North Carolina Construction Law

North Carolina Construction Defect Claims
No mandatory notice. No waiting. Sue directly.

Unlike Georgia, Florida, or Arizona, North Carolina has no mandatory right-to-repair notice period. If your contractor caused damage, you can act immediately — but you have a firm 6-year deadline from project completion to do it.

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None
Mandatory Pre-Suit Notice
6 yr
Statute of Repose
3 yr
Negligence SOL
$30K
Licensing Threshold
$29
Claim Review Starts

What NC law requires — and what advantage it gives you

North Carolina is one of a small number of states without a statutory right-to-repair process. That means homeowners face fewer procedural hurdles — but still face strict deadlines that can extinguish even valid claims.

Statute of Repose

6-Year Absolute Deadline

G.S. § 1-50(a)(5)

North Carolina's statute of repose is 6 years from substantial completion of the construction. This is a hard deadline — it extinguishes claims regardless of when you discovered the defect. Unlike the statute of limitations, the repose period cannot be tolled by fraud or hidden defects. For projects completed more than 4 years ago, time is a serious factor.

Statute of Limitations

3-Year Negligence / 6-Year Contract

G.S. § 1-52 (negligence) · G.S. § 1-50 (contract)

NC's statute of limitations for negligence-based construction defect claims is 3 years from discovery. For breach of a written contract, it is 6 years. The discovery rule applies to the limitations period — meaning the clock starts when you knew or reasonably should have known about the defect — but the repose period above provides the outer limit.

Contractor Licensing

License Required for $30,000+ Projects

N.C.G.S. § 87-1 et seq. — NC Contractors Licensing Act

North Carolina requires a state contractor license for any project valued at $30,000 or more. The NC Licensing Board for General Contractors administers licensing. Working without a required license is a Class 1 misdemeanor and can support fraud claims. License verification is public at nclbgc.org — document the contractor's status as evidence in your claim.

Property Disclosure

NC Residential Property Disclosure Act

N.C.G.S. § 47E

Sellers of residential property in NC must disclose known defects on the Residential Property Disclosure Statement. If you purchased a home with known defects that were not disclosed, this creates a separate claim against the seller — independent of any claim against the original contractor. This is particularly relevant in new construction purchases where the builder also sold the home.

Charlotte and Raleigh's growth is producing defect claims

North Carolina's construction market has been one of the fastest-growing in the nation, driven by population migration into Charlotte, the Research Triangle, and Asheville. That growth has outpaced the supply of experienced trade workers — and the predictable result is a rising incidence of construction defects.

The Charlotte metro's red clay soil creates foundation and drainage challenges that inexperienced contractors frequently mishandle. The Research Triangle's rapid residential development has generated significant warranty and craftsmanship claims from new construction. Asheville's mountain terrain and rainfall make water intrusion and grading failures especially common.

Because North Carolina has no mandatory pre-suit notice requirement, a homeowner with documentation in hand can move directly toward legal action — or, more commonly, use the credible threat of a well-documented claim to negotiate a repair or settlement without litigation. BuildRight's report gives you that documentation baseline and tells you exactly what your claim is worth pursuing.

Construction attorneys for NC claims

Your BuildRight report matches you with attorneys who handle construction defect cases in North Carolina. Our network includes multi-state firms with NC coverage and contingency-based practices for strong claims.

⚖️
Business Trial Group ✓ Verified
Morgan & Morgan — Business Trial Group
States: FL, GA, AL, SC, NC, TX, NY, CA  ·  Fee: Contingency — no fee unless you recover
Background: The nation's largest plaintiff's law firm operates in North Carolina through its Business Trial Group, handling significant residential and commercial construction defect litigation. For high-value NC claims — particularly in the Charlotte and Raleigh markets — the firm's contingency model means homeowners with strong cases face no upfront legal costs. Over $20 billion recovered for clients across all practice areas.

Additional NC construction attorneys — including Charlotte and Raleigh-based firms — are matched based on your claim type, county, and damage amount when you complete your BuildRight review.

NC construction defect questions

No. North Carolina does not have a statutory right-to-repair act requiring pre-suit notice to the contractor. You can file a lawsuit directly without a mandatory notice or cure period. However, consulting an attorney before filing is always advisable — many claims settle before litigation when a strong demand is made.
Possibly, but time is critical. North Carolina's statute of repose (G.S. § 1-50(a)(5)) gives an absolute 6-year limit from substantial completion — after which even valid claims are extinguished. With only 1 year remaining, you need to move quickly: document the defect thoroughly, get a BuildRight report, and consult an attorney promptly.
NC requires a state license for projects of $30,000 or more. Working without a required license is a criminal misdemeanor and can support additional claims for contractor fraud. Document the contractor's license status (check the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors at nclbgc.org). An unlicensed contractor generally cannot enforce payment claims and may face regulatory penalties — which often creates settlement leverage.
In North Carolina, the most common construction defect claims involve improper waterproofing and water intrusion (especially in Asheville and coastal areas), foundation issues related to red clay soil in the Piedmont region, HVAC installation failures, roofing defects, and new home construction quality issues in rapidly developing Charlotte and Raleigh suburbs. Contractor abandonment and payment disputes are also frequently reported.
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BuildRight Consulting provides AI-generated preliminary assessments for informational purposes only. Nothing on this website constitutes legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney before taking legal action. BuildRight Consulting LLC is not a law firm.