how much is a surety bond
A surety bond usually costs a small percentage of the total bond amount, often in the range of about 0.5%–10% (with many quotes clustering around 1%–4% for strong-credit applicants).
Quick Scoop
- Most common range: about 1%–10% of the required bond amount, depending on your risk profile and the type of bond.
- Example: For a $10,000 bond, many people pay somewhere between $100 and $1,000 per year.
- Good credit, clean history, and a low‑risk bond type tend to land you on the lower end (often 0.5%–4%).
- New businesses, poor credit, or high‑risk industries may see rates closer to 5%–10% (and in some cases even a bit higher).
What actually is “how much”?
Think of the “how much” in two steps:
- The bond amount (for example, $10,000, $50,000, or $100,000) is the coverage the bond provides, not what you pay out of pocket.
- The premium is what you pay annually, which is the percentage of that bond amount (say 1%–10%).
So if you are told you need a $50,000 bond and your rate comes back at 2%, your cost is about $1,000 per year ; at 8%, it would be $4,000 per year.
Sample price ranges (recent guides)
Here’s a simple illustration based on recent surety-bond cost guides and calculators for 2024–2025:
- $5,000 bond → roughly $25–$500 per year, depending on credit tier.
- $10,000 bond → roughly $50–$1,000 per year.
- $25,000 bond → roughly $125–$2,500 per year.
- $50,000 bond → roughly $250–$5,000 per year.
- $100,000 bond → roughly $500–$10,000 per year.
You only ever pay the full bond amount if there is a valid claim against the bond and you do not repay the surety.
What affects how much you pay?
- Credit score and financial history : Better credit usually means lower percentages.
- Type of bond : License/permit bonds can be cheaper than high‑risk court or construction bonds.
- Bond amount : Larger bonds mean more total dollars, though large projects sometimes get slightly better percentage rates.
- Business experience and financial strength : Established, profitable businesses often qualify for lower rates.
Tiny story example
Imagine a new contractor in 2026 who lands their first $100,000 public job and needs a surety bond. With average credit, they might be quoted around 3% of the bond amount, so their annual bond cost would be about $3,000; a more seasoned contractor with excellent credit might only pay 1%–2%, or $1,000–$2,000, for the same bond requirement.
Simple HTML table of example costs
Here is an SEO‑friendly HTML table with example annual premium ranges based on recent online bond calculators and guides:
html
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Bond amount (required)</th>
<th>Typical premium range (good credit)</th>
<th>Typical premium range (average credit)</th>
<th>Typical premium range (poor credit)</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>$5,000</td>
<td>$25–$150</td>
<td>$150–$250</td>
<td>$250–$500</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>$10,000</td>
<td>$50–$300</td>
<td>$300–$500</td>
<td>$500–$1,000</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>$25,000</td>
<td>$125–$750</td>
<td>$750–$1,250</td>
<td>$1,250–$2,500</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>$50,000</td>
<td>$250–$1,500</td>
<td>$1,500–$2,500</td>
<td>$2,500–$5,000</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>$100,000</td>
<td>$500–$3,000</td>
<td>$3,000–$5,000</td>
<td>$5,000–$10,000</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
(Ranges compiled from multiple recent surety‑bond cost guides and calculators; actual quotes vary by provider, location, and underwriting.)
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.