The right contractor is not simply the lowest bidder or the most polished salesperson. You are choosing the team that will manage money, decisions, trades, access to your home and unexpected conditions.
Verify the basics
Confirm the contractor’s license status, classification and business name through the appropriate licensing authority. Ask for insurance documentation and confirm that the proposal and contract identify the same legal entity.
Evaluate communication
Notice whether questions are answered directly, whether appointments are kept and whether the contractor explains uncertainty honestly. Communication before the contract is often a preview of communication during construction.
Compare scopes line by line
Look for demolition, protection, disposal, preparation, permits, inspections, materials, allowances, finish work and cleanup. Two totals cannot be compared fairly when the included work is different.
Ask how changes are handled
A professional change process should document the reason, price, approval and schedule impact. Avoid arrangements where extra work is discussed verbally and billed later without clear authorization.
Review payment structure
Payments should correspond to contract requirements and meaningful progress. Understand deposits, milestone payments, retention and how disputed or incomplete work is addressed.
Speak with relevant references
Ask references about a similar type of project. Useful questions include how the contractor handled communication, changes, cleanliness, schedule pressure and final corrections.
Trust process over promises
Be cautious of unusually fast timelines, vague guarantees or pressure to sign immediately. A reliable contractor should be able to explain how the project will be planned, documented and managed.
ADELIE perspective
Choose the contractor whose process makes the project understandable. Construction always includes variables; trust comes from how those variables are communicated and managed, not from pretending they do not exist.