Finding The Right
Contractor For Your Remodeling Project
As
anyone who has any experience working with contractors
will tell you, finding the RIGHT contractor for your
project entails much more than just finding the lowest
price. Less tangible items like your ability to
communicate and feel comfortable working with your
contractor will inevitably prove to be much more
important in determining your eventual satisfaction with
the job – particularly if it’s a large project.
Here are a couple of tips on
finding the right contractor for your home improvement
project:
Ask for references
Talk to homeowners this contractor has
done work for in the past. Were they satisfied with the
work? Was the work finished? Did the contractor keep to
the agreed-upon schedule? Did the contractor return
phone calls
Get two or three
specific written bids
Different contractors can vary widely on
pricing and level of detail even when bidding for the
same job. Make sure and get several estimates on your
home remodeling project, especially if it’s a large
project. As much as possible, make sure that you explain
the job fully to each of the contractors to ensure each
one bids on the same exact job so that you can compare
the estimates ‘apple-to-apple’.
Don’t automatically
accept the lowest bid
The old saying “you get what you pay
for” applies here. A higher bid may be worth the price
in better materials, workmanship and reliability. A
large number of complaints filed against contractors are
the result of homeowner taking the lowest bid and then
being unhappy with the low quality of work. A
recommended alternative to getting bids is to work with
a design/build contractor that you have checked out and
are comfortable with. Even when the contractor promises
to do the same job, be careful – often contractors will
bid a job extremely aggressively in order to get it.
When the work takes longer than originally planned, the
contractor can feel ‘squeezed’ by the budget and try and
cut corners.
Make sure your
contractor is properly licensed
A license is not an endorsement of the
quality of work. It provides some financial protection
for you, the customer.
Make sure your
contractor is properly insured
Ask your contractor for a copy of his
proof of liability insurance and workers' compensation
insurance or the name and
number of his/her insurance agent to call and verify
proof of coverage.
Most importantly…Do you trust this person to work on
your home?
When it comes down to it, the most important thing to
check is your own gut feeling. How do you feel about
this contractor working on what is probably your single
largest investment – your home? Do you trust this person
inside your home? Around your children? Can you
communicate well with this person about the project? Are
they ‘in tune’ to your needs?

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