You owe the IRS. Maybe a state tax lien got filed against your business. Maybe you came out of a bankruptcy a couple of years back and you are finally getting your feet under you again. Now a good job needs a bond, and you are certain the answer is no before you even ask.
Here is the truth most contractors never hear: a tax lien or a past bankruptcy is a red flag to a surety. It is not an automatic no. Contractors get bonded with liens and after bankruptcy every day. The path is narrower and it takes a real file, but it exists. Our job at Grit is to find that path.
Short answer: no, not automatically.
A tax lien tells a surety underwriter two things they care about. First, there is another creditor, the government, that may have a legal claim ahead of the surety if things go sideways. Second, an unpaid tax balance is a cash-flow signal, and cash flow is the number one thing a surety watches on a contractor.
So a lien makes the file harder. It does not close the file. What matters is the whole picture: how big the lien is, whether you are actively resolving it, your work history, your financials, and the size of the bond you need. A small permit or license bond is a very different conversation than a $2 million performance bond. We look at all of it and find the angle that works.
A surety bond is not insurance for you. It is a guarantee to the project owner that the job gets done and the bills get paid. If you default, the surety pays, then comes after you to get its money back. So the surety is underwriting one question above all: how likely are you to finish the work and pay your people?
A tax lien hits that question two ways:
The good news: the IRS itself recognizes surety agreements as a special category and has rules for working around a lien so bonded work can move forward. The federal tax lien statute at 26 U.S.C. 6323(c) gives surety agreements specific protection, and the IRS can subordinate a lien when doing so helps it ultimately collect. That is the legal machinery that lets a bonded contractor with a lien keep working.
This is where a specialist earns their keep. Here are the real paths we use.
A documented installment agreement changes everything. It turns "this contractor is not paying their taxes" into "this contractor has a plan and is making payments on schedule." Sureties want to see the agreement in writing, the monthly amount, and a clean payment history on it. The IRS offers short-term and long-term installment agreements, and being current on one is one of the strongest things you can bring to the table.
Subordination does not remove the lien. It moves the IRS behind another interest so a deal can happen. The IRS grants subordination when it believes the move will ultimately help it collect. In a bonding context, this can clear the priority problem that made the underwriter nervous. It takes paperwork and time, so start early.
Sometimes the fastest yes comes from putting up security. That can mean cash collateral, an irrevocable letter of credit, or a funds-control arrangement where a third party disburses job money to make sure subs and suppliers get paid first. It costs you flexibility, but it can get a bond issued today that would otherwise be a flat no.
A financially strong co-indemnitor, a business partner, a spouse with separate assets, or a related company, can strengthen a weak file. The surety gets another party standing behind the obligation. This is a common fix when the numbers on the business alone do not quite clear the bar.
This is the big one for higher-risk contractors, and most agents never mention it. Through the U.S. Small Business Administration's Surety Bond Guarantee Program, the SBA guarantees 80% to 90% of a surety's loss if a bonded contractor defaults. That guarantee lets a participating surety write a bond for a contractor it would otherwise decline. The program covers bid, performance, and payment bonds on contracts up to $9 million, and up to $14 million on federal contracts when a contracting officer certifies the need. You apply through an SBA-authorized agent, not the SBA directly. For a contractor with a lien or a credit challenge, this program is often the difference between yes and no.
Coming out of bankruptcy does not brand you unbondable. Sureties bond contractors who have been through it. What matters is which chapter, how far past it you are, and what your file looks like now.
Chapter 7 is liquidation. For an individual it wipes qualifying debt through a discharge. For a corporation it usually ends the business. If you personally went through a Chapter 7 and are rebuilding under a new or existing company, the surety looks at the time since discharge and the strength of what you have built since. More time and a clean recent track record help a lot.
Chapter 11 is reorganization, usually for a business that keeps operating under a court-approved plan. A contractor can still pursue bonding during or after a Chapter 11 with the right file, because the company is continuing, not shutting down. The surety will want to understand the plan, the current financials, and how the reorganization changed the balance sheet.
Chapter 13 is a repayment plan for individuals with regular income, typically three to five years. Making your plan payments on time is itself evidence you honor obligations. As with a tax installment agreement, a documented, on-track Chapter 13 is a point in your favor, not just a mark against you.
Whichever chapter you went through, the rebuild looks the same: put time between you and the filing, keep clean financial statements, stay current on taxes and any plan payments, and finish jobs on budget. Every completed project after a bankruptcy is a data point that tells the underwriter the old story is over. See our guide on how contractors qualify for bonds for what goes into a strong file.
If another agent already told you no, do not throw the paperwork away. That declination letter and your lien details are exactly what we want to see. They tell us what the last surety choked on, which means we know what to fix or work around.
Grit does not decline submissions. That is our philosophy. When a contractor needs a bond, our job is to find the path to yes, whether that is a payment-plan story, collateral, a co-indemnitor, or the SBA program. A "no" from one market is a starting point for us, not the end.
Curious where you stand before you call? Run the free Contractor Bond Scorecard to see how a surety would read your file today and what to work on to grow your limits. And if a credit issue is part of the story, read how contractors get bonded with bad credit and the real reasons contractors get declined for bonds.
A note on how bonds actually get approved
Every surety bond is individually underwritten. A tax lien or a past bankruptcy does not automatically disqualify you, and nothing on this page guarantees approval, a rate, or a specific outcome. Bond pricing and terms depend on your file, the bond type, and the market. Talk to the Grit team about your situation and we will tell you straight what the path looks like. Call (801) 505-5500.
We help contractors qualify for bonds other agents turn down. Take our 2-minute scorecard and we will tell you exactly what your bonding program looks like - and what it could look like.
Often, yes. A federal tax lien is a red flag, not an automatic disqualification. The strongest thing you can do is get on a documented IRS installment agreement and stay current on it. Other paths include lien subordination, posting collateral, adding a co-indemnitor, or using the SBA Surety Bond Guarantee Program. Every file is underwritten individually, so talk to a surety specialist about your numbers.
No. Underwriters weigh the size of the lien, whether you are actively resolving it, your work history, your financials, and the size of the bond you need. A small license or permit bond is far easier to place with a lien than a large performance bond. A lien makes the file harder, not impossible.
Yes. Sureties bond contractors who have been through Chapter 7, 11, and 13. What matters is how much time has passed, the strength of your current financials, and your recent track record of finishing jobs. The further you are from the filing and the cleaner your recent history, the easier it gets.
Bring us the declination letter and your lien details. A no from one market tells us exactly what to fix or work around. We do not decline submissions. Our job is to find the path to yes, whether through a payment plan, collateral, a co-indemnitor, or the SBA program.
It is a federal program where the SBA guarantees 80% to 90% of a surety's loss if a bonded contractor defaults, which lets sureties write bonds for higher-risk small contractors they would otherwise decline. It covers bid, performance, and payment bonds on contracts up to $9 million, and up to $14 million on certified federal contracts. You can confirm current program terms and limits directly with the U.S. Small Business Administration. You apply through an SBA-authorized surety agent, not the SBA directly.
It can. Higher-risk files sometimes carry higher rates or require collateral, and pricing varies by surety and bond type. Every bond is individually underwritten, so we cannot quote a rate here. Get your file in front of a specialist and we will work to place it at the best terms the market will give.
A tax lien or a bankruptcy in the rearview does not have to cost you the next job. The contractors who get bonded through it are the ones who bring the whole story to a specialist and let them build the file the right way.
Bring us the details, even the declination letter. We will tell you straight what the path to yes looks like. Call the Grit team at (801) 505-5500 or run the free Contractor Bond Scorecard to see where you stand today.