Completion Bond

Completion Bond

A completion bond is a contract that guarantees monetary compensation if a given project is not finished. A completion bond is a financial contract that pays out in full when a construction or infrastructure project is completed, providing greater coverage than a performance bond. All professionals working on the film benefit from the completion bond because producers are discouraged from terminating the project before completion. Thus, a completion bond ensures that a creditor still receives principal and interest even if the project fails to reach completion. A performance bond is an indemnity bond that guarantees satisfactory completion of contract work by a contractor.

A completion bond is a financial contract that pays out in full when a construction or infrastructure project is completed, providing greater coverage than a performance bond.

What Is a Completion Bond?

A completion bond is a contract that guarantees monetary compensation if a given project is not finished. It provides protection if the contractor runs out of money or any other budgetary issues come up during the project. Many businesses use completion bonds, including films, video games, and construction projects.

A completion bond may also be known as a completion guarantee.

A completion bond is a financial contract that pays out in full when a construction or infrastructure project is completed, providing greater coverage than a performance bond.
Completion bonds are best-suited for multi-faceted projects involving multiple funders.
Completion bonds are most often used for construction projects but are also found in the entertainment industry and for some mortgages.

Understanding Completion Bonds

A completion bond is a particular type of surety bond. A surety bond is a financial guarantee that compensation will be paid to a given party if a contract is not performed to satisfaction or completion. A surety bond is a contract entered into by at least three parties. The first is the obligee, who is the client, owner, or party that requires the bond to be posted for its protection. The second is the principal, who is the primary party that promises to complete the project or contract. The third is the surety or obligor, who assures the obligee that the task or project can be fulfilled to completion.

Completion bonds are often used for complex projects involving large sums of money or multiple investors. To secure the necessary financing, a contractor will make a loan guarantee to a lending institution in the form of a completion bond. The bond guarantees that the project will be completed on time, within budget, and free of liens. A third-party guarantor will assess the risk to the project's completion and collect a premium for insuring the particular risks of a given project. Thus, a completion bond ensures that a creditor still receives principal and interest even if the project fails to reach completion.

Completion Bond vs. Performance Bond

A completion bond provides more coverage than a performance bond. A performance bond is an indemnity bond that guarantees satisfactory completion of contract work by a contractor. Whereas completion bonds create a guarantee between the obligor and its lender as obligee, performance bonds create a guarantee between the obligor and the contractual obligee.

The obligee receives compensation for any losses incurred if the obligor breaches the contractual terms of the agreement. Multiple completion bonds may be required for each contract within a project.

Examples of Completion Bonds

The reasons why projects are not completed differ between industries. Naturally, completion bonds must also work slightly differently for projects in various businesses.

Construction

Since construction projects can take many months or even years to be completed, the risks for investors can be high. Investors are much more likely to get involved if a completion bond is provided. This way they know that they will receive their money back with interest if the project is not completed.

Entertainment

Completion bonds are a long-standing tradition in the entertainment business. Many variables can come into play that may affect the completion of a large film project. In this case, producers of the movie will provide a completion bond to a bank to finance the film project. In return for guaranteeing repayment of the loan, the producers generally do not have to make any loan repayment until the project is completed. All professionals working on the film benefit from the completion bond because producers are discouraged from terminating the project before completion.

Mortgage

A completion bond may be part of a mortgage financing deal, and it protects both the mortgagor and mortgagee. A third-party financier, often a completion guarantor company, typically becomes involved in the deal. The third-party provides a financial backstop if the original financing is insufficient to complete the project.

Related terms:

Bid Bond

A bid bond is a debt secured by a bidder for a construction job, or similar type of bid-based selection process, for the purpose of providing a guarantee to the project owner that the bidder will take on the job if selected. read more

Bond Violation

A bond violation is a breach of the terms of a surety agreement where one party causes damage to the other. read more

Construction Bond

A construction bond is a type of surety bond used in construction projects to protect against an adverse event that causes disruptions or financial loss. read more

Construction Lien

A construction lien is a claim for payment made against a property by a contractor or subcontractor who supplied labor or materials for work done on it. read more

Financial Guarantee

A financial guarantee is a non-cancellable promise backed by a third party to guarantee investors that principal and interest payments will be made. read more

Fixed Income & Examples

Fixed income refers to assets and securities that bear fixed cash flows for investors, such as fixed rate interest or dividends. read more

Indemnity

Indemnity is compensation for damages or loss. When it is used in the legal sense, indemnity may also refer to an exemption from liability for damages. read more

Industry

An industry is a classification that refers to a group of companies that are related in terms of their primary business activities. read more

Maintenance Bond

A maintenance bond is purchased by a contractor to protect the owner from the costs to remedy a completed construction project's defects. read more

Mortgagee

A mortgagee is an entity that lends money to a borrower for the purpose of purchasing real estate. In a mortgage lending deal the lender serves as the mortgagee and the borrower is known as the mortgagor. read more