Writing a Stucco Repair Scope of Work: Specifications and Documentation

A stucco repair scope of work is the formal technical document that defines the boundaries, materials, methods, and acceptance standards for a repair engagement. It functions as both a contractual instrument and a field reference, governing how work proceeds from substrate assessment through final coat application. Precise documentation protects property owners, contractors, and inspectors by eliminating ambiguity about what constitutes completed, compliant work. The specifications embedded in a scope of work also determine whether the project triggers permitting requirements under local building codes.


Definition and scope

A scope of work (SOW) in stucco repair is a written technical specification that describes the spatial extent of repair, the defect classification being addressed, the material system to be applied, and the inspection or testing benchmarks the finished work must satisfy. It differs from a general estimate or proposal in that it carries enforceable technical standards, not just pricing and labor descriptions.

The document typically covers three classification layers:

  1. Defect inventory — a catalogued list of failure types (delamination, cracking, efflorescence, moisture intrusion, impact damage) mapped to specific locations on the structure, identified by elevation face, grid reference, or photo log entry.
  2. Material specification — the cementitious or synthetic product system to be used, including base coat, lath type where applicable, finish coat, and any waterproofing membranes or flashing details. Material specifications may reference ASTM C926 (Standard Specification for Application of Portland Cement-Based Plaster) or ASTM C1063 (Standard Specification for Installation of Lathing and Furring) depending on system depth.
  3. Method and sequence requirements — the procedural order of operations, including surface preparation standards (e.g., minimum surface profile per ICRI Guideline No. 310.2R), cure times between coats, and ambient temperature or humidity limits for application.

The International Building Code (IBC), administered nationally and adopted with local amendments by jurisdictions across the United States, establishes the baseline performance requirements that a repair SOW must satisfy when the work is permit-triggering. For exterior stucco, IBC Section 2512 governs cement plaster application requirements.


How it works

A compliant stucco repair SOW is assembled in phases that mirror the physical repair sequence:

  1. Condition assessment — a field inspection documents existing defects with measurements, photographs, and probing or moisture meter readings. Crack widths are classified (hairline under 1/32 inch, medium 1/32–1/4 inch, structural above 1/4 inch) because classification determines whether the repair is cosmetic or requires structural consultation.
  2. Scope definition — assessment findings are translated into bounded repair zones. Each zone is assigned a repair category: spot repair, section replacement (cut-and-patch), or full-layer removal and re-stucco.
  3. Specification writing — for each repair category, the SOW specifies product type (three-coat traditional, one-coat, EIFS, or synthetic finish), lath attachment method if substrate replacement is needed, mix ratios or approved pre-bagged products, and finish texture requirements matched to the existing façade.
  4. Permitting notation — the SOW flags which repair categories require a building permit. Jurisdictions vary, but structural lath replacement, repairs exceeding a defined square footage threshold (commonly 100 square feet under local ordinances), or work affecting water-resistive barriers typically require permit pull and inspection.
  5. Acceptance criteria — quantified pass/fail standards are established: bond strength (often referenced to ASTM C1583 pull-off testing thresholds), moisture content at substrate level, crack-free curing period, and visual match within a defined tolerance.

Common scenarios

The stucco repair listings covered by documentation-heavy scopes of work fall into recognizable patterns:


Decision boundaries

Not every stucco defect warrants a formal SOW. The stucco repair directory purpose and scope covers the service categories where documentation standards apply most rigorously. The practical threshold for a full written specification is typically repair involving lath exposure, moisture barrier penetration, structural substrate contact, or insurance claims documentation.

A comparison of documentation depth by project type:

Project Type Required Documentation Level
Hairline crack fill (cosmetic) Material spec only
Section patch under 50 sq ft Defect log + material spec
Full-face re-stucco or EIFS replacement Full SOW with permitting notation
Insurance or litigation-related repair SOW + photographic log + third-party inspection

For projects entering permit review, the jurisdiction's building department requires submission of material specifications meeting the applicable code edition adopted locally. The how to use this stucco repair resource section of this reference addresses how to identify qualified specifiers and contractors by credential type, including licensed plastering contractors, AWCI-certified applicators, and registered design professionals where structural involvement is present.


References

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