EasyPDF™ Lien Waiver

Form Features At-A-Glance

EasyPDF™ Construction Lien Waiver vs The Competition

Lien Waiver Form Features
EasyPDF™1
A.I.A. 2, 3
LevelSet
PDF Filler 3
Pricing
$19.99
$43.99
Free
$8+/M
Select Conditional/Unconditional
Select Progressive/Final Payment
Acceptable in All 12 States that Provide Lien Laws
Display State Image on Form
Provides Unlimited/Unrestricted Use
Eliminate Redundancy
Mitigate Typing/Typo Errors
Provide Custom Popup Menu
Auto Format Date Fields
Save, Reuse, Edit to Prepare Subsequent Lien Waivers
Provide Digital Signature Form Field
Designed to Complete/Submit Form in Record Time
Use with Adobe Reader Email File Attachment Option
Created specifically for the Free Adobe Reader
Requires MS Word Program App
Requires a Live Internet Connection to Use
Legend: A.I.A. = American Institute of Architects, ✔ = Yes, ❌ = No/Not Applicable

1EasyPDF™ waiver of lien leased on a per month basis paid in-full annually. Digital form includes a popup calendar, allows a completed lien waiver to be saved, open, and edited for preparing subsequent lien waivers for the duration of an active/ongoing construction project reducing typing/typo errors to expedite completion of the form in record time. Live internet connection required to download form. 2Pay $43.99 for onetime use or an annual fee of $2,199/year for unlimited access to all 242 AIA forms. Form initially provided in MS Word format for onetime use and contains a watermark. Once form has been completed using MS Word, end user is required to return the completed form to A.I.A. in an email file attachment to have the watermark removed from the form to be converted to a static/fixed read-only PDF form ready to be submitted to the owner, title company, or lending institution for review/approval—an altogether unnecessary additional task considered a total waste of time required by A.I.A., 3PDF Filler pricing based on an annual subscription price of $8 and up per month. Neither A.I.A. nor PDF Filler appear to provide a construction lien waiver for any of the 12 States that presently provide Lien Laws specifying exact language to be used to comply with the law of the State.