Key Takeaways
- General contractors with a direct owner contract can skip the pre-lien notice and file a lien directly.
- Subcontractors, suppliers, and sub-subcontractors must send notices to preserve lien rights.
- Commercial and residential projects have different deadlines — the 15th of the 2nd or 3rd month after work.
- Missing your pre-lien notice deadline means losing your right to file a lien for that month's work — permanently.
Texas has some of the strictest construction lien laws in the country. Whether you need to send a pre-lien notice before filing a mechanic’s lien depends entirely on where you sit in the project hierarchy. Get it wrong, and you could lose your legal right to collect payment — even if you did excellent work and have invoices to prove it.
Construction employment in Texas topped 860,900 workers in August 2024, making it one of the most active construction markets in the nation. With that much work happening across the state, payment disputes are inevitable. Understanding pre-lien notice requirements can mean the difference between getting paid and walking away empty-handed.
What Is a Pre-Lien Notice in Texas?
A pre-lien notice in Texas is a written document that alerts the property owner and general contractor that a subcontractor, supplier, or other party has not been paid for work performed on a project. The notice preserves your right to file a mechanic’s lien if payment still doesn’t come through.
You might hear this document called by different names: preliminary notice, Notice of Intent to Lien, Monthly Notice, Second Month Notice, Third Month Notice, or Fund-Trapping Notice. All these terms describe essentially the same legal requirement under Texas Property Code Chapter 53.
Important:
Sending a pre-lien notice does not mean you have to file a mechanic's lien. In many cases, the notice alone prompts payment — the property owner sees you're serious about protecting your rights and resolves the issue before it escalates.
Who Needs to Send a Pre-Lien Notice — And Who Doesn't?
Your position in the project determines whether you must send a pre-lien notice. Texas lien law is very specific here, and many contractors make costly mistakes by assuming they’re exempt.
General Contractors (Original Contractors)
If you have a direct contract with the property owner, you are considered an original contractor under Texas law. You do not need to send a pre-lien notice before filing a mechanic’s lien. You can go straight to filing a lien affidavit if payment doesn’t come through.
Subcontractors (First Tier)
Subcontractors who contract directly with the general contractor must send a pre-lien notice to both the property owner and the general contractor before filing a lien. The property owner may not even know you worked on the project — the notice puts them on legal notice that payment is owed.
Sub-Subcontractors (Second Tier and Below)
If you were hired by a subcontractor rather than the general contractor, you have the same notice requirements but shorter deadlines. You must send notice to the general contractor, the property owner, and technically to all subcontractors above you in the chain.
Material Suppliers and Equipment Rental Companies
Anyone who supplied materials, equipment, or specially fabricated items for a project without a direct contract with the property owner must also send a pre-lien notice. This includes lumber yards, equipment rental companies, and suppliers of custom-manufactured materials.
Pre-Lien Notice Deadlines by Contractor Role
Deadlines depend on two factors: your role in the project and whether the project is commercial or residential. Miss these deadlines by even one day and you could lose your right to file a lien.
| Contractor Role | Commercial Projects | Residential Projects |
|---|---|---|
| General Contractor | No notice required | No notice required |
| Subcontractor (1st Tier) | 15th of 3rd month after work | 15th of 2nd month after work |
| Sub-Subcontractor (2nd Tier) | 15th of 3rd month after work | 15th of 2nd month after work |
| Material Supplier | 15th of 3rd month after delivery | 15th of 2nd month after delivery |
What Happens If You Don't Send a Pre-Lien Notice?
The consequences in Texas are severe and immediate. If you’re required to send a pre-lien notice and you miss the deadline, you lose your right to file a mechanic’s lien for that month’s work. Period. There is no late filing option or penalty you can pay to restore those rights.
What you lose when you skip the notice
- You cannot file a valid mechanic's lien — even if every other step is done perfectly.
- You lose your fund-trapping rights. Money that could have been protected may already be gone.
- You become an unsecured creditor, making collection slower and more expensive.
- Each month stands alone. If you worked three months and only sent one notice, you can only lien for that one month.
How to Properly Send Your Pre-Lien Notice
How you deliver your pre-lien notice matters just as much as what it contains. Texas law requires notices be sent by registered, certified, or otherwise traceable mail that provides proof of delivery. Regular first-class mail won’t protect your lien rights if delivery is ever challenged.
- USPS Certified Mail with Return Receipt Requested
- USPS Registered Mail
- Private delivery services with tracking (FedEx, UPS) that provide proof of delivery
Keep all proof of mailing — certified mail receipts, return receipt cards, and tracking confirmations. Store them with your project files. If you ever need to file a mechanic’s lien, you’ll need to show you met all deadlines.