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    Bad Contractor Work? How to Document It Properly

    To document a contractor dispute, photograph the job site before work begins, throughout each phase, and at every milestone payment. Capture defects, missing materials, and unfinished work with wide and close-up shots. SnapProof adds a verified timestamp, GPS, and a cryptographic fingerprint, creating independently verifiable photo evidence the contractor cannot claim was taken later.

    Build your case before they disappear with your money.

    5 min read

    Document defects with verified timestamps and GPS

    Why Contractor Disputes Are Hard to Win

    Contractors know most homeowners don't document properly. They rely on the fact that by the time you realize the work is bad, evidence is hard to capture. Walls are closed up. Finishes cover sloppy framing. Plumbing is behind drywall. The window to document is narrow — and most people miss it.

    What to Document

    Before work begins — original condition of everything they'll touch
    During the project — progress at each stage, especially before things get covered up
    Completed work — every area, every detail, wide shots and close-ups
    Defects — cracks, gaps, uneven surfaces, leaks, code violations
    Communication — contracts, texts, emails, change orders, payment receipts
    Permits and inspections — or lack thereof

    How to Build a Timeline

    The most powerful evidence is a chronological timeline showing what was promised vs. delivered. For every photo and video: verified timestamps proving when you captured it, GPS confirming it's your property, and original unedited files.

    Before

    In Progress

    Completed

    Defects Found

    Mistakes Homeowners Make

    Paying in full before documenting completed work
    Not photographing work in progress — only after problems appear
    Letting the contractor "fix" issues without documenting the original problem
    Using only before/after without verified dates
    Not saving all texts and emails

    What Small Claims Court Needs

    Judges want: the signed contract, a timeline of work with properly documented evidence, photos showing defects with verified timestamps, all communication, and payment receipts.

    FAQ

    Day one. Take timestamped photos before any work begins, during every stage, and at completion.

    You have every right to document work performed on your property. Their reaction may actually strengthen your case.

    SnapProof creates documentation designed to meet high standards for authenticity. Organized, timestamped evidence with verification codes is exactly what judges want to see.

    Don't let a bad contractor cost you twice.

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