What Is an AIA G702/G703 Invoice?
The AIA G702 (Application and Certificate for Payment) and G703 (Continuation Sheet) are the construction industry's standard invoice forms, published by the American Institute of Architects. Most owners, general contractors, and lenders require subcontractors and GCs to use these forms for progress billing on commercial projects.
Together, the two forms give owners a clear picture of how much work has been completed, how much has been billed previously, and exactly how much is owed in the current pay period.
The G702: Application and Certificate for Payment
The G702 is the cover page. It summarizes the entire billing in a few key numbers:
- Original Contract Sum — the base contract value before any change orders
- Net Change by Change Orders — the total net value of all approved change orders to date
- Current Contract Value — original contract sum plus net change orders
- Total Completed and Stored to Date — all work billed through this application, including stored materials
- Retainage — a percentage (typically 5–10%) withheld until project completion
- Total Earned Less Retainage — the amount actually owed through this period, net of retainage
- Less Previous Certificates for Payment — what has already been paid
- Current Payment Due — the amount owed for this pay application
The G702 is signed by both the contractor and the architect (or owner's representative), making it a legally recognized payment document.
The G703: Continuation Sheet (Schedule of Values)
The G703 is where the detail lives. It breaks the contract down into a Schedule of Values (SOV) — a line-by-line breakdown of every work item, with columns for:
- Description of work
- Scheduled value (contract price for that item)
- Work completed from previous applications
- Work completed this period
- Materials stored on site
- Total completed and stored to date
- Percentage complete
- Balance to finish
- Retainage
Every line on your G703 should tie back to your original contract and any approved change orders. Owners and construction managers scrutinize the G703 closely — inconsistencies will slow payment.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
1. Front-loading the SOV. Assigning inflated values to early work items to get more cash upfront is a fast way to lose credibility with an owner. Keep your SOV balanced and defensible.
2. Forgetting stored materials. If you've purchased materials that are on-site but not yet installed, you can include them in the "Materials Stored" column — but you'll typically need to provide documentation (receipts, delivery tickets).
3. Miscounting previous billings. The "Previous Applications" column must exactly match what was certified on your last pay application. Any discrepancy will cause a rejection.
4. Omitting change orders. If you have approved change orders, add them as separate line items on the G703 and update the contract sum on the G702 accordingly.
5. Wrong retainage math. Retainage is applied to each line item individually, not just to the total. Make sure your software or spreadsheet calculates it at the line level.
How to Create AIA Invoices Faster
Filling out AIA forms by hand (or in Excel) is tedious and error-prone. Construction management software like DeltaPro automates the entire process:
- You set up your Schedule of Values once when a project starts
- Approved change orders automatically add new SOV line items
- Previous billing amounts carry over automatically — no manual lookups
- The G702 totals calculate in real time as you fill in this period's amounts
- A print-ready PDF is generated with one click
For GCs and subcontractors billing multiple projects a month, this alone can save several hours per billing cycle and eliminate costly errors.
Summary
The AIA G702/G703 is the standard for construction progress billing. Understanding what each field means — and keeping your Schedule of Values accurate and current — is the key to getting paid on time. If you're still doing it manually, construction management software is the fastest way to clean up your billing process.