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construction performance bond requirements mauritius

Construction Performance Bond Requirements, Mauritius (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last reviewed: 6 July 2026

Understanding construction performance bond requirements in Mauritius is essential for every employer, contractor, procurement officer and bank involved in local building and infrastructure projects. Mauritius procurement law, led by the Public Procurement Act 2006, mandates performance security on most public works contracts, while FIDIC Sub‑Clause 4.2 governs the mechanics on internationally procured projects. This guide explains the two principal bond formats, on‑demand (unconditional) and conditional, maps the step‑by‑step procedure for issuing and calling a bond, and sets out the timelines, documents and risk‑mitigation measures that contracting parties need in 2026.

Executive Summary and Quick Answer

A performance bond (or performance security) protects the employer against the risk that a contractor fails to fulfil its contractual obligations. In Mauritius, whether you must furnish one, and in what form, depends on the interplay between national procurement legislation and the conditions of contract chosen for the project, most commonly a FIDIC‑based form.

The critical compliance decision can be distilled into three questions: (1) Is a performance security required under the contract and applicable law? (2) What form should it take, on‑demand bank guarantee or conditional bond? (3) When and how may the employer call on it? The remainder of this guide answers each question in detail.

  • Action point, Employers: Confirm the bond percentage, form and issuer requirements at tender stage; draft demand notices in advance.
  • Action point, Contractors: Arrange banking facilities early; negotiate conditional wording where possible to preserve cash‑flow protection.
  • Action point, Banks: Verify FIDIC annex wording against the guarantee text before issuance; anticipate validation timelines on calls.

Key Definitions, Construction Performance Bond Requirements in Mauritius

What is a performance bond / performance security?

A performance security is a financial instrument, typically a bank guarantee or surety bond, provided by the contractor to the employer as collateral for due performance of the construction contract. If the contractor defaults, the employer may claim against the security up to its face value.

On‑demand (unconditional) vs conditional wording

The distinction between on‑demand and conditional instruments is fundamental to understanding construction performance bond requirements in Mauritius, because it determines the speed, evidence burden and dispute leverage of any call.

Type Short definition
On‑demand (unconditional) bank guarantee The issuing bank pays the stated amount on receipt of a compliant written demand from the beneficiary, without requiring proof of the contractor’s default.
Conditional (performance bond / surety) The issuer pays only after the beneficiary demonstrates that the contractor has defaulted in accordance with the bond conditions and/or the underlying contract.

Legal and Procurement Framework in Mauritius

Public Procurement Act, performance security obligations

The Public Procurement Act 2006 (Mauritius) establishes the statutory framework under which public bodies procure works, goods and services. It empowers procuring entities to require performance security from successful bidders as a condition of contract award. In practice, public‑sector construction contracts routinely stipulate a performance security set at between 5 % and 10 % of the accepted contract amount, with 10 % being the most common figure on works contracts of significant value.

The Act permits securities in the form of bank guarantees issued by institutions acceptable to the procuring entity, insurance bonds, or other instruments specified in the bidding documents. Because the Act does not prescribe a single mandatory format, the choice between on‑demand and conditional wording is typically made at tender‑document level, guided by Procurement Policy Office (PPO) directives and the standard bidding documents adopted for the particular procurement.

Procurement Policy Office Directives and common practice

The PPO issues directives and standard bidding documents that supplement the Act. These directives address, among other matters, the acceptable forms of performance security, the requirement for bank domiciliation in Mauritius (or confirmation by a local correspondent bank), and sectoral variations. Industry observers note that in the 2025–26 procurement cycle, there has been a growing preference among public employers for on‑demand bank guarantees, reflecting a desire for faster, more certain access to security proceeds. Contractors tendering on construction projects in Mauritius should therefore verify the exact form required before arranging facilities.

FIDIC Sub‑Clause 4.2 Explained for Mauritius Projects

Most internationally financed and many privately procured construction projects in Mauritius use FIDIC conditions of contract. Sub‑Clause 4.2 of the FIDIC Red Book (2017 edition), titled “Performance Security”, is the governing provision. It operates as follows:

  • Obligation to provide: The Contractor must deliver the Performance Security to the Employer within 28 days after receiving the Letter of Acceptance (or such other period as stated in the Particular Conditions).
  • Amount: The amount is stated in the Contract Data; FIDIC practice commonly sets it at 10 % of the Accepted Contract Amount.
  • Permitted forms: FIDIC annex forms provide both an on‑demand bank guarantee format and a surety bond (conditional) format. The Particular Conditions specify which form is acceptable.
  • Return: The Employer must return the Performance Security to the Contractor within 21 days after receiving a copy of the Performance Certificate, provided there are no outstanding claims.

When can a performance bond be called, FIDIC Sub‑Clause 4.2 triggers

Under the FIDIC framework, the Employer may claim against the Performance Security in defined circumstances. The triggers generally include:

  • Failure to extend: The Contractor fails to extend the validity of the Performance Security as required.
  • Failure to pay: The Contractor fails to pay an amount due to the Employer within 42 days after the Employer gives notice of such amount.
  • Termination for Contractor default: The Employer terminates the contract under the relevant termination sub‑clause (e.g., Sub‑Clause 15.2).
  • Other default: The Contractor otherwise fails to comply with a contractual obligation that entitles the Employer to claim.

Typical timelines and interaction with Mauritius procurement rules

The 28‑day delivery period prescribed by FIDIC must be read alongside any different deadline set out in the local bidding documents or PPO standard forms. Where there is a conflict, the Particular Conditions prevail. Employers should ensure that the bid evaluation report and Letter of Acceptance clearly state the form, amount and delivery deadline for the performance security, so that the contractor’s bank can issue the guarantee within the required window.

On‑Demand vs Conditional Wording, Practical Comparison

Choosing between an on‑demand bank guarantee and a conditional performance bond is one of the most consequential decisions when structuring construction performance bond requirements in Mauritius. The table below compares the two instruments across six critical features.

Feature On‑demand (unconditional) bank guarantee Conditional (performance bond / surety)
Payment trigger Payment on first written demand by the beneficiary Payment only after the beneficiary proves contractor default per bond wording
Evidence burden Low, beneficiary need not prove breach to the bank High, beneficiary must demonstrate contractor default and entitlement
Enforcement speed Fast (typically days) Slower (weeks to months)
Dispute leverage Employer advantage, immediate liquidity Contractor protection, proof required before payment
Typical Mauritius market practice Increasing employer preference in the 2025–26 cycle Historically common with public procurement bodies
FIDIC compatibility Allowed, FIDIC annex forms exist; requires careful wording Provided as an alternative format in FIDIC annexes

For employers, the on‑demand format offers speed and certainty: a compliant demand triggers payment without the need to prove default to the bank. For contractors, a conditional bond provides a safeguard against abusive or premature calls, because the surety will investigate before paying. Industry observers expect that the current trend toward on‑demand instruments in Mauritius will continue, driven by employer risk‑aversion and multilateral development bank preferences on funded projects.

Real‑world bank timelines and underwriting constraints

Banks in Mauritius typically require the contractor to maintain a cash margin or provide collateral security equivalent to the guarantee amount. Underwriting lead times vary: established contractors with existing credit lines can obtain a guarantee within five to ten business days, while new applicants may face a longer approval process. Employers should factor these lead times into the contract programme, particularly where the 28‑day FIDIC delivery window applies.

How to Call on a Performance Bond in Mauritius, Step‑by‑Step Checklist

The procedure for calling on a performance bond depends on whether the instrument is on‑demand or conditional. This section provides a practical step‑by‑step checklist for each scenario, addressing the frequently asked question: How do I call on a performance bond?

On‑demand call flow

  1. Verify the guarantee text. Confirm the exact demand requirements: does the wording require a simple written demand, a statement of default, or a statement that the employer is entitled to claim? Even on‑demand bonds may contain specific compliance conditions (e.g., signature by an authorised officer, delivery to a named branch).
  2. Prepare the demand letter. Include: bond/guarantee reference number, underlying contract reference, date of Letter of Acceptance, amount demanded (within the guarantee limit), a brief statement that the contractor has failed to perform its obligations, and any declaration required by the bond text.
  3. Serve the demand on the issuing bank. Deliver the demand letter in the manner specified in the guarantee (often by registered post, courier or SWIFT message). Use tracked delivery so you can prove service date.
  4. Simultaneously notify the contractor. While not always required by the guarantee, best practice, and most FIDIC conditions, requires the employer to copy the demand to the contractor.
  5. Await bank processing. The bank reviews the demand for compliance with the guarantee wording. Industry observers report that unconditional demands in Mauritius are typically processed within three to seven business days, although some banks apply an internal review window of up to 21 business days.
  6. Receive payment. If the demand is compliant, the bank pays the demanded amount to the beneficiary.

Conditional claim flow

  1. Issue default notices under the contract. Most conditional bonds require the employer to have first notified the contractor of its default under the relevant contract clause (e.g., FIDIC Sub‑Clause 15.1 notice to correct).
  2. Compile evidence of default. Gather inspection reports, photographs, correspondence, interim payment records, programme analyses and any adjudicator or engineer determinations that establish the contractor’s breach.
  3. Submit a claim to the surety/bond issuer. Present the claim with the contract reference, bond number, amount, description of default, and the supporting evidence package.
  4. Surety investigation. The surety investigates the claim, this may involve engaging its own engineers or legal advisers. The timeline is typically longer than an on‑demand call (weeks to months).
  5. Resolution or dispute. The surety either pays, partially pays, or disputes the claim. If disputed, the employer may need to pursue adjudication, arbitration or litigation to enforce.

Evidence, Documentation and Drafting the Demand

Whether the instrument is on‑demand or conditional, assembling the right documentation is critical. This section answers the question: What information is needed for a performance bond call?

Every demand or claim submission should include the following elements:

  • Bond/guarantee reference number, the unique identifier assigned by the issuing bank or surety.
  • Underlying contract reference, project name, contract number, and date of Letter of Acceptance or contract execution.
  • Beneficiary details, full legal name and registered address of the employer.
  • Amount claimed, the specific sum demanded, which must not exceed the guarantee limit.
  • Description of default, a concise statement of the contractor’s failure, referencing the relevant contract clause (e.g., FIDIC Sub‑Clause 15.2).
  • Date of default, when the default occurred or was first identified.
  • Supporting documents, for conditional bonds, attach inspection reports, site photographs, defects lists, engineer’s instructions, interim payment certificates, test results and any prior notices served on the contractor.
  • Declaration/statement, the specific wording required by the guarantee text (e.g., “We hereby certify that the Contractor has failed to perform its obligations under the Contract”).

Pre‑empting bank and underwriter queries

Banks performing a compliance check on an on‑demand call will scrutinise the demand for strict compliance with the guarantee wording. Common queries include: whether the signatory is authorised, whether the demand was served within the guarantee validity period, and whether the stated amount exceeds the guarantee limit. Employers should prepare a board resolution or power of attorney confirming signatory authority, check the guarantee expiry date before serving, and calculate the amount precisely, including any previous partial calls, to avoid rejection on technical grounds.

Bank Processing Timelines and Practicalities in Mauritius

Once a demand is received, the issuing bank’s internal process in Mauritius typically follows these stages: receipt and logging, legal/compliance review, verification of demand format against the guarantee text, internal approval, and payment instruction. The Bank of Mauritius sets supervisory expectations for banks operating in the jurisdiction, including guidelines on risk management and operational procedures that inform how banks handle guarantee obligations.

What to expect: immediate pay vs investigation window

For unconditional (on‑demand) guarantees, the likely practical effect is payment within three to seven business days of a compliant demand. Some banks, however, apply an investigation window of up to 21 business days, particularly for large‑value guarantees or where the guarantee text includes a “without delay” rather than “immediately” obligation. Employers should serve the demand simultaneously on the bank and the contractor, use tracked delivery channels (SWIFT, courier with proof of receipt), and follow up in writing if payment is not received within the expected window.

Risks, Counterclaims, and Mitigation

Calling on a performance bond is not risk‑free. Both employers and contractors should be aware of the following exposures when navigating construction performance bond requirements in Mauritius:

  • Abusive or premature calls. An employer who calls a bond without genuine entitlement risks a counterclaim for damages from the contractor and reputational harm in the market.
  • Injunctive relief. A contractor may seek an urgent court injunction to prevent the bank from paying out, particularly if fraud or bad faith is alleged. Courts in common‑law jurisdictions (including Mauritius) have historically set a high threshold for restraining on‑demand guarantees, generally requiring clear evidence of fraud.
  • Anti‑fraud checks. Banks may pause payment if they suspect fraud, although this is rare with on‑demand instruments and banks generally treat the guarantee obligation as autonomous from the underlying contract.

Contract drafting tips for risk mitigation

  • Cap the call amount, consider step‑demand mechanisms that limit claims to a percentage of the security per event, preserving a balance for future claims.
  • Include a dispute resolution clause within the bond, specify that disputes about the bond itself are subject to the same arbitration mechanism as the underlying contract.
  • Draft clear trigger language, align the bond wording precisely with the contract termination and default clauses to avoid ambiguity.
  • Require simultaneous notice to the contractor, this reduces the risk of surprise calls and supports good‑faith dealing.

Practical Annexes, Templates and Downloads

The following templates and resources support the practical application of this guide. Each should be reviewed by qualified legal counsel before use on a live project:

  • Sample on‑demand bank guarantee wording, based on the FIDIC annex form for a demand guarantee, adapted for Mauritius banking practice. Includes the required demand statement and beneficiary declaration.
  • Conditional performance bond template, modelled on the FIDIC surety bond annex and aligned with World Bank Standard Bidding Document forms for conditional bonds.
  • Sub‑Clause 4.2 notice template, a short‑form notice for employers claiming under the Performance Security, referencing the relevant FIDIC trigger clause.
  • One‑page bond‑call checklist (PDF), a downloadable checklist summarising the on‑demand call flow and the evidence package required for conditional claims.

Templates and checklists reflecting Mauritius construction performance bond requirements are available for download from Global Law Experts. Contact a Mauritius‑qualified construction lawyer for project‑specific advice and document review.

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

Navigating construction performance bond requirements in Mauritius demands a clear understanding of both the statutory procurement framework, anchored in the Public Procurement Act 2006 and PPO directives, and the contractual mechanics of FIDIC Sub‑Clause 4.2. Employers should settle the bond format (on‑demand or conditional) at tender stage, prepare demand documentation in advance, and verify bank processing timelines. Contractors should secure banking facilities early and negotiate protective wording where the procurement rules allow. For tailored guidance on bond structuring, demand drafting or dispute resolution, consult a specialist construction law practitioner with experience in Mauritius projects.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nevish B. B. Sewraj at Sewraj Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. FIDIC, The FIDIC Contracts Guide
  2. Laws of Mauritius, Public Procurement Act 2006
  3. Procurement Policy Office (Mauritius), Directives
  4. Mauritius National Assembly, Government Gazette / Legal Supplement
  5. Bank of Mauritius, Supervisory Guidelines
  6. World Bank, Procurement Guidelines & Standard Bidding Documents

FAQs

How do I call on a performance bond?
Serve a written demand on the issuing bank or surety, identifying the bond reference number, underlying contract, amount claimed, and a statement of the contractor’s default. For on‑demand guarantees, a compliant demand triggers payment; for conditional bonds, attach evidence of default and follow the claim procedure set out in the bond wording.
You need the contract reference, Letter of Acceptance date, bond/guarantee number, beneficiary details, a description of the contractor’s default, the amount claimed, and supporting evidence such as inspection reports, photographs, notices and test results.
A 10 % performance bond is a performance security set at 10 % of the accepted contract amount. This is the percentage most commonly used under FIDIC conditions of contract and in Mauritius public procurement practice to secure contractor performance through to the end of the defects notification period.
A performance bond may be called when the contract or bond conditions are satisfied, typically where the contractor fails to perform, fails to extend the security, fails to pay an amount due to the employer, or where the employer terminates the contract for contractor default under the relevant FIDIC sub‑clause.
Yes. On‑demand (unconditional) bank guarantees are enforceable in Mauritius. The issuing bank is obliged to pay on receipt of a compliant demand, subject to the terms of the guarantee text. Courts will generally only restrain payment where clear evidence of fraud is established.
Timelines vary by bank and guarantee value. Unconditional demands are typically processed within three to seven business days. Some institutions apply an internal validation review of up to 21 business days, particularly for high‑value guarantees.
A bank that has paid out under an on‑demand guarantee may seek reimbursement from the contractor (its customer). The beneficiary employer may face a counterclaim if the call was fraudulent or made without entitlement. Reversal requires separate legal proceedings and cannot be effected by the bank unilaterally after payment.

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Construction Performance Bond Requirements, Mauritius (2026)

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