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Vermont Lien Waiver Forms — Generate in 60 Seconds

Generate Vermont-compliant lien waivers for your construction projects. Vermont does not prescribe mandatory statutory waiver forms, so properly drafted custom forms are standard practice. All four waiver types are available — conditional and unconditional, progress and final. Advance waivers of lien rights are unenforceable under 9 V.S.A. Section 1921, and Vermont's prompt payment law imposes steep late-payment penalties (12% annual interest plus 1% monthly penalty).

Which Type Do You Need?

Vermont uses all 4 standard waiver types. Two factors determine which form you need: (1) whether payment has cleared, and (2) whether this covers a progress payment or the final payment. Because Vermont doesn't prescribe statutory form language, your waivers should clearly state the scope of work covered, the payment amount, and whether the release is conditional on receipt of funds.

Decision Tree

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Mid-project draw and payment has NOT cleared?
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Mid-project draw and payment HAS cleared?
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Final payment and check has NOT cleared?
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Final payment and check HAS cleared?

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Vermont Lien Waiver Rules at a Glance

No mandatory statutory forms

Vermont does not prescribe specific waiver language. Custom forms are used, but must clearly express the intent to waive lien rights with sufficient consideration.

Notarization not required

Vermont law does not require lien waivers to be notarized. However, mechanics lien filings themselves must be notarized under 9 V.S.A. Section 1923.

Advance waivers unenforceable

9 V.S.A. Section 1921 prohibits waiving lien rights before labor is performed or materials are furnished. Any such provision is unenforceable.

Written notice required for subs

Subcontractors (and suppliers) must give written notice to the owner to claim a lien. The lien only covers the unpaid contract balance at the time notice is received.

No statutory retainage cap

Vermont does not cap retainage percentages. However, retainage must be paid within 30 days of final acceptance (9 V.S.A. Section 4005).

180-day filing and enforcement deadlines

Lien must be filed within 180 days of payment becoming due. Enforcement action must start within 180 days of recording the lien (9 V.S.A. Section 1923).

Vermont Lien Waiver Legal Requirements

Vermont is not a statutory form state for lien waivers. Unlike California or Texas, there is no prescribed form language — waivers must clearly express the intent to waive lien rights and be supported by adequate consideration. The governing mechanics lien statute is 9 V.S.A. Chapter 51 (Sections 1921-1928), titled "Contractors' Liens." Section 1921 explicitly prohibits advance waivers: a lien "may not be waived in advance of the time such labor is performed or materials are furnished, and any provision calling for such advance waiver shall not be enforceable." Vermont's lien law has a distinctive notice structure. Subcontractors and suppliers who contract with the GC (not directly with the owner) must give written notice to the owner stating they claim a lien. Critically, the sub's lien extends only to the portions of the contract price remaining unpaid at the time the owner receives notice — delay your notice and the owner may have already paid the GC, leaving your lien worthless. Vermont's prompt payment law (9 V.S.A. Chapter 102) adds teeth: contractors must pay subs within 7 days of receiving each progress or final payment, and wrongfully withheld amounts accrue 12% annual interest plus a 1% monthly penalty. Retainage for delivered and accepted materials covered by manufacturer's warranty cannot be withheld (Section 4005).

Recent Law Changes

  • Vermont's lien and payment statutes have been stable. The prompt payment law (9 V.S.A. Chapter 102) imposes 12% annual interest and 1% monthly penalty on wrongfully withheld amounts — steep late-payment penalties.

Vermont Conditional Progress Waiver

What It Is

Waives lien rights for a specific progress payment, effective only when the payment check clears the bank. Until the funds are actually received, your lien rights remain intact.

When to Use

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

Key Legal Points

  • Release is conditional — effective only upon receipt of payment in good and sufficient funds.
  • Covers only the specific progress payment amount stated, not the entire project.
  • Should explicitly exclude unpaid retainage, pending change orders, and work performed after the through-date.
  • Vermont does not require specific statutory language, but the conditional nature must be clearly stated.
  • Must be supported by adequate consideration (the promise of payment).

Tips

  • Specify the exact through-date and payment amount — Vermont's lack of statutory forms means vague language can lead to disputes about scope.
  • Keep copies of corresponding pay applications and invoices referenced in the waiver.
  • Because Vermont allows custom forms, make sure your conditional language is explicit — ambiguous wording could be interpreted as unconditional.

Vermont Unconditional Progress Waiver

What It Is

Immediately and irrevocably waives lien rights for a specific progress payment upon signing. There is no condition — once signed, the waiver is effective regardless of whether payment actually arrives.

When to Use

Only after you've received the progress payment and the funds have cleared.

Key Legal Points

  • Effective immediately upon signing — no condition on payment clearing.
  • Covers only the specific progress payment amount, not the entire project.
  • Should exclude unpaid retainage and pending change orders.
  • Once signed, you cannot reclaim lien rights for the covered amount even if payment fails.
  • Vermont has no statute prohibiting a GC from requiring an unconditional waiver before payment — your protection is refusing to sign prematurely.

Warning

Do not sign an unconditional progress waiver until the check has cleared your bank. Vermont has no statute like Texas Section 53.283 that prohibits requiring unconditional waivers before payment. Your only protection is refusing to sign prematurely.

Tips

  • Wait for funds to clear before signing — there is no statutory backstop in Vermont if you sign too early.
  • If pressured to sign before payment, offer a conditional waiver instead and cite your right to lien protection under 9 V.S.A. Section 1921.

Vermont Conditional Final Waiver

What It Is

Waives lien rights for all labor, services, equipment, and materials furnished on the entire project, conditioned on receipt of the final payment including retainage.

When to Use

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

Key Legal Points

  • Covers the entire project scope — all labor, materials, equipment, and services.
  • Conditional on receipt of final payment in good and sufficient funds.
  • Final payment amount should include all retainage and approved change orders.
  • The conditional language protects you if the final check bounces or never arrives.
  • Vermont law requires retainage to be released within 30 days of final acceptance (9 V.S.A. Section 4005) — reference this if retainage is withheld beyond that window.

Tips

  • Confirm the final payment amount includes all retainage — Vermont doesn't cap the percentage, so check your contract terms.
  • List any disputed amounts or pending change orders as exclusions if they haven't been resolved.
  • Vermont's 7-day sub-payment rule (9 V.S.A. Section 4003) means the GC must pass retainage to you within 7 days of receiving it from the owner.

Vermont Unconditional Final Waiver

What It Is

Immediately and irrevocably releases all lien rights for the entire project upon signing. This is the most consequential waiver — it states you have been paid in full.

When to Use

Only after all payment — including final payment, retainage, and any approved change orders — has been received and cleared.

Key Legal Points

  • Effective immediately upon signing — covers ALL work on the project.
  • No conditions, no carve-outs, no going back.
  • States that the signer has been paid in full for all labor, services, equipment, and materials.
  • Vermont courts will enforce this as written — there is no statutory fallback for signing prematurely.
  • Cannot be reversed once executed, even if amounts are later found to be owing.

Warning

This is your final release. Do not sign with any amounts outstanding — including retainage, disputed extras, or pending change orders. Vermont has no statutory protection against premature unconditional waivers. Verify every dollar before signing.

Tips

  • Triple-check that all retainage has been released and all change orders are settled before signing.
  • If any disputes remain, use a conditional final waiver and resolve the disputes separately.

Common Vermont Lien Waiver Mistakes

  1. 1

    Including a lien waiver clause in the original contract

    9 V.S.A. Section 1921 makes advance waivers unenforceable. Any contract provision waiving lien rights before you perform labor or furnish materials has no legal effect. If your contract includes this language, it's a dead letter — but you should still push back so there's no confusion later.

  2. 2

    Delaying written notice to the owner as a subcontractor

    Under 9 V.S.A. Section 1921, a sub's lien extends only to the unpaid contract balance at the time the owner receives notice. If you wait until the owner has already paid the GC in full, your lien is worthless. Give written notice as early as possible after starting work.

  3. 3

    Signing an unconditional waiver before payment clears

    Vermont has no statute prohibiting a GC from requiring an unconditional waiver before payment. If you sign and the check bounces, you've released your lien rights with no recourse. Always use a conditional waiver until funds clear your bank.

  4. 4

    Using vague conditional language in a custom waiver

    Since Vermont doesn't prescribe statutory form language, the conditional nature of your waiver depends entirely on how you draft it. Ambiguous language like "upon payment" without specifying when the condition is satisfied can be interpreted as unconditional by a court. Be explicit: "This waiver is effective only upon receipt of payment in good and sufficient funds."

  5. 5

    Not knowing Vermont's steep late-payment penalties

    Vermont's prompt payment law (9 V.S.A. Chapter 102) imposes 12% annual interest and a 1% monthly penalty on wrongfully withheld amounts. If a GC is holding your retainage past 30 days after final acceptance or not paying within 7 days of receipt, cite these penalties. They add up fast.

Vermont Lien Waiver FAQ

Does Vermont require statutory lien waiver forms?
No. Vermont does not prescribe mandatory statutory waiver forms. Custom forms are used, and the waiver must clearly express the intent to waive lien rights with sufficient consideration. This gives you flexibility but also means you need to be careful with the language — since there's no required form, it's easier to inadvertently waive more rights than intended.
Do lien waivers need to be notarized in Vermont?
No. Vermont law does not require lien waivers to be notarized. Note that mechanics lien filings themselves must be notarized under 9 V.S.A. Section 1923, but that's a separate document. Your contract may require notarization as a condition of payment — check your contract terms.
What's the difference between a conditional and unconditional lien waiver in Vermont?
A conditional waiver is effective only when payment actually clears the bank. An unconditional waiver is effective immediately upon signing, regardless of whether payment arrives. Vermont has no statute prohibiting a GC from requiring an unconditional waiver before payment (unlike Texas), so always use a conditional waiver until funds clear.
Are advance lien waivers enforceable in Vermont?
No. 9 V.S.A. Section 1921 states that a lien "may not be waived in advance of the time such labor is performed or materials are furnished, and any provision calling for such advance waiver shall not be enforceable." Any lien waiver clause in a contract signed before work begins is a dead letter.
What are Vermont's mechanics lien filing deadlines?
A lien memorandum must be filed in the town clerk's office within 180 days from when payment became due for the last labor performed or materials furnished (9 V.S.A. Section 1923). After filing, you have another 180 days to commence an enforcement action. Missing either deadline kills your lien.
What notice must a subcontractor give in Vermont?
Under 9 V.S.A. Section 1921, subcontractors and suppliers who don't contract directly with the owner must give written notice to the owner claiming a lien, including the date payment is due if known. The lien extends only to the unpaid contract balance at the time notice is received — send notice early, before the owner pays the GC.
Is there a retainage cap in Vermont?
Vermont does not impose a statutory cap on the retainage percentage — the amount is governed by your contract. However, 9 V.S.A. Section 4005 requires retainage to be paid within 30 days of final acceptance, and subs must receive their retainage within 7 days of the contractor receiving it. Retainage cannot be withheld on delivered and accepted materials covered by manufacturer's warranty.
What happens if a GC doesn't pay on time in Vermont?
Vermont's prompt payment law (9 V.S.A. Chapter 102) is aggressive. Wrongfully withheld amounts accrue 12% annual interest plus a 1% monthly penalty. Contractors must pay subs within 7 days of receiving each progress or final payment. These penalties add up fast — cite them if a GC is dragging their feet.
Can a Vermont lien waiver cover future work?
No. A waiver should only cover work already performed and materials already furnished. 9 V.S.A. Section 1921 prohibits advance waivers, so any attempt to waive lien rights for work not yet performed is unenforceable. Make sure your waiver includes a clear through-date specifying the period covered.
Where do I file a mechanics lien in Vermont?
Lien memoranda are filed in the clerk's office of the town where the real property is located (9 V.S.A. Section 1923). The filing must be notarized and include the amount claimed, the parties involved, and a description of the property. Copies should be delivered to the property owner by certified mail or personal delivery.