Wyoming prescribes a single statutory lien waiver form under Wyo. Stat. § 29-10-101 — the Waiver of Lien. Unlike most statutory states that provide four conditional and unconditional forms, Wyoming uses one sworn-statement form that must be acknowledged before a notary public to be legally valid.
Notarization Required
Wyoming requires lien waivers to be acknowledged before a notary public. A waiver that has not been notarized is of no legal effect under Wyo. Stat. § 29-10-101. The notary acknowledgment block must be completed by a commissioned notary at the time of signing.
Wyo. Stat. § 29-10-101. Wyoming's single statutory lien waiver form. Must be acknowledged before a notary public to be legally valid. Covers all labor, materials, equipment, and services furnished through the stated date.
Most statutory states provide four lien waiver forms — conditional and unconditional versions for both progress and final payments. Wyoming takes a simpler approach: one statutory Waiver of Lien form covers all payment scenarios.
The form operates as a sworn statement — the claimant affirms under oath that they have been fully paid and satisfied for all labor performed and materials, equipment, and services furnished through the stated through date. Because it is an oath, it requires notarization; the form is void without it.
The waiver must include the county in which it is acknowledged, the claimant's identity, a description of the property, the payment amount, and the through date covered. The notary acknowledgment block must be completed at the time of signing — it cannot be added retroactively.
Waivr automates the entire process — generate state-compliant waivers, send for e-signature, and track everything from one dashboard.
Start Free Trial