Jayson Elliott, mechanics lien attorney at Bay Legal PC
Jayson Elliott, Esq.Bay Legal PC · Palo Alto, CA
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Written by Jayson Elliott · Attorney, Bay Legal PC · CA Bar No. 332479 · Last reviewed April 2026

For Contractors & Subcontractors

How to File a Mechanics Lien in California

A mechanics lien is a powerful legal claim against a property that can force payment even when a contractor, GC, or property owner refuses to pay. Here is the complete step-by-step process under California Civil Code §8000 et seq.

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Legal Information — Not Legal Advice: This page provides general information about California mechanics lien law. It is not legal advice for your specific situation. Consult a licensed attorney before making any legal decisions.
⚠ Strict Deadlines Apply: California mechanics lien law sets hard filing deadlines. Missing a deadline permanently extinguishes your lien rights. Consult an attorney promptly.

Step 1: Confirm You Served a Preliminary Notice

Subcontractors and suppliers must have served a 20-day preliminary notice on the property owner, general contractor, and construction lender within 20 days of first furnishing labor or materials. If you did not, your lien rights are limited to the 20 days before notice was actually served.

Direct contractors (with a contract directly with the property owner) are exempt from the preliminary notice requirement.

Step 2: Determine Your Filing Deadline

The deadline depends on whether a Notice of Completion or Notice of Cessation was recorded:

  • No Notice of Completion recorded: You have 90 days from the date of actual completion of the project (or your last day of work, for subcontractors).
  • Notice of Completion recorded: Direct contractors have 60 days from recording. Subcontractors and suppliers have only 30 days from recording.
  • Notice of Cessation recorded: Same deadlines as Notice of Completion apply.
⚠ Never miss this deadline. There are no extensions and no exceptions. A late-filed mechanics lien is void and unenforceable. If you are approaching your deadline, contact an attorney immediately.

Step 3: Prepare the Mechanics Lien Form

California law specifies required contents for a valid mechanics lien under Civil Code §8416. The lien must include:

  • A statement of your demand (the unpaid amount) after deducting credits and offsets
  • The name of the owner or reputed owner of the property
  • A general description of the work furnished or materials supplied
  • A description of the site sufficient to identify it (legal description or street address)
  • The name of the person by whom the claimant was employed or to whom materials were furnished
  • A verification (sworn statement) signed under penalty of perjury

California has a mandatory statutory form for mechanics liens that must be used. An attorney can prepare this accurately; errors in the lien form can render it defective and unenforceable.

Step 4: Record the Lien with the County Recorder

The lien must be recorded with the county recorder's office in the county where the property is located — not just mailed. Recording typically costs $15–$25 per page. You will receive a recorded copy with a document number and recording date. Keep this original.

Step 5: Serve the Property Owner

Within 20 days after recording the lien, you must serve a copy on the property owner by (a) personal delivery, (b) first-class certified mail, or (c) first-class registered mail. Proof of service must be noted on the lien itself or in a separate document.

Failure to serve the owner within 20 days of recording does not void the lien, but it does give the owner additional grounds to challenge it.

Step 6: Pursue Foreclosure or Negotiate Settlement

Filing the lien is not the end — it is the beginning. You now have 90 days from the date of recording to either:

  • File a lawsuit to foreclose the lien in superior court, or
  • Enter into a written agreement with the owner to extend the foreclosure period

If you take neither action within 90 days, the lien expires automatically. The lien foreclosure process is a civil lawsuit that, if successful, results in a court order that can force the sale of the property to satisfy your unpaid debt.

What Comes Next

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the deadline to file a mechanics lien in California?

Without a Notice of Completion, you have 90 days from the last day you performed work or supplied materials. If a Notice of Completion is recorded, subcontractors and suppliers have only 30 days from recording and direct contractors have 60 days.

What is the preliminary notice requirement for subcontractors?

Subcontractors must serve a 20-day preliminary notice on the owner, general contractor, and construction lender within 20 days of first furnishing labor or materials under Civil Code §8200. Failure to serve limits lien rights to work performed in the 20 days before the notice was actually served.

What should I do if a contractor is not paying me?

Immediately verify your preliminary notice was served, send a formal demand letter, file a mechanics lien before the deadline, and consider a stop payment notice if the project has active construction financing. Contact an attorney before the lien deadline passes.

Bay Legal PC — Mechanics Lien Attorneys

Bay Legal PC prepares and records mechanics liens for California contractors and subcontractors. Attorney Jayson Elliott (CA Bar No. 332479) handles the full process from preliminary notice through foreclosure.

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Jayson Elliott consulting with clients about a mechanics lien dispute

Jayson Elliott, Bay Legal PC · Palo Alto, California

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