Low quote
When one contractor bid is much cheaper
Use this when the total looks attractive but the quote does not
clearly prove the same scope as the other bid.
Hi [Contractor Name],
Before I compare this quote against the other bids, can you revise or confirm the written scope so I understand exactly what is included in the total?
Specifically, can you clarify:
- which rooms/areas are included
- what demo, prep, protection, installation, cleanup, and finish work are included
- which materials or selections are allowances
- what common items are excluded
- whether permits, inspections, and code-required changes are included
I am not asking you to change the price yet. I want to make sure I am comparing the same project assumptions before signing.
Large deposit
When money is due before work starts
Use this when the deposit feels high or the payment schedule is
not tied to visible project progress.
Hi [Contractor Name],
Before I send the deposit, can you clarify what the deposit covers and how the payment schedule lines up with project milestones?
Specifically:
- what the deposit is being used for
- which materials are being ordered before work starts
- what documentation I will receive for ordered materials
- what work must be complete before each progress payment
- whether any inspections must pass before the next payment
- what amount is held back for punch list, cleanup, and closeout
I want the payment schedule to be clear in writing before money moves.
Allowances
When material numbers look thin or lumped together
Use this before selections turn into surprise overages.
Hi [Contractor Name],
Can you revise the allowance section so I can understand what is included in each allowance?
For each allowance, can you show:
- the product category
- quantity or assumed scope
- whether tax, delivery, freight, waste, and installation labor are included
- whether contractor markup is included
- how overages are priced
- what written approval is required before ordering or installing over-budget selections
This will help me compare the quote and avoid confusion during selections.
Exclusions
When the quote may leave normal project costs outside the price
Use this to pull hidden owner costs into the open before signing.
Hi [Contractor Name],
Can you confirm the full exclusion list for this quote before I sign?
I especially want to understand whether the price excludes:
- permits, inspections, engineering, or design updates
- code-required upgrades
- hidden conditions
- utility changes
- patching, painting, or repair to adjacent areas
- debris hauling, final cleaning, or punch-list closeout
- owner-supplied materials or installation of those materials
If any of these are excluded, can you note how they would be priced if needed?
Change orders
When the quote does not explain how extra work is approved
Use this before unclear change-order rules become the project
rules later.
Hi [Contractor Name],
Can you clarify the change-order process in writing before I sign?
Specifically:
- what counts as a change order
- whether I must approve the change in writing before work starts
- how labor, materials, subcontractor costs, and markup are calculated
- how schedule delays are handled
- whether allowances and owner selections use the same approval process
- when change-order payment is due
I want to make sure extra work is priced and approved before it begins.
These scripts are educational and are not legal, inspection,
engineering, construction, licensing, lien, or contractor-vetting
advice. A paid Bid Before Build review reads your actual source
documents and gives quote-risk notes, not contractor selection or
outcome guarantees.