Wisconsin Lien Waiver Forms — Generate in 60 Seconds
Generate Wisconsin lien waivers that follow best practices under Wis. Stat. 779.05. Wisconsin doesn't prescribe mandatory waiver forms, but it does something arguably worse: any ambiguity in a waiver is construed against the signer. All four waiver types available with free preview.
Which Type Do You Need?
Wisconsin accepts all four standard waiver types. Two factors determine which one you need: (1) whether payment has cleared, and (2) whether this covers a progress payment or the entire project. Because Wisconsin construes waiver ambiguity against the signer (Wis. Stat. 779.05), using precise, well-drafted forms matters more here than in statutory form states.
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Sign Up FreeWisconsin Lien Waiver Rules at a Glance
No statutory form required
Wis. Stat. 779.05 governs lien waivers but does not prescribe mandatory form language. Any written, signed document expressing intent to waive lien rights is enforceable.
Ambiguity construed against the signer
Under Wis. Stat. 779.05, any ambiguity in a lien waiver document is interpreted against the person who signed it. Vague language can cost you more rights than you intended to give up.
Waivers cover ALL work unless expressly limited
A signed waiver is deemed to cover all labor, services, and materials on the entire improvement — unless the document specifically and expressly limits its scope (Wis. Stat. 779.05).
Right to refuse until paid
A lien claimant can refuse to furnish a waiver unless paid in full for the work to which the waiver relates (Wis. Stat. 779.05(2)). Contract provisions requiring pre-payment waivers are void (779.135).
Notarization NOT required
Wisconsin lien waivers don't need to be notarized. A signature is sufficient.
6-month filing deadline
Mechanics lien must be filed within 6 months of last furnishing, with a mandatory 30-day Notice of Intent served beforehand (Wis. Stat. 779.06).
Wisconsin Lien Waiver Legal Requirements
Wisconsin's lien waiver framework under Wis. Stat. 779.05 is deceptively short but carries serious consequences. The statute doesn't prescribe mandatory form language — any written, signed document purporting to waive construction lien rights is "valid and binding" regardless of whether consideration was paid and regardless of when it was signed (before or after the work). That last part is critical: Wisconsin treats a waiver signed before work begins the same as one signed after payment clears. Two provisions make Wisconsin uniquely risky for signers. First, ambiguity is construed against the person who signed the waiver — not the person who drafted it. Second, unless a waiver "specifically and expressly" limits its scope, it covers all labor, services, materials, plans, and specifications on the entire improvement. These rules mean a sloppy or overbroad waiver can eliminate far more rights than intended. Wis. Stat. 779.135 provides one safeguard: contract provisions requiring a sub to waive lien rights before payment are void. But this only voids the contract clause — if the sub voluntarily signs a waiver anyway, 779.05 makes it binding.
Wisconsin Conditional Progress Waiver
What It Is
Waives lien rights for a progress payment, intended to take effect only when the check clears the bank.
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
- Wisconsin has no case law confirming that conditional language is enforceable under Wis. Stat. 779.05. The statute says waivers are valid "whether or not consideration was paid," which creates legal uncertainty about conditions tied to payment.
- Despite this ambiguity, conditional waivers are standard industry practice in Wisconsin and are recommended by construction attorneys.
- The conditional language must be specific and express — vague conditions will be construed against the signer.
- Should cover only work through a specific date and exclude retainage, pending change orders, and work performed after the covered period.
- Reference the specific project, property location, owner, and exact payment amount.
Tips
- Use specific conditional language: "This waiver is effective only upon actual receipt and clearance of payment in the amount of [amount]."
- The more precise your conditional language, the better your chance of enforcement — Wisconsin punishes ambiguity.
- Keep copies of pay applications alongside each waiver for your records.
Wisconsin Unconditional Progress Waiver
What It Is
Immediately waives lien rights for a progress payment upon signing. No conditions — effective the moment you sign.
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.
- Under Wis. Stat. 779.05, this waiver is binding even if you haven't actually been paid. Wisconsin law does not prohibit requiring unconditional waivers before payment (unlike Texas or California).
- The waiver covers all work on the improvement unless it "specifically and expressly" limits the scope. Always include a through-date and payment amount.
- Ambiguity in the waiver language is interpreted against you as the signer.
Warning
Wisconsin law does NOT prohibit a GC from requiring an unconditional waiver before payment — 779.135 only voids contract clauses requiring pre-payment waivers, not the waiver itself. If you sign, it's binding. Don't sign until the money is in your account.
Tips
- Verify the exact deposit amount against your bank statement before signing.
- Expressly limit the scope: specify the payment amount, through-date, and exclude retainage.
- Remember: 779.05(2) gives you the right to refuse to furnish a waiver until paid in full.
Wisconsin Conditional Final Waiver
What It Is
Waives lien rights for ALL labor, services, and materials on the entire project, intended to take effect only upon receipt of final payment.
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.
- Same legal uncertainty as conditional progress waivers: no Wisconsin case law confirms conditional language overrides 779.05's "valid regardless of consideration" language.
- Final payment amount should include all retainage and approved change orders.
- If the conditional language fails, you've unconditionally waived all lien rights on the project. The stakes are highest with this form.
- The 6-month lien filing deadline (779.06) still applies — a conditional waiver doesn't extend it.
Tips
- Make sure the final payment amount includes ALL retainage. Wisconsin has no private retainage cap, so the amount could be significant.
- If disputes remain, list them with dollar amounts as express exceptions in the waiver.
- Consider a simultaneous exchange — hand over the signed waiver only when you receive the check.
Wisconsin 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 you can sign.
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.
- Under Wis. Stat. 779.05, this is binding upon signing regardless of payment status. No built-in protections like Texas's bold "PROHIBITED" notice.
- Covers all labor, services, materials, plans, and specifications on the entire improvement — no carve-outs unless you expressly include them.
- Once signed, your only recourse for non-payment is a breach of contract claim. The lien is gone.
- Ambiguity is construed against you — any unclear language will be read in the broadest possible way.
Warning
This is permanent and irrevocable. Wisconsin's "construe against the signer" rule makes this the riskiest unconditional final waiver in the country. Verify every dollar has cleared before signing. If ANY amount is outstanding, use a conditional final waiver instead.
Tips
- Triple-check that all retainage, change orders, and final payment have cleared your bank.
- If disputes remain, don't sign. Use a conditional final and resolve separately.
- Keep your complete paper trail: all progress waivers, pay apps, notices, and this final waiver.
Common Wisconsin Lien Waiver Mistakes
- 1
Signing a waiver without expressly limiting its scope
Under Wis. Stat. 779.05, a waiver without express limitations covers ALL work on the entire improvement. If you sign a progress waiver that doesn't specify a through-date, payment amount, and scope, you may have waived your lien rights for the whole project — not just the draw you thought you were covering.
- 2
Assuming conditional language will protect you
No Wisconsin court has ruled on whether conditional waiver language is enforceable under 779.05. The statute says waivers are valid "whether or not consideration was paid." Conditional waivers are standard practice, but don't rely on them alone as your primary protection. A simultaneous exchange of waiver and payment is the recommended approach.
- 3
Not serving the required notices on time
Subcontractors must serve notice to the owner within 60 days of first furnishing labor or materials (Wis. Stat. 779.02). Before filing a lien, a separate 30-day Notice of Intent is required (779.06). Missing either deadline can destroy your lien rights entirely.
- 4
Signing an unconditional waiver before payment clears
Wisconsin law doesn't prohibit requiring unconditional waivers before payment. Wis. Stat. 779.135 only voids contract clauses — if you voluntarily sign anyway, the waiver is binding. Use 779.05(2) to push back: you have the right to refuse to furnish a waiver until paid in full.
- 5
Using vague or ambiguous waiver language
Wisconsin is one of the toughest states for waiver signers: ambiguity is construed against you, not the drafter. A poorly worded waiver could be interpreted to cover more work, more money, or more rights than you intended. Use precise forms with specific amounts, dates, and scope limitations.
Wisconsin Lien Waiver FAQ
Does Wisconsin require statutory lien waiver forms?
Do lien waivers need to be notarized in Wisconsin?
What's the difference between a conditional and unconditional lien waiver in Wisconsin?
Are advance lien waivers enforceable in Wisconsin?
What does 'construed against the signer' mean for my lien waiver?
What are Wisconsin's mechanics lien filing deadlines?
What notice do subcontractors need to give in Wisconsin?
Can I refuse to sign a lien waiver until I'm paid?
Is there a retainage cap on private construction projects in Wisconsin?
What happens if my waiver doesn't specify a scope limitation?
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