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How to Increase Your Surety Bonding Capacity
Your Bonding Limits Are Not Fixed. They Grow When You Give Your Surety Reasons to Grow Them.
Every contractor with a bond program has two numbers that define their capacity: a single job limit and an aggregate limit. These numbers determine the largest project you can bond and the total amount of bonded work you can carry at any given time. When a project comes along that exceeds those limits, you are stuck, unless you have been building toward higher capacity all along.
Bonding capacity is not assigned randomly. It is a direct reflection of your financial strength, your track record, and your relationship with your surety. The contractors who consistently grow their capacity are the ones who understand what sureties need to see, and who manage their business with that visibility in mind.
At Grit Insurance Group, helping contractors grow their bonding capacity is at the core of what we do. We do not just place bonds. We help you build the financial profile, the documentation, and the surety relationships that support where your business is headed.
How Long Does It Take to Increase Bonding Capacity?
Most contractors see meaningful improvement in 6 to 12 months when they take deliberate, structured steps. The contractors who increase capacity fastest are not the ones with the biggest numbers - they are the ones who communicate consistently, document thoroughly, and manage their surety relationship like a business partnership.
Here is what a realistic timeline looks like:
Months 1 to 3: Financial Foundation
- Upgrade to CPA-prepared financial statements. This single step can unlock immediate capacity for many contractors.
- Improve working capital by delaying equipment purchases, collecting aged receivables, and retaining earnings inside the business.
- Update your work-in-progress schedule to current. Submit it proactively to your surety. Do not wait to be asked.
Months 4 to 6: Banking and Cash Position
- Strengthen your bank line of credit. Sureties treat your bank line as a financial backstop.
- Reduce short-term debt and refinance into long-term obligations where possible. Sureties read short-term debt as cash flow pressure.
- Begin submitting quarterly financials instead of annual-only. Quarterly reporting alone shows discipline and gives the surety more frequent data to justify increases.
Months 7 to 9: Track Record and Project Selection
- Complete bonded projects in your current range on time and on budget. Each successful completion is the evidence your surety needs to justify the next capacity increase.
- Avoid overextension. Sureties penalize backlog that grows faster than your financial base supports.
- Document every completed project: type, contract value, owner, dates, and final profitability. This becomes the project schedule in your underwriting file.
Months 10 to 12: Request a Formal Program Review
- Assemble the full underwriting package: updated financials, current WIP, backlog, completed project list, and bank line summary.
- Schedule a formal program review through your bond agent. Do not just ask for a limit increase - present a business case.
- Set your target single job limit and aggregate for the coming year, with the financial and operational milestones that support those numbers.
If your timeline is shorter than 12 months because a specific project requires it, your surety still wants to see the same evidence. The faster you can produce CPA financials, a current WIP, and a clean project history, the faster the conversation about capacity moves forward.
Strengthen Your Financial Statements
Financial strength is the single biggest driver of bonding capacity. Sureties extend limits based on what your balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow can support. If you want bigger limits, you need stronger numbers, and you need those numbers presented in a way sureties trust.
Move to CPA-prepared financial statements if you have not already. For bond programs above $1 million in capacity, most sureties require at least CPA-compiled statements. For larger programs, reviewed or audited financials carry significantly more weight. The level of CPA involvement signals to the surety how reliable the numbers are, and the more confidence the surety has in your financials, the more capacity they will extend.
Focus on the metrics sureties care about most: working capital, net worth, profitability, and cash flow. Growing your working capital, the difference between current assets and current liabilities, is the most direct path to higher bonding limits. Sureties often use working capital as a multiplier to set your capacity. A contractor with $500,000 in working capital will generally receive significantly more capacity than one with $200,000, all else being equal.
Submit your year-end financials promptly, ideally within 90 to 120 days of your fiscal year end. Do not wait for the surety to ask. Proactive submission shows professionalism and gives the surety current data to work with when you need a limit increase.
Maintain an Accurate Work-in-Progress Schedule
Your work-in-progress (WIP) schedule is the document that tells your surety how your active projects are performing. It shows every job in progress, including the contract amount, costs to date, billings to date, percentage complete, and estimated cost to complete. A clean, current WIP gives the surety confidence that you have a handle on your project economics. A sloppy or outdated WIP makes them nervous.
Update your WIP at least quarterly. If you are actively seeking capacity increases or bidding on larger work, monthly updates are even better. Make sure the numbers are accurate. The WIP is one of the first things an underwriter checks when you ask for more capacity, and inconsistencies between your WIP and your financial statements create questions that slow the process.
The WIP also tells the surety how much of your current capacity is being used. If your aggregate limit is $5 million and your WIP shows $4.8 million in active bonded work, there is almost no room for a new project. If your WIP shows $2 million in active work with several projects nearing completion, the surety sees available capacity and is more likely to approve additional bonds.
Build Your Track Record Strategically
Sureties increase capacity based on demonstrated performance. Every bonded project you complete successfully, on time, on budget, and without claims, builds your credibility with the surety and supports higher limits on the next project.
The key is progressive growth. If your current single job limit is $1 million, do not expect to jump to $5 million overnight. Take on projects that stretch your capacity incrementally: a $1.2 million job, then $1.5 million, then $2 million. Execute each one well. Each successful completion gives the surety evidence that you can handle more.
Maintain a detailed completed project list that shows the type of work, the contract value, the project owner, and the completion date. This document is part of every underwriting submission and directly supports your case for higher capacity. The more comprehensive your track record, the easier it is for your surety to justify increasing your limits.
Invest in Your Financial Infrastructure
As your business grows, the surety's expectations for your financial infrastructure grow with it. A contractor doing $1 million in annual revenue can often manage with basic bookkeeping and compiled financial statements. A contractor doing $5 million needs a construction-focused CPA who understands percentage-of-completion accounting and WIP schedules. A contractor doing $10 million or more needs either a fractional CFO or a full-time financial professional who can produce the level of reporting that supports a large bond program.
A construction-focused CPA is one of the most impactful investments you can make for your bonding capacity. They understand how sureties read financial statements, they know which metrics matter most, and they can prepare your financials in a format that speaks the surety's language. A general accountant who handles your taxes may not have this specialized knowledge.
For contractors who are not ready for a full-time CFO but need more financial sophistication than a CPA alone provides, a fractional CFO can bridge the gap. They can help with financial planning, cash flow management, WIP accuracy, and the kind of forward-looking reporting that sureties value when considering capacity increases.
Building strong banking relationships also supports capacity growth. A line of credit or letter of credit from a reputable construction lender strengthens your balance sheet and gives the surety additional confidence in your liquidity. Some sureties specifically ask about banking relationships during the underwriting process.
Fractional CFO vs Full-Time CFO
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Manage Your Surety Relationship Proactively
Your surety relationship is a business partnership, and like any partnership, it works best when communication flows both ways.
Do not wait for your annual review to engage with your surety. If a project runs into trouble, whether that is cost overruns, schedule delays, or disputes with the owner, tell your bond agent early. Sureties do not like surprises. A contractor who communicates proactively about challenges earns more trust than one who stays silent and hopes the problem resolves itself. That trust translates directly into capacity.
When you submit your annual financials, ask your bond agent to schedule a program review with the surety. Use that conversation to discuss your growth plans, your project pipeline, and what capacity you will need over the next 12 months. Give the surety a reason to increase your limits by showing them where your business is going, not just where it has been.
If your surety is not growing with you, and your capacity has been flat despite stronger financials and a solid track record, it may be time to explore additional surety relationships. Some contractors maintain relationships with two sureties, using one as their primary and the other as a secondary for overflow capacity. Your bond agent can help you evaluate whether this makes sense for your situation.
Plan for Perpetuation
Sureties do not just evaluate your business today. They think about what happens tomorrow. If you are the sole owner and key operator of your contracting company, the surety is exposed to a risk that many contractors do not think about: what happens to bonded projects if something happens to you?
Contractor perpetuation planning addresses this risk directly. Sureties require it not as a generic business best practice, but because they need assurance that bonded projects will be completed even if the principal or key leadership is no longer available. If a contractor dies, becomes incapacitated, or leaves the business while bonded projects are active, the surety is still on the hook for project completion.
Contractors who demonstrate a perpetuation plan, including key person insurance, a succession strategy, and a second-in-command who can manage projects, give the surety confidence that the business can continue operating through unexpected events. That confidence supports higher bonding capacity.
Explore the Full Increase Your Bonding Capacity Section
This page is an overview. For deeper detail on each strategy, explore our dedicated Increase Your Bonding Capacity section, where each topic gets its own full page.
Increase Your Bonding Capacity
Financial Strength and Bonding
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Whether you are hitting your current limits and need more room, or you want to build a strategy for long-term capacity growth, our team can help.
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Want to talk about growing your bonding capacity? Call us at (801) 505-5500.