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What is the primary difference between substantial completion and final completion of a construction project?

Correct Answer

B) Substantial completion allows owner use with minor items remaining, final completion means all work is finished

Substantial completion means the work is sufficiently complete for the owner to occupy and use the project for its intended purpose, though punch list items may remain. Final completion means all work is entirely finished.

Answer Options
A
Substantial completion requires owner occupancy, final completion does not
B
Substantial completion allows owner use with minor items remaining, final completion means all work is finished
C
There is no difference, the terms are interchangeable
D
Substantial completion is 90% complete, final completion is 100% complete

Why This Is the Correct Answer

Option B correctly defines the fundamental distinction between substantial and final completion. Substantial completion occurs when the project is sufficiently complete for the owner to occupy and use it for its intended purpose, even though minor deficiencies or punch list items may still exist. Final completion means absolutely all work has been finished, all punch list items completed, and the project is 100% done with no remaining deficiencies.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: Substantial completion requires owner occupancy, final completion does not

This is incorrect because substantial completion does not require owner occupancy - it simply means the project is ready for occupancy and use. The owner may choose not to occupy immediately even after substantial completion is achieved.

Option C: There is no difference, the terms are interchangeable

This is wrong because the terms have distinctly different legal and contractual meanings. They represent different milestones in the construction process with different implications for warranties, risk transfer, and payment schedules.

Option D: Substantial completion is 90% complete, final completion is 100% complete

This is incorrect because substantial completion is not defined by a specific percentage. A project could be 95% or 98% complete and still not achieve substantial completion if critical systems aren't functional, or conversely, could achieve substantial completion at 90% if all essential elements work properly.

Memory Technique

Think 'SUBstantial = SUBstantially usable but not perfect' vs 'FINAL = FINished ALl work completely'

Reference Hint

Look up AIA Contract Documents, specifically A201 General Conditions, Section on Substantial Completion, or Florida Building Code Chapter 1 - Scope and Administration

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