waives all remaining lien rights for the entire project, conditioned on receipt and clearance of final payment including retainage.
When to Use
When requesting final payment (including retainage) and you want protection until the check clears.
Key Legal Points
- Covers ALL remaining work and lien rights for the project.
- Conditional on final payment clearing — protects you until funds are confirmed.
- Should address retainage explicitly — Nebraska caps retainage at 10% (5% after 50% completion).
- Under the Prompt Pay Act, retainage must be released within 45 days of substantial completion.
- Accepting a promissory note does NOT waive lien rights unless the note explicitly says so (Section 52-144(4)).
Tips
- Verify the final payment amount includes all retainage. Nebraska's Prompt Pay Act requires release within 45 days of substantial completion.
- The promissory note provision in Section 52-144(4) protects you if a GC offers a note instead of cash.
Nebraska Unconditional Final Waiver
What It Is
Complete and permanent release of ALL lien rights for the entire project. Effective immediately upon signing.
When to Use
Only after ALL payment — including final payment and all retainage — has been received and cleared.
Key Legal Points
- Most consequential Nebraska waiver form — releases everything, permanently.
- Effective immediately. No recall. Under Section 52-144, ambiguities are construed against you.
- Covers all lien rights unless specifically limited (Section 52-144(2)).
- Does not affect contract rights outside of lien rights (Section 52-144(3)).
- No statutory prohibition against requiring this form before payment — use extreme caution.
Warning
Do not sign with any amounts outstanding. Nebraska has no law prohibiting GCs from requiring unconditional waivers before payment, and ambiguities work against you. Verify every dollar before signing.
Tips
- This is the final, complete release. Verify every dollar — including all retainage — before signing.
- If disputes remain, use a conditional final instead and resolve separately.
- Keep all payment records. Your contract rights survive the waiver (Section 52-144(3)), but your lien rights don't.
Common Nebraska Lien Waiver Mistakes
- 1
Not knowing advance waivers are enforceable in Nebraska
Nebraska is one of the few states where lien rights can be waived by statute in the contract before work begins. Many contractors sign contracts with no-lien clauses without realizing they're giving up lien rights entirely. Read every contract carefully — especially if you're used to working in states where advance waivers are void.
- 2
Using vague waiver language
Section 52-144 construes ambiguities against the claimant (signer). A waiver that doesn't clearly limit its scope can be interpreted to cover all lien rights for the entire project. Use precise language specifying the payment amount, period, and scope.
- 3
Signing an unconditional waiver before payment clears
Unlike Texas and California, Nebraska has no law prohibiting GCs from requiring unconditional waivers before payment. You're on your own here — always use a conditional waiver until payment has cleared your bank.
- 4
Missing the 120-day lien filing deadline
Section 52-137 requires recording a construction lien within 120 days of last furnishing services or materials. Miss this window and your lien rights are gone — no extensions, no exceptions. The 120 days runs from YOUR last furnishing date, not the project's completion date.
- 5
Accepting a promissory note as payment without checking the waiver
Section 52-144(4) protects you: accepting a promissory note doesn't waive lien rights unless the note explicitly says so. But if you sign a separate waiver alongside the note, your lien rights are gone. Read everything before signing.
Nebraska Lien Waiver FAQ
Does Nebraska require statutory lien waiver forms?
Do lien waivers need to be notarized in Nebraska?
What's the difference between a conditional and unconditional lien waiver in Nebraska?
Can I waive lien rights before starting work in Nebraska?
What does it mean that ambiguities are construed against the claimant?
What are Nebraska's lien filing deadlines?
Does accepting a promissory note waive my lien rights in Nebraska?
What are Nebraska's retainage rules?
How long is a Nebraska construction lien enforceable?
Can a lien waiver in Nebraska cover more than I intended?
Lien Waiver Guides & Resources
Lien Waivers Meet QuickBooks Online: Automatic Sync for GCs
LienWaiver.pro now syncs lien waivers directly with QuickBooks Online. Generate waivers from QBO bills, track them, and attach signed PDFs back to the bill.
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Conditional vs Unconditional Lien Waiver: Which One Should You Sign?
Sign conditional waivers before payment clears, unconditional after. Here's the difference and why it matters.
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How to Fill Out a Lien Waiver Form: A Step-by-Step Guide
A lien waiver has 8-12 fields. Here's what goes in each one, common mistakes that invalidate waivers, and how to avoid signing away more than you should.
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Do Lien Waivers Need to Be Notarized? A State-by-State Guide
Only 2 states require notarized lien waivers by law. In California, notarization may actually invalidate your waiver. Here's what you need to know.
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Lien Waiver Forms for Other States
* = mandatory statutory form language required