Remodel Quote Guide
Do not accept vague change-order wording.
Change orders are where a remodel quote often turns into a moving target. Before signing, check whether extra work must be written, priced, approved, and tied to schedule changes.
Source Panel
What the change-order check is grounded in.
Missing source categories
Visible risk phrases
Scope limit
This workflow is educational source-document review. It is not legal, inspection, engineering, construction, licensing, lien, contractor-vetting, or financial advice.
Change-Order Check
Good change-order wording answers four questions.
- Who can approve it? The quote should say whose written approval is required before added work starts.
- How is it priced? The quote should explain labor, material, markup, tax, and whether credits are handled the same way.
- When does work pause? The quote should say whether work continues while price or scope changes are being approved.
- What happens to the schedule? The quote should explain how changes affect completion dates and payment timing.
Red Flags
Change-order wording to slow down on.
No written approval rule
The quote does not say that added cost or scope must be approved in writing before the work starts.
Markup is missing
The quote does not say whether contractor markup, tax, delivery, supervision, or overhead apply to changes.
Schedule impact is vague
The quote does not explain whether changes can extend completion dates or alter payment milestones.
Ask for this before signing.
Use this language with the contractor.
Please update the quote so change orders must be written, priced, and approved before extra work starts, including how markup, credits, schedule changes, and payment timing are handled.
Before The First Change
Change-order rules are easier to clarify before the deposit.
If the quote does not explain how changes are approved and priced, get a written red-flag review before you sign.