The Things That Don’t Appear In QuickBooks, But Determine Whether You Stay In Control

Yes, profit & loss reports are important.
But let me tell you something as someone who’s reviewed dozens of real estate books and financials:
There are documents and decisions that will never appear in QuickBooks—and if you’re not paying attention to them, your project could collapse before it even begins.
This post is about everything around the numbers that turns you from someone “doing a deal” into a developer who knows what they’re doing.
1. Contracts: The Most Powerful Document You’re Probably Skimming
You might trust your contractor.
But if you haven’t read and understood your contract, you could end up overpaying—or worse.
Every clause impacts:
Payment schedules
Definitions of completion
Liability for delays
Penalties (or the lack of them)
I’ve seen developers make early payments because they didn’t realize when payment was actually allowed—and they had no leverage when work wasn’t completed.
2. Waivers & Insurance: You Can’t Afford to Skip These
Paid your contractor? Great. But did you get a signed waiver?
Are your subcontractors properly insured?
If not—here’s a truth bomb: Paying without documentation = paying twice.
4 types of waivers you should know:
Unconditional Waiver (Progress Payment): Gives up all lien rights up to a specific date, no conditions—even if the payment hasn’t cleared.
Conditional Waiver (Progress Payment): Releases lien rights only once payment is received and cleared.
Unconditional Final Waiver: Permanently releases all rights after the final payment. No going back.
Conditional Final Waiver: Valid only if the final payment is actually received and confirmed.
Pro tip:
Never rely solely on a waiver from the GC (General Contractor).
Subcontractors can file a lien—even if you’ve paid the GC.
A waiver is a legal receipt confirming payment has been made and lien rights are waived.
And don’t forget—every U.S. state has different lien laws. Know yours.
3. Insurance: “It’s All Handled” Isn’t Enough
Every contractor—and especially subcontractors—must submit a:
Certificate of Insurance (COI)
Proof of coverage for their specific trade
And you (the developer) should be listed as Additional Insured
I keep a simple spreadsheet with:
Contractor name, expiration date, coverage amount, and notes.
No contractor sets foot on site until this is submitted and verified.
4. Entity Documents: The DNA of Your Deal
If you have partners, loans, or outside investors and you don’t know what’s written in your:
LLC Operating Agreement
Partnership Agreement
Limited Partnership Agreement (LPA)
…you’re flying blind.
These documents determine:
Who gets to decide what
When distributions can be made
Who reports to investors
How and when the exit happens
What happens if the deal underperforms
I’ve seen developers raise money, open an LLC, and never finalize an operating agreement.
Then investors start asking for reports—and suddenly, no one has answers.
If you’re raising capital: expectations must be aligned and clearly written in the docs.
Always consult a real estate attorney to review agreements.
5. Waterfall Structures: Who Gets Paid First (and How Much)?
The waterfall dictates how profits (and sometimes losses) are split:
First, return of capital
Then preferred returns
Then profit splits (the promote)
What you need to know:
Not every dollar is split equally
The waterfall defines when investors see returns—and when you, the sponsor, earn your share
Poor communication can lead to confusion—and broken trust
This is usually buried in the LPA or Operating Agreement. If you don’t know the numbers, you won’t know when to distribute or how to report earnings accurately.
Yes, I’ve seen developers make “rough” estimates—only to end up in financial messes or even legal disputes by year-end.
How to Stay in Control: Build a Real Project Control File
I always recommend a simple Excel-based control sheet that includes:
Waiver tracking
Insurance log
Contract management
Entity & investor document status
Reporting timelines
This isn’t for your CPA—it’s for you, the developer.
Because if you don’t know where you stand, you can’t move forward confidently.
Final Thoughts
A clean financial system is just the start.
Without proper contracts, insurance, waivers, and legal agreements,
you don’t have a project—you have a ticking time bomb.
In my next post, I’ll cover how to turn investor reporting into a tool that builds trust—and sets the stage for your next capital raise.
Want my real estate “Control File Template” or a Due Diligence Checklist?
Drop a comment—I’m happy to share
— Lihi
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