You’ve gotten three bids for your New Jersey renovation. They all look legitimate. The prices are in a similar range. You’re ready to pick one. But before you sign, there are five critical elements that experienced NJ homeowners — and construction professionals — check in every contractor estimate. Missing even one of them can turn a reasonable-seeming bid into a project that ends in disputes, cost overruns, and frustration.
A legitimate NJ contractor estimate specifies work at the line-item level. Not ‘kitchen renovation — $45,000.’ Instead: demo and disposal, rough plumbing, electrical rough-in and panel work, cabinet supply and installation (brand, style, door type), countertop supply and installation (material, thickness, edge profile), tile supply and installation (material, size, layout), appliance hookup, painting, and permit fees. When scope is vague, the contractor can interpret any grey area in their favor and claim that work you assumed was included was always an ‘extra.’ Line-item specificity is your protection against this.
‘Tile allowance: $8/sq ft’ sounds specific. It is not. An $8/sq ft tile allowance in a Jersey City bathroom covers basic ceramic floor tile at best. If you are expecting large-format porcelain or any natural stone, you will receive a change order the moment you visit the tile showroom. A properly constructed NJ contractor estimate specifies: tile manufacturer and series, cabinet line and door style, countertop material and slab source, fixtures by manufacturer and model number, and appliance model numbers. Allowances are not specifications — they are invitations to change orders.
Many NJ contractor estimates show only a total price and a deposit amount. A properly structured payment schedule ties each payment to a specific, verifiable construction milestone. For example: 10% at contract signing, 15% at permit issuance, 20% at demolition completion, 20% at rough MEP inspection approval, 20% at drywall completion, 10% at substantial completion, and 5% holdback at final punch list sign-off. A payment schedule that front-loads payment (e.g., 40% at contract signing, 40% at start of work) is structured to benefit the contractor, not the homeowner.
Renovation projects change. Walls hide surprises. Homeowners upgrade selections. The question is not whether you will have change orders — it is whether the process for handling them is clearly defined in your contract. A proper NJ contractor contract specifies: how change orders are initiated (in writing only), how change order pricing is calculated (time-and-materials at a stated rate, or lump sum agreed before proceeding), whether change orders require your written approval before work begins, and the impact of change orders on the project schedule. Without this language, ‘while we’re in there…’ conversations can add thousands to your bill without a clear paper trail.
Who is pulling the permits? Who is paying for them? When are they expected? These questions are absent from a surprising number of NJ contractor estimates. The answer should be: the contractor pulls all required permits as the contractor of record, permit fees are either included in the estimate line by line or explicitly called out as a separate cost, and the project schedule assumes a realistic permit review timeline for your specific municipality. If the estimate says nothing about permits, ask directly — and put the answer in writing.
If a bid is missing three or more of these elements — vague scope, allowances instead of specs, front-loaded payments, no change order language, and no mention of permits — that is not an oversight. That is how problematic contractors operate. Politely request the missing information in writing. A legitimate contractor will provide it. A contractor who pushes back or becomes evasive when asked for specifics is showing you who they are before any money changes hands.
Every PS Elite estimate includes: line-item scope of work, material specifications by brand and model number, a milestone-based payment schedule, a written change order process, and full permit cost and responsibility disclosure. We will walk through every line of our estimate with you at contract review — because homeowners who understand their contract are the best clients to work with.
A complete NJ contractor estimate should include: line-item scope of work, material specifications by brand/model, a milestone-based payment schedule, change order procedures, warranty terms, permit responsibility and fees, and start/completion dates.
Allowances are placeholder dollar amounts for items not yet specified (tile, fixtures, cabinets). They are risky because if your actual selection exceeds the allowance, you receive a change order for the difference — often thousands of dollars. Prefer specified materials over allowances wherever possible.
A standard upfront deposit for a licensed NJ contractor is 10-15% of the total project cost. Anything over 20-25% upfront is a warning sign. Never pay more than 50% total before substantial work is complete.