Alabama Construction Lien Law
Alabama's construction lien law governs the rights of contractors, subcontractors, materialmen, and laborers to assert a claim against real property when payment for work or materials has not been received. Rooted in Alabama Code Title 35, Chapter 11, Article 3 (Ala. Code §§ 35-11-210 through 35-11-234), this statutory framework creates a security interest in improved property that runs in favor of those who contributed value to it. Understanding these mechanics is foundational to managing payment risk on any Alabama construction project, whether residential, commercial, or public.
- Definition and Scope
- Core Mechanics or Structure
- Causal Relationships or Drivers
- Classification Boundaries
- Tradeoffs and Tensions
- Common Misconceptions
- Checklist or Steps
- Reference Table or Matrix
Definition and Scope
Alabama's mechanics lien statute — codified at Ala. Code §§ 35-11-210 et seq. — establishes a legal mechanism by which parties who furnish labor, materials, or services for the improvement of real property can place an encumbrance on that property as security for unpaid amounts. The lien attaches to the land and improvements, not merely to the contractual relationship between the parties.
Covered parties under Alabama law include:
- General contractors with a direct contract with the property owner
- Subcontractors (first- and lower-tier)
- Materialmen who supply materials incorporated into the project
- Laborers who perform physical work on-site
Scope limitations: This page covers lien law as it applies to private construction projects in Alabama under state statute. Public construction projects (those involving state agencies, counties, municipalities, or public school boards) are not covered by mechanics lien law — instead, payment protection on public projects flows through payment bond requirements under the Alabama Little Miller Act (Ala. Code §§ 39-1-1 through 39-1-2). Federal construction projects within Alabama fall under the federal Miller Act (40 U.S.C. §§ 3131–3134), which is outside the scope of this page. For a broader framework of how project delivery structures interact with these legal tools, see How Alabama Construction Works: Conceptual Overview.
This page also does not address general contract enforcement, surety bond claims, or UCC Article 9 security interests, which operate under separate legal frameworks. Geographic coverage is limited to Alabama; no other state's lien laws are analyzed here.
Core Mechanics or Structure
Lien Attachment and the "Relation Back" Doctrine
Under Ala. Code § 35-11-211, a mechanics lien attaches to the property from the date the first work was performed or the first materials were furnished under the contract. This "relation back" doctrine means the lien priority date can predate the filing of the lien itself — a critical concept when multiple encumbrances (mortgages, deeds of trust) are recorded during construction.
Notice Requirements
Alabama does not require preliminary notice as a universal condition for lien rights, but notice plays a pivotal role for certain parties:
- Subcontractors and materialmen who lack privity with the owner must serve a written notice of lien claim on the property owner to preserve rights. Under Ala. Code § 35-11-218, this notice must be served within 30 days after the claimant last performed work or furnished materials.
- General contractors with a direct owner contract are not subject to the same preliminary notice requirement but must still file a verified lien statement.
Filing the Lien Statement
The verified statement of lien must be filed with the Judge of Probate in the county where the property is located. Alabama requires filing within 4 months after the last day work was performed or materials were last furnished (Ala. Code § 35-11-215). Failure to file within this window extinguishes the lien right entirely.
Enforcing the Lien
Filing alone does not enforce the lien. A lien claimant must bring a civil action to enforce (foreclose) the lien in the circuit court of the county where the property is located. Under Ala. Code § 35-11-221, the enforcement action must be filed within 6 months after the lien statement is recorded, or within 30 days after written demand from the owner for the claimant to commence suit, whichever is earlier.
For context on how payment and lien rights fit into the broader contractual architecture of a project, see Alabama Construction Contracts Framework and Alabama Construction Payment Practices and Prompt Pay.
Causal Relationships or Drivers
The mechanics lien system exists because of the structural payment risk inherent in construction. Labor and materials are incorporated into property — often irreversibly — before full payment is received. Without a statutory lien right, a subcontractor or supplier would have only a contractual claim against the party that hired them, not against the property that holds the value of their contribution.
Three primary causal conditions drive lien claims:
- Owner-contractor payment disputes that cascade down to subcontractors who are paid through the general contractor. Alabama's lien statute acknowledges this chain by extending rights to parties without privity with the owner.
- Contractor insolvency or abandonment, which leaves lower-tier parties unpaid despite the owner having already paid the general contractor. The lien right on property provides recourse independent of the general contractor's solvency.
- Disputed change orders or scope disagreements (Alabama Construction Change Order Management) that result in withheld payment, triggering protective lien filings.
Retainage practices also create lien exposure. When retainage is withheld until substantial completion (Alabama Construction Retainage Practices), subcontractors may be owed significant sums for extended periods, increasing the risk that disputes translate into filed liens.
Classification Boundaries
Alabama lien law draws distinctions among claimant categories that affect notice requirements, priority, and the amount recoverable.
By Contractual Tier
| Claimant Type | Privity with Owner | Notice to Owner Required | Lien Right Basis |
|---|---|---|---|
| General Contractor | Direct contract | Not required (but must file lien statement) | Ala. Code § 35-11-210 |
| Subcontractor | No | Yes — within 30 days of last furnishing | Ala. Code § 35-11-218 |
| Materialman (supplier) | Varies | Yes — within 30 days if no privity | Ala. Code § 35-11-218 |
| Laborer | No | Yes — follows subcontractor rules | Ala. Code § 35-11-218 |
| Architect/Engineer | No — service provider | Limited; design-only claims contested | Ala. Code § 35-11-210 |
By Project Type
- Private residential projects: Full statutory lien rights apply.
- Private commercial projects: Full statutory lien rights apply. See Alabama Commercial Construction Overview.
- Public projects (government owned): Mechanics lien laws do not apply. Claims are made against payment bonds under the Little Miller Act.
- Industrial facilities: Private ownership triggers lien rights; certain leased-land structures may complicate lien attachment. See Alabama Industrial Construction Overview.
Tradeoffs and Tensions
Owner Protections vs. Claimant Access
Alabama's statutory framework creates tension between property owners who want certainty of title (and freedom from unexpected encumbrances) and contractors/suppliers who need meaningful payment security. The 4-month filing window is relatively long compared to states like Georgia (90 days) or Florida (90 days), giving claimants more time but leaving property in a cloud longer during disputes.
Lien Waivers and Conditional Payments
Owners and general contractors routinely require unconditional lien waivers as a condition of payment, which — when signed prematurely — can extinguish valid lien rights before payment actually clears. Alabama courts have enforced signed unconditional waivers even where payment was disputed. This creates pressure on subcontractors and suppliers to accept conditional waivers (contingent on payment clearing) rather than unconditional ones, but contract leverage often determines which form prevails.
Relation-Back Priority and Construction Lenders
Lenders financing construction projects often record their deeds of trust before project commencement to establish first-priority security interests. The relation-back doctrine means mechanics liens can achieve priority over a construction loan deed of trust if work begins before the deed is recorded — a direct conflict that creates disputes between lenders and lien claimants about the sequence of events. See Alabama Construction Financing Concepts for discussion of how lenders manage this risk.
Subcontractor Exposure in Owner-Pays-GC Scenarios
When an owner has fully paid a general contractor who then fails to pay subcontractors, Alabama law still allows subcontractors to lien the owner's property. This "double payment" risk for owners creates incentives to use joint checks, conditional payment structures, and subordinate-tier tracking — practices that are addressed in Alabama Construction Subcontractor Relationships.
Common Misconceptions
Misconception 1: Filing a lien statement enforces the lien.
Filing only preserves the right; a separate civil enforcement action must be filed within 6 months of recording (or within 30 days of an owner's demand to sue), or the lien expires unenforceable.
Misconception 2: Only general contractors can place liens.
Alabama law explicitly extends lien rights to subcontractors, materialmen, and laborers at lower tiers of the contractual chain, subject to their specific notice obligations.
Misconception 3: A lien covers the full contract price regardless of what was actually unpaid.
Alabama liens are limited to the reasonable value of labor performed and materials furnished that remain unpaid — not the full contract amount if partial payments were made.
Misconception 4: Public projects are subject to mechanics lien law.
Public projects are categorically excluded. A subcontractor on a state highway project, for example, has no lien rights against the property — recourse runs through the payment bond.
Misconception 5: Paying the general contractor in full protects an owner from all sub-tier liens.
Until proper lien waivers are obtained from all sub-tier claimants, an owner who has paid the general contractor in full can still have valid sub-tier liens filed against the property.
Checklist or Steps
The following sequence represents the procedural stages documented in Alabama statute for a materialman or subcontractor asserting a lien claim. This is a factual description of statutory mechanics, not legal guidance.
- Confirm project is private: Verify the project is privately owned; public projects require a payment bond claim, not a lien filing.
- Document last date of furnishing: Record the last date labor was performed or materials were delivered to the project site. This date starts the notice and filing clocks.
- Serve notice on property owner (if no privity): Prepare and serve written notice of lien claim on the property owner within 30 days of the last date of furnishing (Ala. Code § 35-11-218).
- Prepare verified lien statement: Draft a statement including the claimant's name, the owner's name, a description of the property, the amount claimed, and a statement of work or materials furnished.
- File lien statement with Probate Court: File the verified statement with the Judge of Probate in the county where the property is located within 4 months of the last furnishing date.
- Obtain certified copy of filed lien: Secure the date-stamped certified copy as evidence of timely filing.
- Track enforcement deadline: Note that the lien enforcement action (civil suit) must be filed within 6 months of the lien statement filing date — or within 30 days of a written owner demand, whichever comes first.
- File enforcement action in Circuit Court: If unpaid, file a lien foreclosure action in the circuit court for the county where the property is located before the enforcement deadline.
- Evaluate lien waiver requests: Review any lien waiver forms submitted in connection with payment — distinguish conditional (payment contingent) from unconditional (absolute release) forms before executing.
For the permitting and inspection processes that run parallel to payment timelines on Alabama projects, see Permitting and Inspection Concepts for Alabama Construction. For the full regulatory framework governing Alabama construction, see Regulatory Context for Alabama Construction.
Reference Table or Matrix
Alabama Mechanics Lien — Key Deadlines and Requirements by Claimant Type
| Requirement | General Contractor | Subcontractor | Materialman | Laborer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preliminary notice to owner required? | No | Yes | Yes (if no privity) | Yes |
| Notice deadline | N/A | 30 days from last furnishing | 30 days from last furnishing | 30 days from last furnishing |
| Lien statement filing deadline | 4 months from last furnishing | 4 months from last furnishing | 4 months from last furnishing | 4 months from last furnishing |
| Filing location | County Probate Court | County Probate Court | County Probate Court | County Probate Court |
| Enforcement (foreclosure) deadline | 6 months from filing | 6 months from filing | 6 months from filing | 6 months from filing |
| Accelerated enforcement deadline | 30 days from owner demand | 30 days from owner demand | 30 days from owner demand | 30 days from owner demand |
| Governing statute | Ala. Code § 35-11-210 | Ala. Code § 35-11-218 | Ala. Code § 35-11-218 | Ala. Code § 35-11-218 |
| Public project alternative | Little Miller Act bond claim | Little Miller Act bond claim | Little Miller Act bond claim | Little Miller Act bond claim |
For a resource index covering the full scope of Alabama construction law and practice topics, visit the Alabama Commercial Authority index.
References
- Alabama Code Title 35, Chapter 11, Article 3 — Mechanics and Materialmen's Liens (Justia)
- Alabama Code Title 39, Chapter 1 — Public Works (Little Miller Act) (Justia)
- Federal Miller Act, 40 U.S.C. §§ 3131–3134 — Payment Bonds on Federal Construction (Cornell LII)
- Alabama Judicial System — Circuit and Probate Court Locator
- Alabama Legislature — Official Code of Alabama