If you've been told you need a surety bond — for a contractor license, a business permit, a court requirement, or a client contract — and you're not quite sure what that means, you're in the right place. Surety bonds are one of the most misunderstood financial products in business. Let's demystify them.

What is a surety bond and how does it work?
A surety bond is a three-party agreement that guarantees one party will fulfill an obligation to another:
- Principal — you, the business or person who needs the bond
- Obligee — the government agency, client, or court requiring the bond
- Surety — the insurance/bonding company that guarantees your obligation
If you fail to meet your obligation (finish a contract, follow license laws, pay a court judgment), the surety pays the obligee up to the bond amount. You then owe the surety that money back. It's essentially a credit product backed by an insurance company — not traditional insurance that protects you.
Key difference from insurance: Insurance protects you from losses. A surety bond protects others from your failure to perform. If a claim is paid, you must repay the surety. This is why surety companies check your credit and financial history.
Types of surety bonds in California
- License and permit bonds — required by state or local government to get or maintain a business license. Contractor bonds, auto dealer bonds, mortgage broker bonds, notary bonds.
- Commercial/business service bonds — protect clients when your employees enter their property. Janitorial bonds, home health aide bonds, locksmiths.
- Court bonds — required by courts for appeals, guardianship, probate, or fiduciary roles. Probate bonds, executor bonds, guardian bonds.
- Contract bonds — used in construction to guarantee project completion. Bid bonds, performance bonds, payment bonds.
- Fidelity bonds — protect employers from dishonest acts by employees.
Who needs a surety bond?
- California contractors (CSLB requires a $25,000 bond)
- Auto dealers (DMV requires a $50,000 bond)
- Mortgage brokers and loan originators
- Notaries public ($15,000 bond required)
- Janitorial and cleaning companies
- Home health aides and care workers
- Court-appointed guardians, executors, and trustees
- Construction companies bidding on public projects
What does a surety bond cost?
Surety bond premiums are typically 1–4% of the bond amount per year, depending on your credit score and the bond type. Examples:
- $25,000 contractor bond: $100–$350/year
- $50,000 auto dealer bond: $200–$700/year
- $10,000 janitorial bond: $100–$200/year
- $15,000 notary bond: $40–$80 for a 4-year term
How to get a surety bond fast
Most small surety bonds — under $100,000 — can be quoted, approved, and issued the same day. The process is simple:
- Tell us what bond you need and why (license, permit, court, contract)
- Complete a short application
- Credit check (soft pull for most small bonds)
- Receive your bond certificate — digitally or by mail
- File with the required agency (we assist with this)
Need a surety bond in California?
Same-day bonds for contractors, businesses, and courts. Fast, affordable, no hassle.

