Illinois Construction Lien Law
Illinois construction lien law governs the rights of contractors, subcontractors, suppliers, and design professionals to claim a security interest in real property when payment is withheld for construction work or materials. Rooted in the Illinois Mechanics Lien Act (770 ILCS 60), the framework creates enforceable claims against property titles and establishes strict procedural deadlines that, if missed, permanently extinguish lien rights. Understanding this body of law is essential for any party in the Illinois construction payment chain — from general contractors seeking payment to property owners managing lien exposure.
- Definition and Scope
- Core Mechanics or Structure
- Causal Relationships or Drivers
- Classification Boundaries
- Tradeoffs and Tensions
- Common Misconceptions
- Checklist or Steps (Non-Advisory)
- Reference Table or Matrix
Definition and Scope
The Illinois Mechanics Lien Act (770 ILCS 60/1 et seq.) grants any person who provides labor, materials, fixtures, apparatus, machinery, services, or information — including architects and engineers — a statutory lien on the improved property and on money owed by the owner to the contractor. The lien attaches to the real property itself, meaning an unpaid subcontractor can cloud the title of a parcel regardless of whether the owner has any direct contractual relationship with that subcontractor.
Scope of this page: This reference covers lien rights arising under Illinois state law — specifically 770 ILCS 60 — as applied to private commercial and residential construction projects within Illinois. It does not address federal Miller Act bond claims (which apply to federal public projects), Illinois public contract payment bonds under the Public Construction Bond Act (30 ILCS 550), or lien rights in other states. For a complementary overview of the step-by-step filing process, see Illinois Mechanics Lien Process. Questions about contract terms that give rise to payment disputes are covered separately under Illinois Construction Contract Law.
Lien law in Illinois does not cover personal property — only improvements to real property. Owner-occupied residential projects of 4 units or fewer are subject to the same act but carry additional notice requirements. Public property cannot be liened under the Mechanics Lien Act; claimants on public work must pursue bond claims under the Public Construction Bond Act.
Core Mechanics or Structure
Who May Claim a Lien
Under 770 ILCS 60/1, claimants include contractors (those with a direct contract with the owner), subcontractors, material suppliers, architects, engineers, and surveyors. A claimant must show that the labor or material "was used or consumed" in the improvement. The lien attaches to the interest of the property owner who contracted for the work — including equitable interests such as a purchaser under a land installment contract.
The Two-Party Contract Requirement and Notice
A contractor (direct primate with the owner) can lien without preliminary notice, but must file a lien claim within 4 months after completion of the last work or supply of the last materials (770 ILCS 60/7).
A subcontractor or supplier (no direct contract with the owner) must:
1. Serve a sworn statement or notice on the owner within 90 days of the last furnishing, asserting the claim amount and the name of the party contracted with.
2. File a verified lien claim in the circuit court of the county where the property is located within 4 months of completion of last work.
Failure to meet either deadline extinguishes the lien right without exception.
Filing and Enforcement
Liens are filed in the circuit court of the county where the property sits, not the county recorder. An action to enforce the lien must be commenced within 2 years of the filing of the lien claim. The lien must be a verified (sworn) petition stating the contract amount, the balance due, a description of the property, and the name of the owner of record.
Owner Protections: Sworn Statements and Waivers
Owners and lenders routinely require contractor sworn statements before disbursing funds. Under 770 ILCS 60/5, contractors must furnish a sworn statement listing all subcontractors and suppliers and the amounts owed to each. An owner who relies on a false sworn statement is protected from subcontractor liens to the extent of good-faith payment made in reliance on it. Lien waivers — both conditional and unconditional — are commonly exchanged at each draw; Illinois law does not provide a standardized waiver form, making careful drafting critical.
Causal Relationships or Drivers
Lien claims arise from a discrete set of upstream conditions:
Payment chain breakdown is the primary driver. On multi-tiered projects, a general contractor who receives payment but fails to pay downstream subcontractors creates simultaneous lien exposure for the owner, even though the owner already paid the general.
Title insurance pressure amplifies the consequences of filed liens. A lien claim clouds the property title, blocking refinancing, sale, or new lending until the lien is released, bonded over, or adjudicated.
Draw disbursement failures in construction lending — where a lender's disbursement schedule misaligns with contractor payment obligations — frequently trigger subcontractor liens. Illinois lenders typically require sworn statements and lien waivers as preconditions to each draw specifically to interrupt this causal chain.
Scope disputes and change orders without written authorization create contested lien amounts. When contractors perform extra work without a signed change order, the lien amount they can claim is limited to the original contract balance plus the value of work the owner can be shown to have authorized or ratified.
Permitting delays and project abandonment affect the "last date of work" calculation that determines filing deadlines. Disputed work stoppage dates have generated substantial Illinois case law. For permitting context affecting project timelines, see Illinois Construction Permits and Approvals.
Classification Boundaries
Illinois lien law creates three functionally distinct tiers of claimants with different procedural obligations:
| Claimant Tier | Contract Relationship | 90-Day Notice Required? | Lien Filing Deadline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prime Contractor | Direct with owner | No | 4 months after last work |
| Subcontractor / Sub-sub | Through contractor | Yes | 4 months after last work |
| Material Supplier | Direct or indirect | Yes | 4 months after last work |
| Design Professional | Direct with owner | No | 4 months after last work |
| Design Professional | Through contractor | Yes | 4 months after last work |
Residential vs. Commercial: The same act applies to both, but residential owners of single-family homes who have not recorded a building loan contract enjoy additional protections — specifically, greater protection against subcontractor liens that exceed amounts unpaid to the prime contractor.
New Construction vs. Improvement: Liens on new construction attach to the land and all improvements. Liens on improvement of existing structures attach only to the addition, except where the improvement constitutes a substantial enhancement of the whole.
Tradeoffs and Tensions
Strict deadlines vs. practical discovery: The 4-month filing window begins on the last date of actual work, not the date a payment dispute becomes apparent. Claimants who are unaware a dispute exists until after the deadline lose rights permanently. Courts have narrowly construed exceptions to the deadline.
Subcontractor protection vs. owner exposure: The act deliberately prioritizes subcontractor payment security, meaning an owner who pays the general contractor in full can still face subcontractor lien exposure. This creates incentive for owners to withhold final payment pending sworn statements — but also creates cash flow tension for contractors.
Lien waivers as risk-shifting tools: Unconditional lien waivers, once signed, release lien rights regardless of whether payment is actually received. Conditional waivers are safer for claimants but more complex to administer. Illinois provides no statutory waiver form, so ambiguous waiver language frequently generates disputes. The related framework for payment protections is addressed in Illinois Construction Payment Protections.
Bond-over mechanism: An owner or contractor can discharge a lien by posting a surety bond in the amount of the lien plus a statutory penalty. While this clears the title and allows the project to proceed, it shifts but does not eliminate the financial exposure — the bond is substituted for the property as security. For bonding requirements generally, see Illinois Construction Bonding Requirements.
Common Misconceptions
Misconception: Payment by the owner eliminates all lien exposure.
Correction: Under 770 ILCS 60, an owner who pays the general contractor without first obtaining a sworn statement from the contractor may remain exposed to subcontractor liens up to the amount still owed — but also potentially on amounts already paid if the sworn statement requirement was not followed.
Misconception: Verbal notice to the owner satisfies the 90-day notice requirement.
Correction: Illinois courts have required the notice to be written and to substantially comply with the statutory content requirements. Verbal communication does not toll the deadline.
Misconception: A lien can be filed at the county recorder's office.
Correction: Illinois mechanics liens are filed in the circuit court of the county where the property is located — not with the recorder of deeds. Filing with the recorder provides no legal lien protection under the Mechanics Lien Act.
Misconception: Architects and engineers cannot file liens.
Correction: 770 ILCS 60/1 expressly includes architects, engineers, and surveyors who provide services under contract, even if no physical work was performed on the site.
Misconception: The 2-year enforcement period resets upon any activity.
Correction: The 2-year period to bring an enforcement action runs from the date the lien claim was filed, not from any subsequent correspondence or demand.
Checklist or Steps (Non-Advisory)
The following sequence outlines the procedural steps in the Illinois lien process as defined by 770 ILCS 60. This is a structural description of the statutory framework, not legal guidance.
For a Subcontractor or Supplier:
- Document last furnishing date — Record the date of last labor performed or last materials delivered; this triggers the 90-day notice window and the 4-month filing window.
- Identify the property owner of record — Obtain the current recorded owner from the county recorder of deeds; notice served on the wrong party is ineffective.
- Serve 90-day notice on the owner — Written notice must identify the claimant, the contracting party, the property, and the amount claimed; serve within 90 days of the last furnishing date.
- Prepare verified lien claim — Draft a sworn, notarized petition including contract amount, amount unpaid, description of property, and owner name.
- File in circuit court — File the lien claim in the circuit court of the county where the property is located within 4 months of the last furnishing date.
- Serve the lien on the owner — Serve notice of the filed lien on the property owner.
- Commence enforcement action — File suit to enforce the lien within 2 years of the filing date or the lien becomes unenforceable.
- Monitor for bond substitution — If the owner or contractor bonds over the lien, redirect enforcement against the bond.
For a Prime Contractor:
- Document project completion date — The 4-month filing clock begins on completion of all work or last furnishing.
- Prepare and file verified lien claim — No 90-day pre-notice required; file in circuit court within 4 months.
- Serve notice of lien on the owner — Ensure proper service of process.
- Enforce within the 2-year window.
Reference Table or Matrix
Key Deadlines and Requirements Under 770 ILCS 60
| Action | Party | Deadline / Requirement | Statutory Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-lien notice to owner | Subcontractor / Supplier | Within 90 days of last furnishing | 770 ILCS 60/24 |
| Lien claim filing | Prime Contractor | Within 4 months of last work | 770 ILCS 60/7 |
| Lien claim filing | Subcontractor / Supplier | Within 4 months of last work | 770 ILCS 60/24 |
| Enforcement action | All claimants | Within 2 years of lien filing | 770 ILCS 60/9 |
| Contractor sworn statement | Prime Contractor | Before each draw disbursement | 770 ILCS 60/5 |
| Bond-over amount | Owner / Contractor | Lien amount + statutory penalty | 770 ILCS 60/38 |
| Public project bond claim | All claimants on public work | Per Public Construction Bond Act | 30 ILCS 550/1 |
Lien Rights by Project Type
| Project Type | Lien Against Property? | Bond Claim Alternative? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Private Commercial | Yes | Yes (voluntary bond-over) | Full Mechanics Lien Act applies |
| Private Residential (1–4 units) | Yes | Yes (voluntary bond-over) | Additional owner protections apply |
| State/Municipal Public Work | No | Yes (required under 30 ILCS 550) | Property cannot be liened |
| Federal Public Work | No | Yes (Miller Act, 40 U.S.C. § 3131) | State lien law inapplicable |
| Condominium / Common Areas | Limited | Depends on association structure | Complex; varies by recorded declaration |
References
- Illinois Mechanics Lien Act, 770 ILCS 60 — Illinois General Assembly
- Illinois Public Construction Bond Act, 30 ILCS 550 — Illinois General Assembly
- Miller Act, 40 U.S.C. § 3131–3134 — U.S. House of Representatives, Office of the Law Revision Counsel
- Illinois Circuit Court System — Illinois Courts, for lien filing jurisdiction
- Illinois General Assembly — ILCS Full Text Search — Primary source for all Illinois statutes referenced