保修期避坑 — Warranty Period Pitfalls
The warranty period is your primary protection against construction defects and material failures after project completion. However, contractors routinely limit warranty scope, create barriers to claims, and exploit homeowners' lack of knowledge about their legal rights. This guide explains warranty requirements under Chinese law, common exclusion tactics, and how to ensure your warranty provides meaningful protection.
Table of Contents
- 1. Legal Warranty Requirements
- 2. What Contractors Commonly Exclude
- 3. How Warranty Claims Get Denied
- 4. Documentation Needed for Warranty Claims
- 5. Warranty Claim Process
- 6. Warranty Period Checklist
- 7. Contractor Change or Closure
- 8. Extended Warranty Options
1. Legal Warranty Requirements
1.1 Minimum Warranty Periods Under Chinese Law
Under the 《住宅室内装饰装修管理办法》(Measures for the Administration of Residential Interior Decoration) and 《建设工程质量管理条例》(Construction Project Quality Management Regulations), the following minimum warranty periods apply:
| Work Category | Minimum Warranty Period | Start Date | Legal Basis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Waterproofing (bathroom, kitchen, balcony) | 5 years | Project completion acceptance date | Construction Project Quality Management Regulations, Article 40 |
| Plumbing and drainage | 2 years | Project completion acceptance date | Same as above |
| Electrical wiring | 2 years | Project completion acceptance date | Same as above |
| Wall and ceiling plastering | 2 years | Project completion acceptance date | Same as above |
| Flooring | 2 years | Project completion acceptance date | Industry standard |
| Custom cabinets and built-ins | 2 years | Project completion acceptance date | Industry standard |
| Paint and coatings | 2 years | Project completion acceptance date | Industry standard |
| Tile work | 2 years | Project completion acceptance date | Industry standard |
| HVAC installation | 2 years (equipment per manufacturer) | Project completion acceptance date | Industry standard |
Important notes:
- These are minimum periods. Contracts may specify longer warranty periods but cannot specify shorter ones.
- The warranty period starts from the project completion acceptance date (竣工验收合格之日), not the contract signing date or the move-in date.
- If a contract specifies a warranty period shorter than the legal minimum, the legal minimum applies regardless of the contract language.
1.2 Warranty Scope by Law
The warranty covers defects in workmanship and materials supplied by the contractor that occur under normal use conditions. Specifically:
| Covered | Not Covered |
|---|---|
| Cracking or peeling paint due to improper application | Damage caused by homeowner modification or renovation |
| Water leaks from improperly installed waterproof coating | Damage from natural disasters (earthquake, flood) |
| Electrical failures from improper wiring | Normal wear and tear (faded paint, worn surfaces) |
| Tile detachment from inadequate adhesive | Damage from homeowner negligence (impact, flooding) |
| Pipe leaks from defective installation or materials | Problems with homeowner-supplied materials |
| Floor deformation from improper installation | Changes in appearance due to normal aging |
1.3 Warranty vs. Guarantee
| Term | Meaning | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Warranty (保修) | Contractor's obligation to repair defects at no cost | Legal minimum periods listed above |
| Maintenance (维护) | Contractor's offer to perform upkeep (not legally required) | As agreed; usually paid service |
| Guarantee (保证) | Contractor's promise of overall quality; broader than warranty | Varies by contract |
2. What Contractors Commonly Exclude
2.1 Unlawful Exclusions
The following exclusions are commonly found in contractor warranty clauses but may be unenforceable because they conflict with legal requirements:
| Unlawful Exclusion | Why It's Problematic | Your Rights |
|---|---|---|
| "Warranty void if homeowner is not present during construction" | Homeowner presence is not a legal warranty requirement | Warranty remains valid regardless of homeowner presence |
| "Cosmetic defects not covered" | Peeling paint, cracking plaster, and uneven tile are both cosmetic and functional defects | Quality defects must be covered regardless of classification |
| "Only material cost covered, not labor" | Law requires complete repair at no cost to homeowner | Both materials and labor must be covered |
| "Warranty limited to original contract price" | Repair cost may exceed original work cost if damage is extensive | Contractor is liable for full repair cost |
| "Third-party materials not covered" | Only materials supplied by homeowner are excluded; contractor-supplied materials are covered | Verify which materials were contractor-supplied |
| "Warranty requires annual inspection by contractor" | No legal basis for mandatory inspection requirement | Warranty is automatic; no action required to maintain it |
2.2 Gray Area Exclusions
These exclusions may be enforceable depending on the specific circumstances and contract language:
| Exclusion | Analysis |
|---|---|
| "Damage from unauthorized modifications" | Generally enforceable if homeowner altered the work without contractor consent |
| "Problems caused by building settlement" | May be enforceable if settlement is due to building structure, not contractor work |
| "Wear and tear after X years" | Enforceable after the warranty period expires; not during it |
| "Homeowner-supplied material defects" | Enforceable — contractor cannot warranty materials they did not supply |
| "Improper maintenance by homeowner" | May be enforceable if homeowner clearly violated maintenance instructions |
2.3 Specific Category Pitfalls
Waterproofing:
- Contractors may claim leaks are due to "building movement" rather than installation defect
- Counter: Request independent assessment; building movement causing leak within 5 years suggests inadequate waterproofing installation
Electrical:
- Contractors may deny claims for "overload" without evidence
- Counter: Document that circuit was used within designed capacity
Paint and Wall Finishes:
- Contractors may claim cracking is due to "building settlement" or "temperature changes"
- Counter: Normal temperature variation is a foreseeable condition that proper installation should accommodate
Flooring:
- Contractors may blame humidity or homeowner cleaning methods
- Counter: If flooring was installed per manufacturer specifications and used normally, defects are covered
3. How Warranty Claims Get Denied
3.1 Common Denial Tactics
| Tactic | How It Works | Counter-Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Delay | Contractor acknowledges claim but never schedules repair; hopes homeowner gives up | Set a deadline in writing; escalate to consumer protection agency if missed |
| Dispute cause | Contractor claims damage is due to homeowner action, not workmanship | Document with photos; request independent third-party assessment |
| Claim warranty expired | Contractor uses incorrect start date (e.g., contract date instead of completion date) | Reference legal start date; provide completion acceptance documentation |
| Blame other contractors | "That's the plumber's problem, not ours" | General contractor is responsible for coordinating all subcontractors |
| Offer paid repair | "We can fix it, but warranty doesn't cover this" | Request written explanation of why it's not covered; compare with legal requirements |
| Require original contract | "We need the original contract to process the claim" | Provide copy; original should have been kept by both parties |
| Company restructuring | "That was under the old company name / old manager" | Legal entity remains responsible; corporate name change does not void warranty |
3.2 Denial Response Flowchart
Warranty claim submitted to contractor
│
├── Accepted → Schedule repair within reasonable time (7-14 days)
│ ├── Repair completed satisfactorily → Close claim
│ └── Repair unsatisfactory → Request re-repair; escalate if needed
│
├── Delayed (no response within 7 days) → Send written notice with deadline
│ ├── Contractor responds → Proceed with scheduling
│ └── No response → File complaint with consumer association (12315)
│
└── Denied → Request written denial with specific reason
├── Reason is valid (e.g., homeowner damage) → Consider self-repair
├── Reason is questionable → Request third-party assessment
└── Reason is clearly invalid → File complaint; consider legal action4. Documentation Needed for Warranty Claims
4.1 Essential Documents to Retain
Maintain a dedicated warranty file containing the following documents:
| Document | Purpose | Where to Get It |
|---|---|---|
| Renovation contract (original + all amendments) | Proof of agreement terms, scope, and warranty clauses | Provided at signing |
| Completion acceptance report (竣工验收单) | Establishes warranty start date | Signed at project completion |
| Material receipts and warranties | Proof of material quality and manufacturer warranty | Contractor should provide |
| Before/after/during photos | Evidence of original condition and work performed | Homeowner documentation |
| Payment records | Proof of completed payment and contract fulfillment | Homeowner financial records |
| Change request forms | Documents any modifications to original scope | Signed during construction |
| Supervisor inspection reports (if hired) | Independent quality verification at each phase | Supervisor provides |
| Contractor business license copy | Identifies legal entity for warranty claims | Request from contractor |
| Contractor contact information | Current address, phone, legal representative | Request at project completion |
4.2 Photo Evidence Standards
When documenting defects for warranty claims:
- Wide shot — Show the defect in context of the room
- Close-up — Show the specific defect in detail
- Comparison shot — If possible, show the same area before the defect appeared
- Date reference — Include a dated newspaper or phone screen showing the date
- Measurement reference — Include a ruler or tape measure for scale
- Video walkthrough — For complex issues, record a continuous video showing the defect and surrounding area
4.3 Defect Documentation Template
Use this template when reporting a warranty defect:
Warranty Claim Report
Date: [YYYY-MM-DD]
Contractor: [Company name]
Contract Number: [Contract reference]
Completion Date: [Warranty start date]
Warranty Category: [Waterproofing / Plumbing / Electrical / etc.]
Defect Location: [Specific room and area]
Defect Description: [Detailed description of the problem]
First Observed: [Date]
Worsening: [Yes/No — describe progression]
Photos Attached: [List photo file names]
Impact: [How the defect affects use of the space]
Requested Action: [Repair / Replace / Assess]
Contact Information:
Name: [Homeowner name]
Phone: [Phone number]
Email: [Email address]
Preferred Contact Time: [Time window]5. Warranty Claim Process
5.1 Step-by-Step Claim Procedure
Step 1: IDENTIFY AND DOCUMENT
├── Discover defect during normal use
├── Take comprehensive photos and video
├── Note the date of discovery
└── Check warranty status (is it within the warranty period?)
Step 2: NOTIFY CONTRACTOR
├── Contact contractor by phone (record call if possible)
├── Send written notice via WeChat and/or email
├── Include: defect description, photos, location, warranty reference
└── Request repair appointment within 7-14 days
Step 3: CONTRACTOR RESPONSE
├── Accepted and scheduled → Attend repair appointment
├── Delayed → Send written reminder with deadline
├── Disputed → Request written explanation; prepare evidence
└── Denied → Review denial reason against legal requirements
Step 4: REPAIR EXECUTION
├── Contractor performs repair
├── Homeowner supervises the repair work
├── Verify repair quality upon completion
└── Sign repair completion confirmation
Step 5: REPAIR WARRANTY
├── Repaired work should have its own warranty period
├── Confirm new warranty start date for repaired area
└── Document the repair with photos5.2 Escalation Procedures
If the contractor does not cooperate with a legitimate warranty claim:
| Escalation Level | Action | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Level 1 | Written notice with 7-day deadline | Contractor ignores initial verbal request |
| Level 2 | Consumer complaint (12315 hotline or app) | Contractor does not respond to written notice |
| Level 3 | Industry association complaint (建筑装饰协会) | Consumer complaint does not resolve the issue |
| Level 4 | Mediation through community committee (居委会) | Neighbor dispute or shared building issue |
| Level 5 | Small claims court | All other methods exhausted; claim amount justifies legal cost |
5.3 Repair Warranty After Warranty Work
Important: When a contractor performs warranty repair, the repaired work should carry a new warranty period:
| Original Category | Repair Warranty Period |
|---|---|
| Waterproofing | New 5-year warranty on repaired area |
| Other categories | New 2-year warranty on repaired area |
Request written confirmation of the new warranty period after any warranty repair.
6. Warranty Period Checklist
At Project Completion
- [ ] Obtain signed completion acceptance report with date
- [ ] Receive warranty certificate or warranty clause in contract
- [ ] Verify warranty periods meet or exceed legal minimums
- [ ] Obtain contractor's current contact information (address, phone, email, legal representative)
- [ ] Obtain copies of all material warranties from manufacturer
- [ ] Organize all documentation in a dedicated warranty file
- [ ] Take comprehensive final photos of entire property
During Warranty Period
- [ ] Inspect waterproofing areas quarterly (check for leaks, dampness, mold)
- [ ] Test all electrical outlets and switches annually
- [ ] Check for tile hollow sounds (tap tiles with a coin) annually
- [ ] Inspect paint and wall finishes for cracking or peeling annually
- [ ] Check plumbing connections under sinks and behind toilets annually
- [ ] Test floor for squeaks, gaps, or uneven areas annually
- [ ] Report any defects immediately — do not wait
- [ ] Document all defects with photos and written description
- [ ] Submit warranty claims in writing with deadline for response
Near Warranty Expiration
- [ ] Review warranty expiration dates for each work category
- [ ] Conduct comprehensive inspection 3 months before expiration
- [ ] Submit any pending claims before warranty expires
- [ ] If defects are found, document and notify contractor immediately
- [ ] Keep all documentation for at least 2 years after warranty expiration
7. Contractor Change or Closure
7.1 What Happens If the Contractor Goes Out of Business?
This is one of the most serious warranty risks. Consider the following:
| Scenario | Impact | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Company closes / deregisters | Warranty may become unenforceable | File claim before closure; seek compensation from company assets |
| Company changes name | Legal entity still responsible | Track legal entity registration number (统一社会信用代码) |
| Company merges or is acquired | Successor entity may assume obligations | Check merger agreement for warranty assumption clause |
| Individual contractor (not company) | Personal liability applies; harder to enforce | Prefer contracting with registered companies |
| Contractor "disappears" | May need to pursue through legal channels | File complaint with market regulation bureau (市场监管局) |
7.3 Pre-Emptive Protection Strategies
- [ ] Contract with a registered company (not an individual contractor)
- [ ] Verify company registration status before signing (via 国家企业信用信息公示系统)
- [ ] Retain 3-5% of final payment as warranty deposit (保修保证金) for 1 year
- [ ] Ensure contract specifies warranty obligations survive company name changes or restructuring
- [ ] Consider purchasing third-party renovation insurance for major projects
8. Extended Warranty Options
8.1 Contractor-Offered Extended Warranty
Some contractors offer extended warranty beyond the legal minimum:
| Offering | Typical Duration | Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Standard legal minimum | 2-5 years by category | Non-negotiable minimum |
| Contractor extended warranty | 3-10 years total | Verify financial stability of contractor; may be worthless if company closes |
| Premium warranty package | 5-15 years total | Usually offered by high-end companies; confirm terms in writing |
Questions to ask about extended warranty:
- Is the extended warranty backed by insurance or a guarantee fund?
- What happens if the contractor closes during the extended warranty period?
- Are there any additional costs or conditions for the extended warranty?
- Is the extended warranty transferable if you sell the property?
8.2 Third-Party Warranty Insurance
An emerging option is third-party renovation warranty insurance:
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Provider | Insurance company (not the contractor) |
| Coverage | Repair cost if contractor fails to honor warranty |
| Cost | Typically 0.5-2% of total project cost |
| Duration | Matches or exceeds legal warranty periods |
| Advantage | Protection against contractor closure |
| Limitation | May have exclusions and deductibles |
8.3 Warranty Comparison Table
| Protection Type | Coverage | Duration | Reliability | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Legal minimum warranty | Workmanship + contractor materials | 2-5 years | High (legally enforceable) | Included |
| Contractor extended warranty | As agreed | 3-15 years | Medium (depends on contractor survival) | May be included or extra |
| Warranty deposit (retention) | Financial leverage | 1 year | High (cash leverage) | 3-5% withheld |
| Third-party warranty insurance | As per policy | 2-10 years | High (backed by insurance company) | 0.5-2% of project cost |
Additional Resources
- Related: Legal Pitfalls — Legal framework for renovation contracts and disputes
- Related: Dispute Resolution — Steps to take when warranty claims are denied
- Related: Contract Pitfalls — Contract clauses that strengthen your warranty position
- Related: Insurance Pitfalls — Renovation insurance options and considerations