A job site lockout is one of the most stressful disputes a contractor can face. You arrive at the site to perform work, only to find the gates locked, the door codes changed, or the homeowner refusing to let your crew inside. Whether the lockout is caused by a dispute over work quality, schedule delays, or a breakdown in communication, you must react carefully. A homeowner locking you out is often a breach of contract, but if you handle it incorrectly, the homeowner may claim you abandoned the job, which can void your payment rights and expose your business to legal liability.

To protect your business during a lockout, you must document every step of the dispute. If the dispute escalates, you will need to understand the rules of abandoned job liability and how to handle claims of poor work quality. Review our guides on handling work quality disputes and sending a certified demand letter to prepare your business for recovery.

Understanding a Job Site Lockout

A job site lockout occurs when the property owner prevents you, your crew, or your subcontractors from accessing the work area. In most construction contracts, the owner is obligated to provide reasonable access to the property so you can perform the work. Locking you out without a legal basis is considered a material breach of contract by the owner.

However, you must not assume the contract is automatically terminated. You must follow a specific process to establish the owner's breach and protect your business. If you simply walk away from the project without sending formal notice, the owner can argue in court that you walked off the job, which is a breach on your part. Protecting your business requires converting the owner's physical lockout into a documented legal record.

Avoiding Job Abandonment Claims

The biggest risk during a lockout is being accused of job abandonment. Property owners often lock contractors out and then file complaints with licensing boards claiming the contractor took their money and walked off the job. To defeat an abandonment claim, you must prove that you were willing and able to work but were physically prevented from doing so by the owner.

Never leave the site without documenting that you attempted to work. If you arrive and find the site locked, do not simply drive away. Take immediate steps to establish your presence and the lockout. Send an email or text message to the owner stating that you are at the site, ready to perform the contracted work, and require access. Keep a copy of these communications in your files.

"An undocumented lockout is a major risk. If the homeowner changes the locks and claims you abandoned the project, you need written, time-stamped proof to defend your business."

How to Document the Lockout

Documentation is your primary defense during a job site lockout. As soon as a lockout occurs, compile a detailed record of the event. Take photos of the locked gates, doors, or changed lockboxes to prove you were locked out. Ensure the photos are time-stamped and include GPS metadata to verify the location.

Write a detailed entry in your daily log describing the event. Record the date, time, names of crew members present, and what occurred. If you spoke with the homeowner, write down the details of the conversation. Keep all text messages, emails, and voicemail records related to the lockout. Using a secure record system that generates unalterable, time-stamped logs is the best way to ensure your evidence is accepted in court.

Sending a Formal Notice to Cure

To legally establish that the owner is in breach of contract, you must send a formal written notice. This notice should state that the owner is violating the contract by denying access and must cure the breach within a specific number of days (typically 3 to 7 days, depending on your contract terms).

Send this notice using certified mail with a return receipt requested, and send a copy via email. The notice must specify the contract terms that require the owner to provide access, describe how access was denied, and state that you will suspend work or terminate the contract if access is not restored by the deadline. Having a signed delivery receipt proves the owner received the notice and chose not to resolve the issue.

Retrieving Your Tools and Materials

A lockout often leaves your tools, equipment, and uninstalled materials trapped inside the property. Homeowners sometimes withhold tools to force a settlement. Legally, the homeowner cannot keep your personal property, and doing so can be considered theft or conversion.

Request access to retrieve your tools in writing. Suggest a specific date and time to pick them up. If the homeowner refuses, do not attempt to enter the property without permission, as you can be charged with trespassing. Instead, contact local law enforcement and request a civil standby to accompany you while you retrieve your equipment. Keep a detailed list of all tools and materials left on the site, along with their values.

Recovering Payment for Work Performed

If the cure period expires and the owner refuses to grant access, you can formally suspend your work or terminate the contract. You are entitled to be paid for all labor and materials provided up to the lockout date, plus any reasonable profits on the completed portion of the project.

To recover these payments, prepare a final invoice detailing the work completed. If the client refuses to pay, send a formal demand letter. If the payment remains outstanding, you can file a mechanics lien against the property. Because a lockout signals the end of your work on the site, your deadline to file a mechanics lien begins running immediately from the lockout date. Do not delay in taking legal action to protect your claim.

Lockout Notice Template

Below is a standard layout for a formal Notice of Lockout and Request for Site Access that you can copy, customize, and send to a property owner who has denied you access to the job site.

COPY-PASTE TEMPLATE: NOTICE OF CONTRACT SITE LOCKOUT
NOTICE OF SITE ACCESS DENIAL AND REQUEST FOR CURE (Sent via Certified Mail and Email) Date: [Date Sent] TO: Owner: [Owner Name & Address] RE: Project Access Denial at [Job Site Address] Contract Date: [Date of Contract] Dear [Owner Name], This notice is to formally document that on [Date of Lockout] at [Time], the Contractor and crew arrived at the project site located at [Job Site Address] to perform contracted labor and deliver materials. Upon arrival, access to the site was denied because [describe lockout, e.g., the front door lock code was changed / gates were locked / you verbally refused entry]. Under Section [Insert Section Number, e.g., 4] of our signed Agreement, the Owner is required to provide the Contractor with reasonable and continuous access to the property to perform the work. Denying access constitutes a material breach of this Agreement. Please be advised that: 1. Cure Period: You must restore full access to the project site within [e.g., 3] business days of receiving this notice (no later than [Insert Date]). 2. Suspension of Work: In accordance with our Agreement, all contract performance is suspended until access is restored. Project completion deadlines are extended by the duration of this delay. 3. Contract Termination: If access is not restored within the cure period, the Contractor reserves the right to terminate the Agreement and pursue all legal remedies to recover payment for work performed, materials delivered, lost profits, and attorney fees. To schedule site access or discuss this matter, please contact me immediately at [Your Phone Number]. Sincerely, By: [Your Signature] [Your Printed Name / Title] [Your Company Name]

Modify the bracketed fields with your project details and send this notice immediately via certified mail to document the physical lockout.

Sending this formal notice creates a legal record that protects your business from false job abandonment claims.

Protect Your Work

THE BOTTOM LINE

A job site lockout is a serious contract dispute, but you can protect your business by avoiding abandonment claims, documenting site access denial, sending a formal notice to cure, and taking prompt action to recover payments for work performed.