Why You Should Never Start Work Without a Signed Contract in Minnesota
Handshakes feel friendly. Group texts feel easy. But when thousands of dollars and your home are on the line, you need more than “yeah, we’ll get you taken care of.” Here’s why a written, signed contract is non-negotiable before anyone swings a hammer or backs a truck into your driveway.
In Minnesota, a lot of projects still start with a simple promise: a text, a quick quote, and “we’ll be there Monday.” Most of the time, things go fine. Until they don’t.
Jobs run long. Extra work “pops up.” Prices change. The owner is on vacation when the crew shows up. Suddenly, what you thought was a simple project turns into a he-said / she-said mess—and you’re standing in the middle of it with nothing in writing.
A clear, signed contract is what keeps everyone honest, keeps expectations tight, and gives you something solid to point to when memories get fuzzy. The good contractors already know this. The ones who resist it are usually the same ones who cause headaches later.
A handshake doesn’t hold up when memories change
At the kitchen table, it all sounds simple: “We’ll remove the tree, grind the stump, clean up, and it’ll be about five grand.” Everybody nods. A week later, you’re arguing about what “clean up” meant and whether stump grinding was actually included.
Verbal agreements rely on memory—and memories bend toward whoever’s under pressure. A written contract takes the guesswork out. It turns “I thought” into “Here’s what we both signed.”
That doesn’t make things confrontational. It makes them professional. The contractor knows exactly what they’ve promised. You know exactly what you’re paying for.
A real contract spells out scope, price, and payment schedule
The core of a good contract is simple: what’s being done, what it costs, and how/when you pay.
At a minimum, the agreement should clearly list:
• The exact work to be performed (what’s included—and what isn’t)
• Total price or clear pricing structure
• Deposit amount and when it’s due
• Progress payments or milestones, if any
• Final payment timing (for example, “due at substantial completion”)
When those pieces are vague, it’s easy for “a quick extra” to turn into hundreds or thousands more than you expected—or for a contractor to demand more money halfway through the job with no paper trail.
Change orders protect you when the job inevitably shifts
On almost every project, something changes. Rot shows up behind siding. A neighbor asks to extend the fence. You decide to upgrade materials halfway through. That’s normal—but it’s dangerous if it stays verbal.
A solid contract explains how changes will be handled:
• Who can approve extra work
• How new costs are presented (written change order, text confirmation, etc.)
• How those changes affect schedule and payment
Without that structure, “we can just add that on” turns into the world’s worst surprise bill.
Timelines, access, and cleanup need to be written down too
A contract isn’t just about money. It’s about how the job fits into your actual life.
Look for language that covers:
• Approximate start date and expected completion window
• Work hours (for example, “between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.”)
• What happens if weather or materials delay the job
• Access to your home, garage, gates, or driveway
• Cleanup expectations and debris removal
When none of that is written, you’re left arguing from feelings: “You said you’d be done by now.” The contractor has their version. You have yours. The contract is what keeps both sides aligned.
A signed contract supports your insurance and legal options
If something truly goes sideways—a major property damage claim, unfinished work, or a contractor who disappears—your future self will be glad you insisted on paperwork.
A written, signed agreement can help:
• Show your own insurance company you acted reasonably
• Support complaints to licensing boards or state agencies
• Give attorneys something concrete to work with, if it comes to that
Without it, everything is based on text fragments and fuzzy memories. That doesn’t mean you’re helpless—but it does make it harder and more expensive to get help.
Make “no signed contract, no work” your personal house rule
You don’t need to be a lawyer to set a simple boundary: no one does work at your home without a written agreement that both sides sign.
Most reputable Minnesota contractors will respect that immediately. In fact, they’ll appreciate the clarity. The pushback usually comes from the people who benefit from keeping things loose and fuzzy.
When a contractor seems in a hurry to start “today” but doesn’t want to slow down for paperwork, that’s your cue to slow the whole process down—or walk away. A one-day delay to get things in writing is better than months of regret.
Want a second opinion before you sign a big contractor agreement?
Minnesota Contractor Check reviews your contractor’s licensing, insurance, and core paperwork—so you understand who you’re hiring, how you’re protected, and what questions to ask before you sign.
- ✓ License, business, and policy cross-check
- ✓ Contract and paperwork reviewed for clarity
- ✓ Plain-English summary and red-flag notes
Just Minnesota homeowner protection.