Commercial Construction Contracts Explained for Jacksonville Projects

Commercial construction contracts govern the legal, financial, and operational relationships between owners, general contractors, subcontractors, and design professionals on every building project in Jacksonville. These instruments allocate risk, define scope, establish payment mechanisms, and set the conditions under which disputes are resolved — making contract structure one of the most consequential decisions made before a shovel enters the ground. This page covers the primary contract types used in Florida commercial construction, their internal mechanics, classification boundaries, and the tradeoffs that shape how Jacksonville project teams select and negotiate them.


Definition and Scope

A commercial construction contract is a legally binding agreement that defines the scope of work, compensation structure, schedule obligations, risk allocation, and dispute resolution procedures for a commercial building project. In Florida, these contracts operate within the framework established by Chapter 713 of the Florida Statutes (the Construction Lien Law) and Chapter 255 for public construction, and are subject to enforcement in Florida's circuit courts.

The scope of a commercial construction contract extends beyond the prime agreement between an owner and a general contractor. It encompasses subcontract agreements, design-build contracts, construction management agreements, and owner-furnished equipment provisions. On large Jacksonville commercial developments — whether office towers, industrial facilities, or mixed-use projects — a single project may involve 40 or more separate contract instruments binding different parties simultaneously.

Florida's Prompt Payment Act (Florida Statutes § 255.073–255.078) establishes mandatory payment timelines that overlay all commercial construction contracts in the state, regardless of how parties draft their payment terms. These statutory floors cannot be contracted away and apply to both public and private commercial work.

Geographic and Legal Scope: This reference covers commercial construction contracts for projects located within Duval County, Florida, under the jurisdiction of the City of Jacksonville. Florida statutory law governs; Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) provisions applicable to federal projects, contracts executed under other states' laws, and residential construction contracts are not covered here. Projects on federal enclaves within Jacksonville (such as Naval Air Station Jacksonville) fall under separate federal contracting regimes and are outside the scope of this reference.


Core Mechanics or Structure

Every commercial construction contract, regardless of type, contains a set of core structural components:

Scope of Work: The technical description of what the contractor is obligated to build, drawn from drawings, specifications, and addenda. On design-bid-build projects, the scope is fixed before bidding. On design-build projects, scope definition is a collaborative and evolving obligation.

Compensation Structure: The payment model — lump sum, cost-plus, guaranteed maximum price, or unit price — that determines how the contractor is paid and how cost risk is allocated between owner and contractor.

Schedule: The project timeline, including the notice-to-proceed date, milestone dates, substantial completion, and final completion. Jacksonville contractors referencing construction timelines and scheduling will find that Florida's hurricane season (June 1 through November 30) directly affects schedule provisions and force majeure clauses.

Change Order Mechanism: The process by which scope, cost, and schedule adjustments are documented and approved. The change order process is one of the most litigated contract provisions in Florida commercial construction.

Payment Schedule: Draw schedules, retainage percentages, and the conditions triggering each payment. Florida Statutes § 713.346 governs retainage on private commercial projects, generally capping it at rates that vary by region through rates that vary by region completion, and reducing it to rates that vary by region thereafter (Florida Statutes § 713.346).

Dispute Resolution: Mediation, arbitration, or litigation clauses, including venue selection. Florida enforces arbitration clauses in construction contracts under Chapter 682 of the Florida Statutes.

Insurance and Bonding Requirements: Provisions requiring commercial general liability, workers' compensation, builder's risk, and performance and payment bonds. Jacksonville projects reference insurance requirements and bonding requirements as foundational contract exhibits.


Causal Relationships or Drivers

Contract type selection is driven by project-specific risk profiles, owner sophistication, design completion status at the time of contracting, and market conditions.

Design completion at bid time is the primary driver of lump-sum versus cost-plus selection. When construction documents are rates that vary by region complete, contractors can price with sufficient certainty to accept a fixed price. When an owner needs to begin construction before design is finalized — common on fast-track Jacksonville healthcare facility projects — a cost-plus or GMP contract is structurally necessary.

Owner risk tolerance shapes retainage, liquidated damages, and indemnification provisions. Institutional owners (REITs, healthcare systems, government agencies) typically impose more contractor-unfavorable terms than private developers because their procurement policies require it.

Market competition affects contractor willingness to accept onerous terms. In periods of high construction demand in Jacksonville, contractors have greater leverage to negotiate away unlimited liability clauses, consequential damages waivers, and compressed payment terms.

Lien law exposure under Chapter 713 causes owners and lenders to require specific contract language — notably, the contractor's obligation to furnish sworn statements of unpaid lienors and to deliver final lien releases before final payment. The Florida commercial lien law framework is structurally embedded in every properly drafted commercial contract.


Classification Boundaries

Commercial construction contracts in Jacksonville fall into four primary delivery method categories, each with a distinct contract structure:

Design-Bid-Build (DBB): Owner contracts separately with a designer and a contractor. The contractor submits a fixed price against completed documents. The contract vehicle is typically a stipulated sum agreement, often using American Institute of Architects (AIA) A101 or an owner-drafted equivalent.

Design-Build (DB): A single entity holds both design and construction responsibility. The owner executes a single design-build agreement. This delivery method is addressed in detail at Jacksonville commercial design-build contracting.

Construction Management at Risk (CMAR): The construction manager provides preconstruction services for a fee, then assumes a guaranteed maximum price (GMP) for delivery. The CMAR holds subcontracts directly.

Construction Management Agency (CMA): The CM acts as the owner's agent and advisor; the owner holds all trade contracts directly. The CM does not assume construction risk.

Within each delivery method, the compensation structure varies independently. A design-build contract can be structured as lump sum, GMP, or cost-plus. A CMAR contract almost always uses a GMP with an open-book cost-plus structure below it.

Not classified as commercial construction contracts: residential contracts governed by Florida Statutes § 489.1425, service and maintenance agreements, professional services agreements with engineers or architects (which are governed separately), and equipment supply contracts without installation scope.


Tradeoffs and Tensions

Certainty vs. Flexibility: Lump-sum contracts provide owners with cost certainty but require fully developed documents before execution. Premature lump-sum contracting — before design is sufficiently complete — predictably generates change order disputes because the contractor bids against incomplete information and compensates through contingency or change orders.

Speed vs. Risk Transfer: Fast-track project delivery, where construction begins before design is complete, forces owners to use cost-plus or GMP structures that transfer cost risk back to the owner. The owner gains schedule but loses price certainty.

Retainage vs. Contractor Cash Flow: Retainage (typically rates that vary by region in Florida) protects owners against incomplete or defective work but systematically suppresses contractor and subcontractor cash flow. Florida's retainage reduction provisions under § 713.346 partially address this, but retainage practices remain a persistent source of tension in the subcontractor community. The payment schedule structure directly affects whether subcontractors on large Jacksonville projects remain financially solvent through project completion.

Indemnification Scope: Florida Statutes § 725.06 limits the enforceability of construction indemnification clauses, prohibiting indemnification for an indemnitee's own negligence unless specific statutory conditions (including a monetary cap referenced in the contract) are met (Florida Statutes § 725.06). Contracts that attempt to exceed these limits create unenforceable provisions, which surprises parties who import contract language from other states.

Liquidated Damages vs. Actual Damages: Owners prefer liquidated damages (LD) provisions because they avoid proving actual delay costs in litigation. Contractors resist high LD rates. Florida courts enforce LD clauses if the amount was a reasonable pre-estimate of damages at the time of contracting — not a penalty.


Common Misconceptions

Misconception: A signed contract supersedes Florida's lien law requirements.
Correction: Chapter 713 rights vest by operation of law upon furnishing labor or materials to a project. Contract language cannot extinguish a properly perfected lien claim. Owners who rely on "lien waiver" provisions in contracts without obtaining properly executed statutory lien waivers remain exposed.

Misconception: A GMP contract means the owner's cost exposure is capped.
Correction: GMP contracts contain owner contingency line items, allowances, and owner-directed change provisions that can — and frequently do — cause final costs to exceed the stated GMP. The GMP caps the contractor's cost-plus exposure, not the owner's total project cost.

Misconception: AIA contract forms are neutral documents.
Correction: AIA documents (AIA A101, A102, A133, etc.) are drafted by a professional organization with significant contractor input. They contain provisions — particularly around dispute resolution timing, substantial completion definition, and retainage release — that may not align with owner interests without modification.

Misconception: Verbal change order authorizations are enforceable.
Correction: Florida courts have enforced oral change orders in some circumstances, but most well-drafted commercial contracts contain "no damages for delay" and "written change order required" provisions that courts enforce strictly. Pre-construction planning services typically include establishing change order protocols precisely to prevent informal scope creep.

Misconception: Performance bonds guarantee project completion by the surety.
Correction: Performance bonds give the owner options — the surety may finance completion, hire a new contractor, or pay the penal sum — but do not guarantee that the surety will complete the project itself. Surety rights and obligations are governed by the bond form, typically AIA A312 or a state-specific form.


Checklist or Steps

Elements Verified Before Executing a Jacksonville Commercial Construction Contract

The following elements are characteristic of a properly structured commercial construction contract for a Jacksonville project. This is a reference checklist, not legal advice.

  1. Florida statutory compliance confirmed — Prompt Payment Act provisions (§ 255.073–255.078 for public; § 713.346 for private) reflected in payment schedule language.
  2. Retainage percentage and reduction trigger specified — Reduction mechanism from rates that vary by region to rates that vary by region at rates that vary by region completion documented.
  3. Lien law exhibits attached — Notice of Commencement form, preliminary notice requirements, and lien waiver forms (conditional and unconditional) included per Chapter 713.
  4. Indemnification clause reviewed against § 725.06 — Monetary cap reference included if indemnification extends to indemnitee negligence.
  5. Insurance exhibit currentInsurance requirements verified: commercial general liability, workers' compensation, umbrella, builder's risk, and professional liability (if design-build).
  6. Bond requirements confirmed — Payment and performance bond requirements matched to bonding requirements and project size.
  7. Change order authority levels defined — Dollar thresholds for field authorization vs. executive approval specified in writing.
  8. Dispute resolution venue specified — Duval County courts or arbitration panel with Florida seat, consistent with Florida arbitration law (Chapter 682).
  9. Liquidated damages rate documented — Rate set with contemporaneous cost basis documentation to support enforceability.
  10. Substantial completion definition explicit — Triggering conditions for substantial completion, punch list, and retainage release tied to Certificate of Occupancy or equivalent from the City of Jacksonville Building Inspection Division.
  11. Force majeure clause includes Florida-specific triggers — Named storms, declared state emergencies, and supply chain disruptions addressed, consistent with hurricane and wind code compliance requirements.
  12. Subcontractor flow-down provisions confirmed — Prime contract obligations (schedule, payment, safety, lien) flowed down to all tiers of subcontractor coordination.

Reference Table or Matrix

Commercial Construction Contract Type Comparison — Jacksonville Projects

Contract Type Compensation Structure Owner Cost Risk Design Status Required Typical Jacksonville Use Cases
Stipulated Sum (Lump Sum) Fixed price Low rates that vary by region complete documents Retail buildout, warehouse, standard office
Cost-Plus with GMP Cost reimbursable + fee, capped Moderate 50–rates that vary by region complete Healthcare, CMAR projects, fast-track office
Cost-Plus without GMP Cost reimbursable + fee High Schematic or DD Emergency rebuild, highly custom scope
Unit Price Per-quantity rate Variable (quantity risk) Partial Site work, concrete and structural work, paving
Design-Build (Lump Sum) Fixed price for design + construction Low-Moderate Bridging documents only Restaurant and hospitality, healthcare
Design-Build (GMP) Cost reimbursable + fee, capped Moderate Performance criteria Industrial, warehouse and logistics
Construction Management at Risk Preconstruction fee + GMP Moderate Phased Large mixed-use, institutional, public
Construction Management Agency Advisory fee only High (owner holds all contracts) Any Complex institutional, owner-sophisticated only

Key Florida Statutory References by Contract Provision

Contract Provision Governing Florida Statute Key Requirement
Payment timing (private) § 713.346 Payment within 14 days of application approval
Payment timing (public) § 255.073 Payment within 25 days of invoice
Retainage (private) § 713.346 Maximum rates that vary by region; reduce to rates that vary by region at rates that vary by region completion
Indemnification limits § 725.06 Monetary cap required for negligence indemnification
Arbitration enforcement Ch. 682 Florida Arbitration Code governs
Lien rights Ch. 713 Statutory; cannot be waived by contract in advance
Public construction bonds § 255.05 Payment and performance bonds required on public contracts > amounts that vary by jurisdiction (Florida Statutes § 255.05)

For an orientation to how commercial contracting fits within Jacksonville's broader contractor services landscape, the main authority index provides a structured overview of sectors, license categories, and project types across Duval County. Parties assessing contractor qualifications before contract execution should reference the contractor selection criteria and licensing verification resources. Disputes arising from contract execution are addressed under commercial construction dispute resolution. Cost estimation practices that inform contract pricing are documented at commercial construction cost estimation.


References

📜 7 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log
📜 7 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log