What Is a Construction Draw Schedule and How Do I Avoid Overpaying?
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What Is a Construction Draw Schedule and How Do I Avoid Overpaying?
Direct Answer
A construction draw schedule is the agreed timeline of payments to your contractor, where each "draw" is released only after a defined chunk of work is completed and inspected — not on a calendar, and never all up front. To avoid overpaying, tie every draw to verified, completed milestones, hold 5%-10% retainage on each one, and require lien waivers from the GC and every subcontractor before money moves.
The trap that costs owners the most: front-loaded draws, where the contractor schedules 30%-40% of the budget into the first one or two payments before commensurate work exists. That leaves you overpaid relative to progress — if the GC stalls or walks, you have funded labor and materials you do not have.
The fix is simple: keep the money slightly behind the work at all times, verify each draw with photos and an on-site or lender inspection, and never release the final draw until the punch list is closed. On a typical commercial buildout, expect 5-7 draws keyed to demolition, rough-in, drywall, finishes, and completion.
How a Draw Schedule Actually Works
Each draw is a request for payment supported by proof of completed work:
- The GC submits a draw request (often an AIA G702/G703 form) listing each scheduled line, the % complete, and the dollars earned to date.
- You — or your lender's inspector — verify the work on site against that percentage.
- You release the draw minus retainage, against signed lien waivers.
- Repeat until completion, then release the final draw + retainage after punch-list sign-off.
The whole point is that payment trails progress. The owner who pays ahead of the work has handed the contractor leverage; the owner who pays slightly behind keeps it.
The Front-Loading Trap
The most common way owners overpay is a draw schedule that weights early payments:
- A GC schedules "mobilization" and "materials" at 30%-40% of the budget in draw one — far more than the actual early work justifies.
- By draw two or three, you have paid for labor and materials that are not yet installed or even on site.
- If the project stalls, you are overpaid relative to completion, and recovering that money is a lawsuit, not a phone call.
Counter it: demand a draw schedule where the dollars never lead the physical progress. Materials should be paid when delivered and stored on site (with proof), labor when installed and inspected. A reasonable mobilization fee is fine; a disguised prepayment is not.
Retainage: Your Built-In Insurance
Retainage is the slice of each draw you withhold until the job is done — standard at 5%-10%. It does two things:
- Keeps the GC motivated to finish the unglamorous final 5% (the punch list) instead of chasing the next job.
- Gives you a cushion if a defect or unpaid sub surfaces at the end.
On a $1,000,000 buildout at 10% retainage, you are holding $100,000 until completion — real leverage. Release it only after the punch list is closed, inspections pass, and final lien waivers are in. Some owners step retainage down to 5% after the job is 50% complete; that is negotiable, but never drop to zero before the end.
Lien Waivers With Every Draw
This is non-negotiable and it is where owners get burned worst. Even after you pay the GC in full, an unpaid subcontractor or supplier can file a mechanic's lien on your building. Protect yourself:
- Require a conditional lien waiver with each draw request and an unconditional waiver once that payment clears.
- Get waivers from the GC and every sub and material supplier — not just the GC.
- No waivers, no draw. Period.
Without this discipline you can pay twice for the same work — once to the GC and again to satisfy the lien.
A Sample Commercial Draw Breakdown
A balanced schedule keeps money behind work:
| Draw | Milestone | % of budget |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mobilization, permits, demolition | ~15% |
| 2 | Framing + MEP rough-in (inspected) | ~25% |
| 3 | Insulation, drywall, ceilings | ~20% |
| 4 | Flooring, finishes, fixtures, paint | ~25% |
| 5 | Final, punch list, occupancy | ~15% |
All figures are net of 5%-10% retainage. Compare any GC's proposed schedule against this shape — if their draw one is double the mobilization line above, push back.
What to Demand in the Contract
Lock the draw rules into the construction contract, not a handshake:
- Milestone-based draws with defined completion triggers — never date-based.
- 5%-10% retainage on each draw, released at final completion.
- Lien waivers from GC and all subs as a condition of every payment.
- Owner/lender inspection rights before each release.
- Stored-materials proof required before paying for off-site or on-site materials.
- A schedule of values (the G703) you reviewed and approved before work began.
FAQ
How many draws should a commercial buildout have? Usually 5-7, keyed to real milestones — demolition, rough-in, drywall, finishes, and completion. More draws means tighter control and less overpayment risk; fewer, larger draws favor the contractor.
Who inspects the work before a draw is released? If a lender funds the project, their inspector verifies each draw. If you are self-funding, you — or a hired owner's rep / project manager — should walk the site and confirm the claimed % complete before paying.
What happens if I overpay relative to progress? You lose leverage. If the GC stalls or defaults, you have funded work that does not exist on site, and recovery means a lawsuit or a claim against the bond — slow and uncertain. Keeping payment behind progress is the prevention.
Can the contractor bill for materials not yet installed? Only with proof they are delivered and stored on site (or properly bonded if off site). Never pay for materials that are merely "ordered." Require photos and delivery documentation tied to the draw.
Sources
- American Institute of Architects (AIA) — G702/G703 application and certificate for payment
- Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) — payment and retainage standards
- ConsensusDocs — construction payment and lien-waiver forms
- CBRE — commercial buildout cost and schedule benchmarks
- JLL — project and development management payment controls
- Cushman & Wakefield — tenant improvement project guidance
- NAIOP — construction draw and risk-management best practices
