A Step-by-Step Legal and Practical Guide for Florida Property Owners
Hiring a contractor should move your project forward—not leave you with substandard work, unfinished spaces, or thousands of dollars in damage. Unfortunately, many Florida property owners—both residential and commercial—find themselves asking the same question:
“What do I do now that the contractor abandoned the job or did it wrong?”
Whether the contractor disappeared, failed to finish, caused damage, or delivered poor workmanship, you’re not stuck. You can get the work completed, and you may be entitled to compensation—but it’s crucial to take the right steps.
At Douglas Law Firm, we help property owners across Florida recover from contractor abandonment and construction failures. Below is a comprehensive guide to finishing the job and protecting your legal rights.
🛑 Step 1: Stop and Document Everything
Before you bring in another contractor, stop and take stock. Don’t remove, cover up, or alter defective work without documenting it first.
Start by gathering:
- 📸 Photos and videos of all incomplete or defective work (close-ups and wide shots)
- 🧾 Written communications with the original contractor (texts, emails, notes)
- 📑 Contracts, invoices, permits, scope of work documents, and payment records
- 📆 A timeline of work performed, issues noticed, and any walk-offs or abandonment
This documentation is crucial evidence for holding the original contractor accountable—and may also be required by insurance carriers, expert evaluators, or your next contractor.
🧠 Step 2: Preserve Your Legal Claims—Don’t Start Demo Just Yet
It’s natural to want to rip out what was done wrong and move on. But if you destroy the evidence too soon, you may lose your strongest claim.
Instead, preserve the work as-is until it can be reviewed by a licensed third party (see next step). This applies whether you’re dealing with:
- Structural issues
- Water intrusion
- Code violations
- Improper installations
- Abandoned framing, drywall, tile, or MEP work
This protects your right to recover repair costs and other damages later.
👷♂️ Step 3: Hire a Licensed Professional to Evaluate the Work
Have an independent licensed contractor, engineer, architect, or appropriate trade specialist inspect and document the defective or incomplete work.
Ask them to:
- Inspect all affected areas thoroughly
- Document building code violations, safety concerns, or industry-standard failures
- Provide a written report or statement of findings
- Outline what it will take to properly correct or complete the work
If possible, have them photograph and notate existing conditions before making any repairs.
✅ Why this matters:
Their opinion can support a legal claim against the original contractor for:
- Breach of contract
- Negligence
- Violation of building code
- Unlicensed contracting (if applicable)
🔨 Step 4: Hire a New Contractor—But Time It Right
You can—and should—complete the project using a qualified professional. But when you hire the new contractor depends on whether Florida’s Chapter 558 applies:
✅ If Chapter 558 Applies:
- Applies when the original contractor was licensed and the issue involves a construction defect.
- You are required to give the contractor a 558 pre-suit notice and allow an opportunity to inspect and respond.
- It’s best to wait to begin repairs until:
- You’ve served the 558 notice, and
- The contractor’s 45-day response period has expired or they’ve formally responded.
That said, you are not legally barred from hiring a new contractor during this period—especially if waiting would lead to more damage or safety concerns. Just be sure to preserve detailed evidence of the defective work before making changes.
❌ If Chapter 558 Does Not Apply:
- If the contractor was unlicensed, failed to pull permits, or the claim is for abandonment or breach, you are not required to follow the 558 process.
- In those cases, you may hire a replacement contractor immediately after documenting the existing conditions.
No matter when you proceed, keep all estimates, contracts, permits, and final invoices from the new contractor to support your damages claim.
✉️ Step 5: Serve a Chapter 558 Notice of Construction Defect (When Required)
As explained above, Florida law may require you to serve a 558 notice before you can sue for construction defects. That notice must:
- Describe each defect in reasonable detail
- Include any known damages
- Be served at least 60 days before filing a lawsuit (or 120 days for large-scale commercial properties)
- Give the original contractor an opportunity to inspect and respond
We help clients determine if 558 applies and handle the entire notice and response process.
⚖️ Step 6: Consider Legal Action to Recover Damages
If the contractor refuses to make it right—or has already abandoned the job—you may have a strong legal case. Common legal claims include:
- Breach of contract
- Negligent construction
- Building code violations
- Unlicensed contracting
- Fraud or misrepresentation
- Breach of warranty
You may be entitled to recover:
- The full cost to repair or complete the job
- Consequential damages from delays or property damage
- Expert inspection and remediation costs
- Attorney’s fees and litigation expenses (if allowed)
🧾 Step 7: Consider Filing a Complaint or Report
If the contractor was unlicensed or violated permitting and code requirements, consider:
- Filing a complaint with the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR)
- Reporting unlicensed activity to the local building department
- Providing documentation to your county’s contractor licensing board
This may also help others avoid similar issues in the future.
👨⚖️ How Douglas Law Firm Helps Clients in This Situation
We represent homeowners, businesses, investors, and HOAs throughout Florida who have been impacted by:
- Defective construction work
- Incomplete or abandoned projects
- Unlicensed or improperly licensed contractors
- Code violations, unsafe conditions, and permitting failures
Our services include:
- Case evaluation and evidence review
- Coordinating third-party expert inspections
- Serving 558 notices and preparing for litigation
- Negotiating settlements or filing lawsuits for damages
- Advising on liens, DBPR complaints, and insurance claims
📞 Don’t Let a Contractor’s Abandonment Leave You Paying Twice
If your contractor abandoned the job or left you with dangerous, defective, or incomplete work, you don’t have to deal with it alone. You have options—and the right legal guidance can help you finish the project and pursue recovery from the original contractor.
📌 Contact Douglas Law Firm today to speak with a Florida construction attorney. We’ll help you protect your rights, document your claim, and move your project forward—with confidence.