Contractor Cash Flow: Deposits and Draws Done Right
Financing helps the homeowner pay. Deposits and draws are how you get paid without floating the whole job on your own money. Contractors who skip this structure end up funding materials and payroll out of pocket, then wonder why a profitable business feels broke.
Why payment structure beats financing for cash flow
A financed job that pays 100% at completion can still wreck your cash flow — you carry materials and labor for the entire build. A deposit at signing plus draws at milestones means the project funds itself as it progresses. Get this structure right first; then financing becomes an accelerant instead of a crutch.
Common structures by project size
| Project size | Typical structure | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Under $5,000 | Deposit at signing, balance at completion | Two payments keeps it simple for repairs and small installs. |
| $5,000–$25,000 | Deposit, materials draw, completion payment | The materials draw covers your biggest upfront outlay. |
| $25,000+ | Deposit plus milestone draws tied to inspections or phases | Spell out each milestone in the contract to avoid disputes. |
Note: deposit limits and draw rules vary by state and license type — check your local requirements before standardizing a structure.
How financing interacts with deposits and draws
Ask any financing provider three questions: Can the homeowner's loan fund a deposit before work starts? How are draws disbursed — to the homeowner or directly to you? And what documentation triggers each disbursement? Models differ here, and the answers matter more to your cash flow than the headline rate ever will.
Who This Fits
- [✓] Contractors who currently wait until completion to get paid
- [✓] Project-based businesses carrying materials costs out of pocket
- [✓] Anyone adding customer financing who wants it to strengthen, not replace, payment structure
Who This Does Not Fit
- [✗] Emergency repair work completed in a single visit (simple payment at service usually suffices)
FAQ
How big should a deposit be?
It depends on your state's rules, your trade, and the project. Many contractors anchor deposits to their real upfront costs — enough to cover materials commitment — within legal limits.
Do financed customers still pay deposits?
It depends on the financing model. Some programs can disburse funds in stages; others fund at completion. Ask before assuming.
What if a customer refuses a deposit?
A homeowner unwilling to commit anything upfront is telling you something about the deal. Decide your policy in advance and hold it consistently.
Not Sure Which Model Fits Your Business?
Take the 60-second Contractor Financing Fit Check and get a recommendation based on your trade, ticket size, timeline, and sales process.
Take the Fit Check