MN mechanic's lien discharge bonds.
Clear the title. Keep moving.

A mechanic's lien freezes everything it touches — closings, refinances, draws. A discharge deposit under Minn. Stat. §514.10 swaps the surety's guarantee for the property, so the lien comes off the title. Flat 3%, 48-hour underwriter response.

Releases the property from the lien without paying the claim — you keep every defense you have
Court sets the amount to cover the lien, interest, costs, and attorney fees
Same rate for everyone — 3% flat, posted, no leverage games when you're in a hurry
48 hrsunderwriter responseA-ratedA.M. Best carriers$50Maggregate capacity
Trusted by industry leaders
NYCEDC
BDG
Capital
McKinney
Terra
JLL
Triple Five
Georgetown
NYCEDC
BDG
Capital
McKinney
Terra
JLL
Triple Five
Georgetown
How it works

From frozen title to discharged lien.

Every day the lien sits on the title costs you leverage, interest, or a closing date. Here's the entire process:

TODAY · 5 MINUTES

Apply + send the lien documents

The application plus a copy of the lien and any court documents — that's the file. Send documents to underwriting right after you submit; everything is reviewed together.

WITHIN 48 HOURS

A human underwrites it

A licensed underwriter reviews the lien, the dispute, and your file. Larger or heavily contested liens can require financials — you'll get one checklist, once.

ON APPROVAL

File & discharge

The executed bond is deposited with the court, the court orders the premises released from the lien, and your closing, refinance, or draw schedule starts moving again.

The whole pricing page.

Bond amount × 3% = your premium, one-time, $275 minimum. A $100,000 lien typically means roughly a $110,000 bond — $3,300.

$50,000 lien → $55K bond
$1,650
$100,000 lien → $110K bond
$3,300
$500,000 lien → $550K bond
$16,500
About this bond

What it is and who needs it.

What a discharge bond actually does

When a contractor, sub, or supplier files a mechanic's lien, the property itself becomes their security. Until it's resolved, title companies won't close, lenders won't fund, and draws stop. Minnesota's lien law lets you swap the property out and a court deposit in — sized by the court to cover the lien plus interest, costs, and attorney fees.

The premises are then released from the lien. The dispute itself continues — bonding off a lien is not paying it and not admitting it's valid. The claimant keeps the same right against the deposit that they had against the property; if they ultimately prove the claim, the deposit pays; if they don't, it releases.

That makes this the rare bond bought for leverage: you stop negotiating with your closing date held hostage and start negotiating on the merits of the claim.

MN Lien LawMinnesota Statutes §514.10 lets you release the premises from a mechanic's lien by depositing with the court an amount the court fixes — covering the lien claimed, interest, probable disbursements, and attorney fees. The claimant retains the same right of lien against the deposit as against the property. Your attorney handles the application and filing; we handle the bond.

You need this bond if you're

A property owner with a lien blocking a sale, refinance, or construction loan draw
A general contractor whose sub's lien is jamming the owner relationship — many GC contracts require you to bond liens off
A developer who needs clean title on a schedule the dispute won't respect
Disputing the lien itself — bonding it off preserves every defense while freeing the property

Five minutes, plus your lien documents.

Submit the application, then send the lien and any court documents to underwriting — a licensed underwriter reviews the full file and responds within 48 hours.

Start the application →
FAQs

Common questions.

If yours isn't here, the bond team can usually answer within the hour.

Does bonding off the lien pay the contractor? +
No. The deposit substitutes for the property as security — nothing is paid to the lienor when the bond is filed. The underlying dispute continues exactly as before, except your title is clean. The claimant keeps the same right against the deposit that they had against the property; if they eventually prove the claim in court, the bond responds; if not, it doesn't.
How is the bond amount set? +
By the court, under Minn. Stat. §514.10 — the order fixes an amount covering the lien claimed plus interest, probable disbursements, and attorney fees, which in practice runs a bit above the lien itself. Your attorney or the court order will state the exact figure; use that number in the application.
How much does it cost? +
A flat 3% of the bond amount, one time, $275 minimum. A $110,000 bond runs $3,300. The rate is posted and identical for everyone — no surge pricing because you have a closing on Friday.
How fast can this happen? +
Submit the application and the lien/court documents today, and a licensed underwriter responds within 48 hours. Straightforward liens move fastest; large or heavily contested liens can take longer if financials are needed. The court application and deposit are then your attorney's errand.
Will I need collateral or financials? +
It depends on the size of the lien and the shape of the dispute. Smaller, clearly documented liens are often approved from the application alone; larger or messier ones can require financial statements. Either way you'll get one checklist, once — and a soft credit check that never affects your score.
Does bonding off the lien mean admitting it's valid? +
No. Depositing to release the property is expressly not an admission — you keep every defense, offset, and counterclaim you had. Most owners and GCs bond liens off precisely so they can fight them properly.
Related bonds

Other New York bonds.

Get the lien off the title this week.

Five-minute application, flat 3%, underwriter response within 48 hours. Your attorney files; the project moves.

Your premium @ 3%$3,300
Apply now →