cyberknight
As long as I breathe, I attack.
- Location
- Land of confusion
I am also assuming he is working off a ladder? Are you happy to accept this risk or would you feel safer and happier with the insurance risk if he used scaffolding?
I personally don't trust any of these trade bodies that you, the trader pay to belong to. I would never join any, prefered to be refered by previous customers.
remove top 3 rows then work up relathe and underfelt moving existing tiles up as he goes as i understand itIs he totally removing all the roof tiles, lifting the lats, replacing all the underfelt with glass reinforced felt, putting the lats back on, then re-tiling, then doing soffits & guttering, or is he just lifting the bottom 3 or so rows?
For business to business contracts the client does retain a lot of the liability which is why cowboys don't work for larger clients as they have to jump through hoops to prove competence. A small domestic job like this theoretically could leave the OP liable but it's unlikely in reality.Surely that's not for the OP to worry about? I'd expect a roofer to carry their own insurance!
we are getting another quote from the builder who did the house behind us 3 years ago for £2500 just for the roofIt really depends on the size of the job. For larger jobs, it is typical that the intial deposit covers the cost of a large portion of the materials. But for smaller projects such as yours, the material costs don't relate to the amount of the deposit, which is typically a percentage of the entire job. Anywhere from 10% and 33% is appropriate. And on small jobs that run lesss than $1,000 there typically isn't a deposit at all. I would add that for even some small jobs I will get more than one estimate. This way you know what different contractors are asking for. I know it's tempting to just get one estimate but then you really don't know if you are paying an appropriate price for your project. It's like houses. I laugh when I hear people say they only spoke to one broker before listing their home. And even funnier, the broker they go with is a family friend who may have just gotten into the business a short while ago.![]()
If they are worth their salt at all they will be on a discount with the supplier and put on their mark up and still be cheaper than the client going to a merchant.It's not uncommon.
Conversely, you could ask what he newds and order it yourself. Not only does it give you some security, but it removes the opportunity for him to add a 10% mark up.