Palm Beach Florida Owner's 10-Day Notice to Contractor of Intent to Pay Lienors - Corporation or LLC

State:
Florida
County:
Palm Beach
Control #:
FL-03226A
Format:
Word; 
Rich Text
Instant download

Description

This Owner's 10-Day Notice to Contractor of Intent to Pay Lienors form is for use by a corporate or LLC owner to inform the contractor with ten days' notice and before the owner pays any money directly to any lienor except the contractor or any laborer, that the owner intends to make payments directly to listed lienors in specific amounts.
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  • Preview Owner's 10-Day Notice to Contractor of Intent to Pay Lienors - Corporation or LLC

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FAQ

In Florida, your Notice to Owner needs to be mailed within 45 days of when you completed your service or when you last received a payment. The notice must be served on the owner before filing the lien or within 15 days after you have filed the lien.

A Florida mechanics lien must be in the proper format and filed in the county recorder's office in the county where the property is located within the required timeframe. To record a lien in Florida, you will need to bring your completed Claim of Lien form to the recorder's office and pay the filing fee.

In Florida, your Notice to Owner needs to be mailed within 45 days of when you completed your service or when you last received a payment. The notice must be served on the owner before filing the lien or within 15 days after you have filed the lien.

A Notice to Owner (NTO) is a written notice prescribed by Florida Statute (713.06) that officially advises the owner of an improvement that the sender, usually a subcontractor or supplier not dealing directly with the owner, is looking to the owner to be sure the sender is paid before payment is made to the contractor

Here's the short answer: In Florida, all contractors, subcontractors, material suppliers, and vendors who did not contract directly with the property owner must send a Notice to Owner.

Your Florida NTO is not considered valid unless it is received by the 45th day, which means you must leave time for the NTO to reach not only the owner, but all required recipients.

Protect Yourself and Your Investment According to Florida law, those who work on your property or provide materials, and are not paid-in-full, have a right to enforce their claim for payment against your property. This claim is known as a construction lien.

Florida contractors and suppliers must generally send a preliminary notice within the first 45 days on a construction project. In Florida, preliminary notice is called a Notice to Owner, or NTO.

The property owner or property owner's agent is the one who must file the Notice of Commencement. Florida law states that a Notice of Commencement must be submitted to the clerk's office in order to apply for a building permit with contracts having a value greater than $2,500.

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Palm Beach Florida Owner's 10-Day Notice to Contractor of Intent to Pay Lienors - Corporation or LLC