A "Little Miller Act" is a state statute that requires contractors on public construction projects to post payment bonds protecting subcontractors and suppliers — mirroring the federal Miller Act but with rules that vary significantly from state to state. Because you cannot file a mechanics lien on government property in most states, these payment bonds are often your only security when you supply labor or materials on a state, county, or municipal project. Understanding your state's specific thresholds, notice deadlines, and filing requirements is the difference between getting paid and losing your claim entirely.
This guide provides a state-by-state reference table covering bond thresholds, notice requirements, statutes of limitations, and statutory citations for all 50 states and the District of Columbia. It also flags the most contractor-friendly rules and the most dangerous traps.
Key Takeaways
- Every state has a Little Miller Act analogue, but bond thresholds range from $0 (bond required on every public project) to $150,000 or more.
- Notice deadlines are the most common trap. Some states require written notice to the general contractor or surety within as few as 30 days of last furnishing labor or materials. Miss this window and your bond claim is dead.
- Texas, California, Florida, New York, and Illinois have some of the highest volumes of public construction and the most distinct claim procedures — each is covered in detail below.
- Subcontractors below tier-two (sub-subcontractors and suppliers to subcontractors) face stricter notice requirements in nearly every state.
- Understanding why mechanics liens generally don't apply to government projects makes the payment bond your primary remedy.
Why Little Miller Acts Exist
On private construction, unpaid subcontractors and material suppliers can file mechanics liens against the property. On public projects — schools, highways, municipal buildings — you generally cannot lien government property. The federal Miller Act (40 U.S.C. §§ 3131–3134) addressed this for federal contracts by requiring payment bonds on projects over $35,000. Each state enacted its own version, often called a "Little Miller Act," to extend similar protections to state and local public works.
According to the Surety & Fidelity Association of America (SFAA), surety bonds backed approximately $7.4 billion in public construction contract obligations in 2023. The National Association of Surety Bond Producers reports that payment bond claims are filed on roughly 1.5–2% of bonded public projects each year — a small percentage, but one that represents hundreds of millions of dollars in disputed payments.
State-by-State Reference Table
The table below covers all 50 states and D.C. "Bond threshold" is the minimum contract value at which a payment bond is required. "Notice deadline" is the time limit for a claimant (typically a first-tier subcontractor or second-tier supplier) to give preliminary notice. "Suit deadline" is the statute of limitations for filing a lawsuit on the bond.
| State | Bond Threshold | Notice Deadline | Suit Deadline | Key Statute |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 12 months | Ala. Code § 39-1-1 |
| Alaska | $100,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Alaska Stat. § 36.25.010 |
| Arizona | $0 (all public works) | 90 days (no direct contract) | 1 year | Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 34-222 |
| Arkansas | $20,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Ark. Code § 22-9-401 |
| California | $25,000 | 30 days (preliminary notice, all tiers) | 6 months | Cal. Civ. Code § 9550 et seq. |
| Colorado | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 6 months | Colo. Rev. Stat. § 38-26-105 |
| Connecticut | $100,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Conn. Gen. Stat. § 49-41 |
| Delaware | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Del. Code tit. 29 § 6962 |
| District of Columbia | $100,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | D.C. Code § 2-201.01 |
| Florida | $200,000 (state); $200,000 or as set locally | 45 days (preliminary notice, all claimants) | 1 year | Fla. Stat. § 255.05 |
| Georgia | $100,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Ga. Code § 36-91-70 |
| Hawaii | $25,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Haw. Rev. Stat. § 103D-324 |
| Idaho | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 6 months | Idaho Code § 54-1926 |
| Illinois | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 6 months | 30 ILCS 550/1 (Bond Act) |
| Indiana | $200,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Ind. Code § 36-1-12-13.1 |
| Iowa | $25,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Iowa Code § 573.2 |
| Kansas | $100,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Kan. Stat. § 60-1111 |
| Kentucky | $25,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Ky. Rev. Stat. § 45A.435 |
| Louisiana | $25,000 | 45 days (all claimants) | 1 year | La. Rev. Stat. § 38:2241 |
| Maine | $125,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 14 § 871 |
| Maryland | $100,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Md. Code, State Fin. & Proc. § 17-108 |
| Massachusetts | $25,000 | 65 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 149 § 29 |
| Michigan | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Mich. Comp. Laws § 129.201 |
| Minnesota | $75,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Minn. Stat. § 574.26 |
| Mississippi | $25,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Miss. Code § 31-5-51 |
| Missouri | $25,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Mo. Rev. Stat. § 107.170 |
| Montana | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Mont. Code § 18-2-201 |
| Nebraska | $15,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Neb. Rev. Stat. § 52-118 |
| Nevada | $100,000 | 31 days (preliminary notice, all tiers) | 6 months | Nev. Rev. Stat. § 339.025 |
| New Hampshire | $25,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | N.H. Rev. Stat. § 447:16 |
| New Jersey | $100,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | N.J. Stat. § 2A:44-143 |
| New Mexico | $25,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | N.M. Stat. § 13-4-18 |
| New York | $0 (all public works) | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | N.Y. State Fin. Law § 137 |
| North Carolina | $300,000 | 75 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | N.C. Gen. Stat. § 44A-26 |
| North Dakota | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | N.D. Cent. Code § 48-01.2-04 |
| Ohio | $78,258 (adjusted) | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Ohio Rev. Code § 153.54 |
| Oklahoma | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Okla. Stat. tit. 61 § 1 |
| Oregon | $100,000 | 150 days (notice of claim) | 2 years | Or. Rev. Stat. § 279C.600 |
| Pennsylvania | $10,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | 8 Pa. Stat. § 193 |
| Rhode Island | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | R.I. Gen. Laws § 37-12-1 |
| South Carolina | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | S.C. Code § 29-6-250 |
| South Dakota | $50,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | S.D. Codified Laws § 5-21-1 |
| Tennessee | $25,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Tenn. Code § 12-4-201 |
| Texas | $25,000 (state); $50,000 (local) | Within 15th day of 2nd month after unpaid (2nd tier) | 1 year | Tex. Gov't Code ch. 2253 |
| Utah | $50,000 | 90 days (preliminary notice, all tiers) | 1 year | Utah Code § 63G-6a-1103 |
| Vermont | $100,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Vt. Stat. tit. 19 § 10 |
| Virginia | $100,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Va. Code § 2.2-4337 |
| Washington | $35,000 | 30 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Wash. Rev. Code § 39.08.010 |
| West Virginia | $25,000 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | W. Va. Code § 5-22-1 |
| Wisconsin | $50,000 | 60 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Wis. Stat. § 779.14 |
| Wyoming | $7,500 | 90 days (2nd tier) | 1 year | Wyo. Stat. § 16-6-112 |
Note: Thresholds and deadlines change through legislative amendments. Always verify with current statutes or legal counsel before relying on these figures.
Five States With the Most Contractor-Friendly Rules
Arizona: Bonds on Every Public Project
Arizona requires a payment bond on every public works contract regardless of dollar amount (Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 34-222). There is no threshold to worry about. First-tier subcontractors need not send preliminary notice at all — only those without a direct contract with the general contractor must give notice within 90 days of last furnishing. This is among the broadest protections in the country.
New York: No Minimum Threshold, Broad Coverage
New York likewise requires payment bonds on all public improvement contracts (N.Y. State Fin. Law § 137). The coverage extends to subcontractors, material suppliers, and laborers. The one-year suit deadline is relatively generous. For subcontractors working in New York City specifically, our New York vendor payment guide covers additional local requirements.
Oregon: Long Notice and Suit Periods
Oregon gives claimants 150 days from last furnishing to provide notice of claim and a full two years to file suit (Or. Rev. Stat. § 279C.600). These are among the most generous timelines in the country, giving subcontractors significantly more runway to preserve their rights.
Pennsylvania: Very Low Threshold
Pennsylvania's $10,000 bond threshold (8 Pa. Stat. § 193) means nearly every meaningful public works contract triggers bonding requirements. This protects subcontractors even on smaller municipal projects — repaving a parking lot, upgrading a school HVAC system — where other states would not require a bond.
Louisiana: Clear Preliminary Notice Framework
Louisiana requires all claimants — not just second-tier parties — to send written notice within 45 days of last furnishing (La. Rev. Stat. § 38:2241). While this seems strict, the clarity benefits subcontractors: everyone knows the rules upfront. The $25,000 threshold is low, and Louisiana courts have historically interpreted the statute to favor claimants in ambiguous situations.
Five Dangerous Traps to Watch For
Trap 1: California's 30-Day Preliminary Notice
California requires a preliminary 20-day notice within 30 days of first furnishing labor or materials — not last furnishing (Cal. Civ. Code § 9550 et seq.). Miss that initial window and your bond claim rights may be limited. The six-month suit deadline is also shorter than most states. According to the California Contractors State License Board, preliminary notice failures are the single most common reason bond claims are denied in the state.
Trap 2: Texas's Confusing Notice Timing
Texas uses a notice deadline that trips up even experienced contractors. For second-tier claimants on local government projects, you must send notice to the general contractor by the 15th day of the second month after the month in which the unpaid labor or materials were provided (Tex. Gov't Code § 2253.041). That formula — not a simple "90 days from last furnishing" — leads to missed deadlines when subcontractors are tracking multiple invoices across months.
Trap 3: North Carolina's High Threshold
North Carolina does not require a payment bond on public contracts under $300,000 (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 44A-26). For subcontractors on smaller municipal projects — common in rural counties — there may be no bond to claim against at all. Combined with the general prohibition on filing mechanics liens against government property, this can leave subcontractors with no secured remedy.
Trap 4: Florida's 45-Day Preliminary Notice
Florida requires all claimants — first-tier and second-tier alike — to serve a preliminary notice on the contractor within 45 days of first furnishing (Fla. Stat. § 255.05). Unlike most states where first-tier subs are exempt from preliminary notice, Florida makes no distinction. The National Association of Credit Management reports that Florida has one of the highest rates of preliminary notice failures among bond claimants.
Trap 5: Nevada's 31-Day Preliminary Notice
Nevada requires preliminary notice within 31 days of first furnishing for all claimants (Nev. Rev. Stat. § 339.035). The suit deadline is only six months. Combined, these create a very tight window. Subcontractors who mobilize on a job in Las Vegas or Reno and don't immediately send notice risk losing their bond rights before the project is even half finished.
How to Protect Your Bond Claim Rights
Send Preliminary Notice on Day One
Regardless of your state's deadline, the safest practice is to send a preliminary notice on the first day you furnish labor or materials. Use certified mail with return receipt. Many construction attorneys recommend sending preliminary notice on every public project even if your state doesn't require it for first-tier subs — it puts the GC and surety on notice and creates a paper trail.
Verify the Bond Exists
Before you start work, ask the general contractor for a copy of the payment bond and the surety's name and address. Public agencies are generally required to make this information available upon request. If no bond was posted — either because the contract fell below the threshold or because the requirement was waived — you need to know that before you commit labor and materials.
Track Your Deadlines by Invoice
The notice clock usually starts ticking from when you first furnish or last furnish labor or materials. On long projects with multiple pay applications, track deadlines per invoice period, not just per project. One missed month can void your claim for that period's work.
Document Everything
Keep signed delivery tickets, daily logs, and correspondence. A bond claim is only as strong as the documentation supporting it. The surety will scrutinize every dollar.
When the Bond Isn't Enough: Managing Cash Flow on Public Projects
Even when a payment bond exists, pursuing a claim takes time. According to a 2023 analysis by Levelset (now part of Procore), the average time from bond claim notice to resolution is 90 to 180 days — and contested claims can take over a year. During that period, subcontractors still need to cover payroll, materials, and overhead.
This is the core challenge for subcontractors on public works: the remedy exists, but it doesn't put cash in your account when you need it. For vendors and suppliers working on government projects, options like early payment programs can bridge the gap between invoice approval and actual payment — getting you paid in days rather than months without taking on debt.
Managing your cash flow as a government contractor is as important as knowing your legal rights. The best position is one where you never need to file a bond claim at all.
How Little Miller Acts Compare to the Federal Miller Act
| Feature | Federal Miller Act | Typical Little Miller Act |
|---|---|---|
| Applies to | Federal contracts > $35,000 | State/local contracts (threshold varies) |
| Bond type | Payment and performance | Usually both; some states only require payment |
| Notice (1st tier) | None required | Usually none, but CA, FL, NV, LA require it |
| Notice (2nd tier) | 90 days from last furnishing | 30–150 days depending on state |
| Suit deadline | 1 year from last furnishing | 6 months to 2 years depending on state |
| Filing venue | Federal district court | State court (county where project located) |
| Key statute | 40 U.S.C. §§ 3131–3134 | Varies by state (see table above) |
For a detailed walkthrough of the federal process, see our Miller Act payment bond claim guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between the Miller Act and a Little Miller Act?
The Miller Act is a federal statute requiring payment and performance bonds on federal construction contracts exceeding $35,000. A "Little Miller Act" is the informal name for any state's equivalent statute that imposes similar bonding requirements on state or local public construction projects. Each state sets its own thresholds, notice deadlines, and claim procedures, which is why the rules vary so widely.
Can I file a mechanics lien instead of a bond claim on a public project?
In nearly all states, you cannot file a mechanics lien on government-owned property. The payment bond required by the Little Miller Act is designed to replace the lien remedy. This makes compliance with your state's notice and filing requirements critical — if you lose your bond claim rights, you may have no secured remedy at all.
What happens if the general contractor didn't post a payment bond?
If a payment bond was required by statute and the general contractor failed to obtain one, the public agency that awarded the contract may be liable for your unpaid claim in some states. The rules vary. In other states, you may be able to pursue a direct action against the general contractor. Consult a construction attorney in your state immediately if you discover no bond was posted.
How quickly should I send preliminary notice?
Send preliminary notice the same day you first furnish labor or materials — or as soon as possible afterward. States like California (30 days), Nevada (31 days), and Florida (45 days) have extremely short windows, and the clock starts from your first day on the job. Even in states where first-tier subs are exempt, sending notice early is a low-cost way to protect your rights.
Does filing a bond claim affect my relationship with the general contractor?
It can. Many subcontractors hesitate to file bond claims because they depend on future work from the same general contractors. This is a real concern. However, your bond rights exist precisely because public project payment disputes are common and structural. Filing a legitimate claim is a recognized part of the construction process — it is a claim against the surety, not a personal action against the GC. That said, exhausting informal resolution channels first is always good practice.