[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how to enforce a construction contract in canada

How to Enforce a Construction Contract in Canada (2026): Notices, Adjudication, Holdbacks & Enforcement Steps

By Global Law Experts
– posted 14 hours ago

Understanding how to enforce a construction contract in Canada has become more urgent, and more procedurally complex, since Ontario’s Construction Act amendments took effect on 1 January 2026. The changes introduced a mandatory prompt payment regime, a streamlined adjudication pathway for payment disputes, and revised holdback release mechanics that alter the decision tree for every contractor, subcontractor, supplier and owner on an improvement. This guide delivers the practical, step-by-step enforcement workflow that industry participants need in 2026: which rights to preserve first, when to issue notices, how to file and perfect a construction lien in Ontario, when adjudication beats litigation, and how to convert an adjudicator’s determination into hard cash.

Whether you are chasing $50,000 in unpaid invoices or managing a multimillion-dollar dispute, the framework below applies.

Quick Enforcement Checklist, 10 Immediate Actions

Before diving into the detailed legal analysis, the following checklist captures the critical enforcement actions in priority order. Print it, pin it to the project file, and work through each step the moment a payment dispute arises.

  1. Stop the clock. Identify the date your last services or materials were supplied, every statutory deadline runs from this trigger.
  2. Review the contract. Check payment terms, notice-of-default clauses, dispute resolution provisions and any holdback or set-off language.
  3. Issue a written notice of default. Deliver it in the form and to the address specified in the contract (see sample template below).
  4. Preserve your construction lien. Register the claim for lien in the proper land registry office within the statutory preservation period.
  5. Notify the owner. If you are a subcontractor or supplier, send a written notice to the owner confirming that amounts remain unpaid.
  6. Calculate the holdback. Confirm the statutory holdback amount the payor is required to retain and verify whether annual holdback release rules apply.
  7. Consider adjudication. Under the Construction Act 2026 prompt payment regime, adjudication may deliver an interim payment order faster than litigation.
  8. Perfect the lien. Commence an action to enforce the lien within the perfection period to prevent the lien from expiring.
  9. Assemble your documentation pack. Gather every invoice, change order, delivery slip, email chain and site diary relevant to the claim.
  10. Engage construction counsel. A specialist construction lawyer can run the lien, adjudication and enforcement processes in parallel to maximise recovery.

Sample Notice of Default (Template)

Note: This is an example only. Always confirm that the notice complies with the specific requirements of your contract and seek legal advice before issuing.

“NOTICE OF DEFAULT, Pursuant to Section [X] of the Agreement dated [date], you are hereby notified that [Payor Name] is in default of its payment obligations in the amount of $[amount]. Payment was due on [date] and remains outstanding. Unless full payment is received within [X] business days of this notice, [Claimant Name] reserves all rights and remedies available under the Agreement, the Construction Act (Ontario), and at law or in equity, including the right to suspend work, preserve a construction lien and initiate adjudication proceedings.”

Enforceability Fundamentals: The Contract and Statutory Overlay

Before you can enforce a construction contract in Canada, you need a legally binding agreement. Under Canadian common law, a construction contract requires the same foundational elements as any commercial agreement: offer and acceptance, consideration (the exchange of services or materials for payment), an intention to create legal relations, and capacity of the parties. Written contracts are not strictly required for enforceability, but the absence of a written agreement creates evidentiary difficulties that can undermine an enforcement claim, particularly where the scope of work, pricing or payment timelines are disputed.

What makes construction contracts distinctive is the statutory overlay imposed by provincial legislation. In Ontario, the Construction Act operates as a deemed code that supplements, and in many cases overrides, the terms parties have negotiated. For example, section 5 of the Act deems certain provisions into every construction contract regardless of what the parties have agreed, and Part I.1 now mandates prompt payment timelines that cannot be contracted out of. This means that even where a contract is silent on payment terms, the statutory regime fills the gaps and provides enforcement remedies that are independent of the contract itself.

The practical implication is straightforward: when reviewing a construction contract for enforcement purposes, you must read the contract terms alongside the applicable provincial legislation. Any notice provision, holdback obligation, payment timeline or dispute resolution clause that contradicts the Act is, to the extent of the inconsistency, unenforceable. For a quick refresher on key construction law terms and definitions, consult our dedicated glossary.

Preserve Your Rights: Notices, Documentation and Immediate Steps

The single most time-sensitive action in any construction enforcement scenario is preserving your statutory and contractual rights. Delay, even by a matter of days, can extinguish a lien right, forfeit an adjudication remedy, or waive a contractual notice entitlement. This section explains the notice requirements that must be satisfied before any enforcement step can succeed.

Types of Notices to Issue

  • Notice of default. Triggered by the contract’s own terms, typically sent when a payment deadline passes or a material breach occurs. Must be delivered in the manner and to the address specified in the agreement.
  • Notice of non-payment. Under the Construction Act prompt payment provisions, a notice of non-payment is the mechanism by which a payor indicates a bona fide dispute with a proper invoice. Failure to deliver a compliant notice of non-payment within the statutory timeline means the full invoiced amount becomes payable.
  • Notice to owner. Subcontractors and suppliers who do not have a direct contractual relationship with the owner should deliver a written notice confirming the amounts owed by the contractor. This supports both the lien claim and any trust claim under the Act.

When Contract Notice Provisions Are Strictly Enforced

Ontario courts have consistently upheld strict contractual notice requirements. Where a contract specifies that notice of a claim must be delivered in writing, within a stated number of days and to a designated representative, failure to comply with any of those conditions can be fatal to the claim, regardless of the merits. Industry observers note that recent Ontario decisions have reinforced this principle with particular rigour, dismissing otherwise valid claims solely because the claimant failed to give notice in the precise form required by the contract. The lesson is blunt: read every notice clause, comply with it exactly, and keep proof of delivery.

Documentation Pack for Counsel

Efficient enforcement requires a well-organised file. Assemble the following before your first meeting with construction counsel:

  • The signed contract (including all amendments, change orders and schedules)
  • Every invoice issued, with proof of delivery
  • All correspondence (emails, letters, text messages) relating to payment, delays or deficiencies
  • Delivery slips, purchase orders, and material receipts
  • Site diaries, daily logs and progress reports
  • Photographs or video documenting the work performed
  • Any payment certificates, certificates of substantial performance, or notices issued under the Act
  • Details of all payments received and any amounts set off or disputed

Construction Lien Ontario: How to Preserve, Perfect and Enforce a Lien

The construction lien is the most powerful statutory remedy available to contractors, subcontractors and suppliers in Ontario. It creates a charge against the owner’s interest in the land (or the premises) that is being improved, securing the claimant’s right to payment against the real property itself. The process of enforcing a construction lien in Ontario involves three distinct stages, preservation, perfection and enforcement, each with its own statutory deadline. Missing any one of those deadlines is usually irrecoverable.

Step A, Preserve the Lien

Preservation is the first mandatory step. A construction lien must be preserved by registering a claim for lien in the land registry office where the property is located, within the time limit prescribed by the Construction Act. The preservation period begins to run from different trigger dates depending on the claimant’s role on the project:

  • Contractor: The preservation period runs from the date of publication of a certificate of substantial performance of the contract, or from the date the contract is completed or abandoned, whichever is earlier.
  • Subcontractor or supplier: The preservation period runs from the date the subcontract is certified as substantially performed, or from the last date the subcontractor supplied services or materials to the improvement, whichever triggers first under the Act.

The prescribed form for a claim for lien must include the claimant’s name and address, the name and address of the owner, a description of the premises sufficient for registration, the amount claimed, and a short description of the services or materials supplied. The form must be verified by affidavit.

Step B, Perfect the Lien (Register and Commence Action)

Preserving a lien is not enough. To keep the lien alive, the claimant must “perfect” it by commencing a court action to enforce the lien and registering a certificate of action in the land registry office, again within the statutory perfection period prescribed by the Act. The perfection period runs from the date the lien was preserved.

The court action is commenced in the Superior Court of Justice in the county or district where the property is located. If the lien is not perfected within the statutory window, it expires and the registration is vacated. Early indications suggest that the 2026 amendments have prompted courts to be even less forgiving of late filings, given that the statute now provides parallel adjudication remedies that further reduce any justification for delay.

Step C, Enforce the Lien (Trial, Settlement or Judicial Sale)

Once perfected, the lien action proceeds as a court proceeding. The court may order a reference (a detailed accounting exercise), consolidate multiple lien actions on the same project, and ultimately determine the priority and quantum of each lien. Remedies include a judgment for payment and, in appropriate cases, a judicial sale of the premises.

Industry observers expect the practical effect of the Construction Act 2026 changes to be a reduction in fully litigated lien trials, as parties increasingly use the faster adjudication mechanism for interim payment determinations and reserve the lien action as security for the final accounting. In many cases, the existence of a perfected lien creates sufficient leverage to settle the dispute before trial.

Key Lien Deadlines at a Glance

Stage What It Does Key Deadline / Note
Preserve Registers the claim for lien to prevent the right from expiring Must be registered within the statutory preservation period from the relevant trigger date (Construction Act, Part II)
Perfect Commences a court action and files a certificate of action to keep the lien alive Must be commenced within the statutory perfection period from the date the lien was preserved (Construction Act, Part II)
Enforce Obtains a court judgment, reference order, or judicial sale to realise the lien Proceeds as a Superior Court action; timeline depends on court scheduling, complexity and settlement dynamics

Note: Exact statutory periods (expressed in days) are prescribed by the Construction Act (R.S.O. 1990, c. C.30, as amended). Always verify current deadlines against the official statute on ontario.ca, as transitional provisions may apply to projects commenced before 1 January 2026.

Prompt Payment and Adjudication in Ontario: When and How to Use the 2026 Pathway

The prompt payment and adjudication provisions in the Construction Act 2026 represent the most significant change to how to enforce a construction contract in Canada in decades. For the first time, Ontario contractors and subcontractors have access to a mandatory, statutory adjudication mechanism designed to resolve payment disputes within weeks rather than years. This section explains when to use adjudication, how to start the process, and how to enforce the result.

When to Choose Adjudication vs. Lien vs. Litigation

Adjudication, liens and litigation are not mutually exclusive, they can and often should be pursued in parallel. The decision tree below helps identify when each remedy adds the most value:

  • Choose adjudication when: you need interim cashflow relief quickly; the dispute concerns a proper invoice that has not been paid or a notice of non-payment that you wish to challenge; or you want a binding interim determination without the cost and delay of full litigation.
  • Preserve and perfect a lien when: you need security against the land to protect your ultimate recovery; the dispute involves amounts that may not be resolved by a single adjudication; or the paying party’s financial position creates a risk that a money judgment alone will not be collected.
  • Commence litigation when: the dispute involves complex technical issues (deficiency claims, delay damages, scope disputes) that exceed the scope of adjudication; you require injunctive or declaratory relief; or the adjudicator’s determination needs to be converted into an enforceable court judgment.

For a deeper look at preparing for a dispute resolution hearing, whether adjudication or arbitration, see our guide on how to prepare for adjudication and arbitration.

Starting Adjudication, Step-by-Step

The adjudication process under the Construction Act follows a structured sequence designed to produce a determination rapidly:

  1. Deliver a notice of adjudication. The referring party serves a written notice of adjudication on the responding party, identifying the dispute and the relief sought.
  2. Select an adjudicator. The parties may agree on an adjudicator from the registry of qualified adjudicators maintained by the authorised nominating authority. If they cannot agree, the nominating authority appoints one.
  3. Submit the adjudication documents. The referring party delivers its written submissions, supporting documents and the contract to the adjudicator within the prescribed timeline. The responding party then has a defined period to deliver a response.
  4. Adjudicator’s determination. The adjudicator issues a written determination within the statutory timeline. The determination is binding on an interim basis, meaning it must be complied with immediately, even if either party subsequently commences litigation or arbitration to obtain a final resolution.

The speed of adjudication under the prompt payment Ontario regime is its defining feature. The entire process, from notice to determination, is compressed into a matter of weeks, which represents a dramatic acceleration compared to the typical multi-year timeline for lien actions or breach-of-contract litigation.

Enforcing an Adjudicator’s Decision

An adjudicator’s determination is only as valuable as your ability to collect on it. The Construction Act provides that a determination is enforceable in the same manner as a court order. In practice, the enforcement pathway involves several options:

  • Voluntary compliance. In most cases, the losing party pays the determined amount promptly to avoid further enforcement costs and potential claims of bad faith.
  • Court application. If the losing party does not comply, the successful party may bring an application to the Superior Court of Justice to have the determination recognised and enforced as if it were a court order. The scope for resisting enforcement is narrow, courts generally limit challenges to jurisdictional errors or procedural unfairness.
  • Surety and bond claims. Where the project is bonded, the successful party may also pursue a claim against the surety under the labour and material payment bond, using the adjudicator’s determination as evidence of the amount owed.

The Canadian Bar Association has published detailed practice guidance on enforcing adjudicator decisions, including the procedural steps for converting a determination into a collectible judgment and the interaction with surety claims.

Holdbacks, Bond Claims and Other Security Options

Holdbacks are a central feature of construction payment in Ontario. The Construction Act requires every payor (owner, contractor and subcontractor) to retain a statutory holdback from each payment, a percentage of the price of the services or materials, as security for the lien and trust claims of parties further down the payment chain. The 2026 amendments refined the annual holdback release mechanics, introducing clearer timelines for the release of holdback where no liens have been preserved and the applicable release period has expired.

For claimants, the holdback represents a pool of funds from which lien claims can be satisfied. For payors, releasing the holdback prematurely, before the statutory period has expired and all liens have cleared, creates personal liability for any amounts that should have been retained.

Using a Bond or Surety to Collect

On bonded projects, a labour and material payment bond provides an additional layer of security. The bond guarantees that subcontractors and suppliers will be paid for their services and materials. To make a claim against the bond:

  • Confirm that the project carries a labour and material payment bond and obtain a copy of the bond.
  • Deliver a written notice of claim to the surety within the time period specified in the bond (typically a defined period after the claimant last supplied services or materials).
  • Provide the surety with documentation supporting the claim, invoices, delivery slips, proof of non-payment, and any adjudicator’s determination.
  • If the surety does not pay, commence a court action against the surety on the bond.

Bond claims can be pursued alongside lien claims and adjudication, giving the claimant multiple recovery pathways. For an overview of contractor remedies in comparable common-law jurisdictions, see our analysis of contractor remedies from suspension to termination.

Enforcement Steps Post-Judgment: Execution, Garnishment and Insolvency Options

Obtaining a court judgment or enforceable adjudicator determination is only half the battle. The next step is converting the paper remedy into actual payment. Ontario provides several enforcement mechanisms under the Courts of Justice Act and the Rules of Civil Procedure:

  • Writ of seizure and sale. Filed with the sheriff, this writ authorises the seizure and sale of the debtor’s personal property and creates a charge against any real property the debtor owns in the jurisdiction.
  • Garnishment. A notice of garnishment directed to the debtor’s bank, customers or other persons who owe money to the debtor diverts those funds to the creditor.
  • Examination in aid of execution. The debtor is examined under oath about their assets, income, debts and financial affairs to identify executable assets.
  • Bankruptcy and receivership. Where the debtor is insolvent, the creditor may file an application under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act to place the debtor into bankruptcy or seek the appointment of a receiver over the debtor’s assets.

Enforcement costs and timelines vary. A garnishment can produce payment within weeks if the debtor has accessible bank accounts. A bankruptcy proceeding may take months and yield only a fraction of the judgment. Experienced construction counsel can advise on the most efficient combination of enforcement tools for your specific circumstances. Our international litigation and enforcement guide provides additional context for cross-border situations.

Common Pitfalls and Quick Remediation Checklist

Construction disputes are littered with avoidable errors that cost claimants their rights. The six most common mistakes, and how to remediate them, are set out below:

  • Missing the lien preservation deadline. Once the statutory period expires, the lien right is lost forever. Remediation: diarise the trigger date and set a reminder well before the deadline.
  • Issuing a notice of default in the wrong form or to the wrong address. Courts enforce contractual notice provisions strictly. Remediation: verify the contract’s notice clause, deliver the notice exactly as specified, and keep proof of delivery.
  • Failing to keep contemporaneous records. Oral evidence of work performed or materials delivered is difficult to prove. Remediation: maintain daily logs, photograph progress, and confirm material changes in writing.
  • Releasing holdback prematurely. Premature release exposes the payor to personal liability. Remediation: track the statutory release timelines and obtain written confirmation that no liens have been preserved before releasing.
  • Ignoring the adjudication timeline. Prompt payment adjudication is subject to tight statutory deadlines. A late notice of adjudication or late submission can forfeit the right to the remedy. Remediation: commence adjudication immediately upon identifying a payment dispute.
  • Treating adjudication, liens and litigation as sequential. These remedies can and should be pursued concurrently. Remediation: work with counsel to run all three enforcement tracks in parallel.

When to Engage a Construction Lawyer

Construction enforcement is a technical, time-sensitive practice area. While this guide provides the framework, there are decision points where specialist legal advice is essential:

  • Any time a lien preservation or perfection deadline is imminent
  • Before issuing a notice of adjudication or responding to one
  • When a contract contains unusual dispute resolution, set-off or indemnity provisions
  • Where the opposing party has disputed the validity of your lien or the adjudicator’s jurisdiction
  • When enforcement involves cross-provincial or international elements

To connect with a qualified construction law practitioner, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Appendix: Templates and Forms

The following templates are provided as starting points only. They do not constitute legal advice and should be reviewed and adapted by qualified construction counsel before use on any project.

  • Notice of Default template. See the sample language in the Quick Enforcement Checklist section above. Customise the clause references, amounts and deadlines to match your contract.
  • Lien preservation checklist. Trigger date identified → prescribed form completed → affidavit sworn → registered at land registry office → copy served on owner → diary entry for perfection deadline.
  • Adjudication referral checklist. Payment dispute identified → notice of adjudication drafted → adjudicator selected (or nominating authority engaged) → submissions and supporting documents compiled → timeline for response and determination diarised.
  • Statutory forms. The prescribed forms for claims for lien, certificates of action and other filings under the Construction Act are available from the Government of Ontario on ontario.ca.

Understanding how to enforce a construction contract in Canada in 2026 requires mastery of multiple parallel remedies, contractual notices, statutory liens, prompt payment adjudication, holdback rules and post-judgment enforcement. The Construction Act 2026 amendments have expanded the toolkit available to claimants, but they have also compressed timelines and imposed stricter procedural requirements. Early action, meticulous documentation and specialist legal counsel are the three pillars of successful enforcement.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Brendan D. Bowles at Glaholt Bowles LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Government of Ontario, Construction Act (R.S.O. 1990, c. C.30)
  2. Canadian Bar Association, When You Win: Enforcing the Adjudicator’s Decision
  3. Global Arbitration Review, Construction Arbitration: Canada
  4. Borden Ladner Gervais (BLG), Construction Arbitration Practice Note
  5. Margie Strub Construction Law LLP, No Notice, No Claim: Ontario Courts Uphold Strict Notice Requirements
  6. Canadian Home Builders’ Association (CHBA), Legal Resources

FAQs

What is needed to enforce a construction contract in Canada?
You need evidence of a binding contract (written or oral), compliance with all contractual notice requirements, preservation of any applicable statutory rights (such as a construction lien), and a legal remedy, whether adjudication under the Construction Act, a court judgment for breach of contract, or enforcement of a lien against the property.
Prepare the prescribed claim for lien form, including the claimant’s and owner’s names and addresses, a description of the premises, the amount claimed, and a description of the services or materials supplied. Verify the form by affidavit and register it at the land registry office where the property is situated, within the statutory preservation period under the Construction Act.
The preservation period is prescribed by the Construction Act and runs from specific trigger dates that vary depending on whether you are a contractor, subcontractor or supplier. Timelines are strict and cannot be extended. Always verify the current deadlines against the official statute on ontario.ca and consult construction counsel immediately when a payment dispute arises.
The amendments that took effect on 1 January 2026 introduced a mandatory prompt payment regime (with strict timelines for payment of proper invoices and delivery of notices of non-payment), a statutory adjudication mechanism for interim payment determinations, and revised holdback release rules that clarify the annual release timeline and conditions.
You may apply to the Superior Court of Justice to have the adjudicator’s determination recognised and enforced as a court order. The grounds for resisting enforcement are narrow. Once you have a court order, you can use standard enforcement tools, writs of seizure and sale, garnishment, and examination of the debtor. On bonded projects, you may also claim against the surety using the determination as evidence of the debt.
These remedies are not mutually exclusive. The recommended approach is to preserve your lien immediately (to protect your security against the land) and commence adjudication concurrently (to obtain a rapid interim payment determination). Litigation may follow if a final resolution is required beyond the scope of the adjudicator’s determination. Running these tracks in parallel maximises both your security position and your cashflow recovery.
how to report cartel australia
By Global Law Experts

posted 23 minutes ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How to Enforce a Construction Contract in Canada (2026): Notices, Adjudication, Holdbacks & Enforcement Steps

Send welcome message

Custom Message