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Hiring the Right Contractor in HRM: The In-and-Outs (and a Handy Checklist)

Choosing a contractor can feel like picking a babysitter for your house. You’re handing over keys, trust, and a chunk of your savings—so let’s make sure you hire the right crew for your HRM home.

As a Nova Scotian–owned company with 17+ years in Halifax, Dartmouth, Bedford, Sackville (and the South Shore by request), here’s the straight-talk guide we’d give our own neighbours.

1) Start with fit, not the lowest quote

Right fit > right now. A contractor who listens, explains trade-offs, and brings solutions will save you time, money, and headaches. Ask yourself after the first visit:

  • Did they ask good questions about how you live?

  • Did they explain options (good/better/best) with pros/cons?

  • Did they talk budget early and set realistic ranges?

Local tip: In HRM’s older homes, expect surprises behind walls. A good contractor will flag this and suggest a 10–15% contingency—before you sign.

2) Verify the essentials (five quick checks)

  • Insurance: Ask for general liability and WCB proof.

  • Licensing & permits: Who pulls HRM permits (building, electrical, plumbing)? The contractor should handle them and schedule inspections.

  • References: Get two recent (last 12 months) and one older (3+ years) to check long-term satisfaction.

  • Portfolio: Look for projects like yours—size, style, scope.

  • Warranty: Clarify workmanship coverage and process for callbacks.

3) Compare apples to apples (scope, not vibe)

Three quotes can vary wildly if the scope isn’t identical. Ask each bidder to include:

  • Demo (what’s removed and who disposes of debris)

  • Framing, rough-ins, insulation, drywall

  • Waterproofing details for wet areas (membranes, not “we’ll caulk it”)

  • Finishes (exact SKUs/allowances for tile, flooring, cabinets, fixtures)

  • Glass & custom lead times

  • Paint, hardware, trim

  • Cleanup & protection (floor coverings, dust control, HEPA, daily tidy)

  • Final walkthrough & punch list

If one price is dramatically lower, something’s missing—or someone’s guessing.

4) The contract must cover the “boring but vital” bits

Your agreement should clearly state:

  • Scope of work and exclusions

  • Start window and estimated duration (plus what affects this)

  • Payment schedule tied to milestones (not just dates)

  • Change-order process (in writing, priced before work)

  • Site rules (hours, pets, smoking, neighbour relations)

  • Warranty terms and who to contact

  • Who buys what (you vs. contractor) and how allowances work

Pro tip: Ask for a one-page project calendar (demo → rough-ins → inspections → finishes). It won’t be perfect, but it anchors expectations.

5) Communication: set the cadence on Day 1

Renovations go best when everyone knows what’s happening.

  • One point of contact

  • Update rhythm

  • Decisions list with due dates

  • Issues escalation path (how to flag and resolve quickly)

6) HRM-specific smarts (coastal climate & codes)

  • Moisture management: Vent fans ducted outdoors, proper waterproofing membranes, and heated floors to keep surfaces dry in winter.

  • Exteriors & additions: Fasteners and materials rated for Atlantic weather (

  • Suites & basements: Secondary units have specific egress, fire separation, and ventilation rules—your contractor should know them cold.

  • Energy incentives: Ask about Efficiency Nova Scotia rebates (heat pumps, insulation upgrades) that can offset costs.

7) Red flags to walk away from (no hard feelings)

  • “We don’t do permits.”

  • “We’ll figure the finishes later” (with no allowances).

  • 50%+ upfront before mobilization.

  • Only cash, no paper trail.

  • Vague scope and timelines, no references you can call.

8) Budget truth: how to keep it on track

  • Pick one wow feature (tile or glass or vanity) and keep the rest timeless.

  • Lock selections before ordering—changes mid-build cost time and money.

  • Bundle improvements smartly: moving plumbing? Add blocking for future grab bars now.

9) The Hiring-Right Checklist (print this)

  •  Liability & WCB verified

  •  HRM permit plan explained

  •  3 references (2 recent, 1 older)

  •  Detailed written scope & exclusions

  •  Milestone-based payment schedule

  •  Change-order process in writing

  •  Weekly update cadence agreed

  •  Site protection & cleanup plan

  •  Warranty terms provided

  •  10–15% contingency in budget

Born, raised, and building here—since day one

We’re Nova Scotian-owned, community-minded, and focused on respectful, on-budget renovations. If you’re comparing contractors, we’re happy to walk your home, answer questions, and provide a clear, line-by-line quote—no pressure.

Book now for a free in-home consult and see if we’re the right fit for your project.

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