SAN DIEGO REAL ESTATE ARTICLES


TYPES OF CONTRACTORS


A general contractor is the key contractor you have to hire for a major renovation project. The general contractor though, has other subcontractors that he oversees for the renovation of your home. The repair and maintenance contractors you need are very different from the general contractor.

Normally the General Contractor does not provide the labor to build the house. The workers come from the subcontractors or the trades. This may include carpenters for roughens, excavators, flooring, painting, concrete sub, plumber, electrician, roofer, and the finish carpenter. The general contractor hires the subcontractors and holds their contracts. Holding the contract means that they are working for him, they are under contract to him and he pays them directly. When you hire a general contractor you only have a contract with him not all the subs. The general contractor marks up the subcontractor's fee a certain percentage of the construction amount.

For this fee the contractor does all the managing and scheduling of the subs. He also pays, provides supervision of the construction, provides dumpsters, port-a-john, insurance and other miscellaneous things concerned with the construction project. The contractors make money by charging for labor and by marking up the materials. The general contractor is referred to the generalist and the subs are the specialist. Whenever you need just a specific thing fixed in your home you would always hire a specialist. A specialist would be for an example a plumber or electrician. When hiring someone for maintenance task some people just hire a guy with a magnet advertising on the side of his truck but in reality he is not licensed at all. This could be people like gutter cleaners, painters or lawn care. Usually using these types do work out but you must be careful because you do not have the legal protection as with using a licensed contractor. It's just better to use common sense and keep yourself protected by going with someone who is licensed.

It's generally easy to tell the unlicensed contractors or scam artist or possibly someone who is just trying to get in your home. Use wisdom and do your homework to dodge the following pitfalls.

1. Unlicensed contractors often go door-to-door maintaining that they "just finished a job down the street and we're in the neighborhood and noticed your roof needs patching."

2. They may rush you and twist their words stating, "If you act now, you'll get a special price."

3. Unlicensed contractors either overlook to pull construction permits or they ask you to do it for them. If you do this, you are assuming legal responsibility for the project as well as the contractor's mistakes.

4. Some states require contractors to list their license numbers on their vehicles, their estimates and their advertising. If a contractor has not done that, this is commonly a bad sign.

5. If you see a license number in an ad, and it has a different number of letters, numerals and digits than all the other licenses, this probably means it is a bogus license number.

6. Be suspicious if a contractor provides only a PO box or cell number. That may mean he does not have credibility in the community and could skip town when people start to complain.

7. Unlicensed contractors usually ask for a lot of money up front if not the whole amount. Consider this a red flag and try not to pay any money in advance. If you must, keep the amount to a minimum.

 

This work is protected under copyright and may not be published in other works without express written permission

 

Return to Brokerforyou's real estate articles

 

San Diego real estate

Search the San Diego MLS