FTC 3-Day Cooling-Off Rule
The FTC Cooling-Off Rule, 16 CFR Part 429, is the federal floor for many in-home sales. It generally covers door-to-door or other off-premises sales of consumer goods or services when the price is $25 or more at the buyer's residence, or $130 or more at certain temporary locations. When it applies, the seller must give oral and written cancellation notices, and the buyer may cancel by midnight of the third business day under 16 CFR § 429.1. It usually does not cover real estate, insurance, securities, vehicles sold at a permanent dealership, online-only sales, or emergency repairs the buyer specifically requests.
Key refs: 16 CFR Part 429; 16 CFR § 429.1
State Home Solicitation Sales Act
Alaska gives buyers a five-day state cancellation right for covered door-to-door or similar sales under Alaska Stat. § 45.02.350. The seller should give a dated contract or receipt, the seller's name and address, and a written notice explaining how to cancel. The Alaska rule is narrower than a general construction warranty and should be checked against the sale location, price, written notice, emergency request, and whether the owner initiated the repair visit. For a homeowner project, the key question is where and how the contract was sold: a roof, HVAC, window, waterproofing, pest, or remodeling agreement signed after an in-home pitch can be covered even though the service is construction. A bid negotiated at the contractor's office, by ordinary online checkout, or after the owner invited emergency work usually needs separate analysis.
Key refs: Alaska Stat. § 45.02.350
Construction contract cancellation rights
Alaska requires construction contractor registration and, for covered residential work, a residential endorsement under Alaska Stat. §§ 08.18.025 and 08.18.051. Those licensing and disclosure rules can support a board complaint or civil defense, but they do not create a separate cancellation period for every construction contract. Construction cancellation rights should be read with the contract, any financing documents, permit records, and proof of how the sale happened. If the homeowner cancels within a valid statutory window, the safest record is a dated written notice sent by the method the statute or contract allows. This summary is informational and is not legal advice; project-specific questions can depend on local licensing, insurance paperwork, and whether work or materials already began.
Key refs: Alaska Stat. §§ 08.18.025, 08.18.051
Mechanic's lien response window
A mechanic's lien is not an immediate forced sale. In Alaska, a recorded mechanic's lien generally does not bind real property for more than six months after recording unless an enforcement action or timely extension is filed under Alaska Stat. § 34.35.080. If a homeowner receives a summons, show-cause order, or foreclosure complaint after a lien is recorded, the court paper sets the response deadline; missing that deadline can lead to judgment and eventually a sheriff sale or judicial sale. Dispute process: owners can contest recording date, amount, completion date, license status, payment history, and any recorded extension before a court orders foreclosure. Keep the signed contract, change orders, proof of payments, photos, permits, cancellation notices, and all certified-mail receipts together before responding.
Key refs: Alaska Stat. §§ 34.35.070, 34.35.080
What to do after the cancellation window
If the cancellation window has passed, focus on evidence and remedies rather than self-help. Alaska homeowners can file a consumer complaint with the state attorney general or consumer agency at https://law.alaska.gov/department/civil/consumer/cp_complaint.html, and licensing-board complaints may also fit if the contractor needed a license or registration. Civil options can include breach of contract, fraud, unfair-practice, warranty, or lien-discharge claims. Statute of limitations: Alaska generally uses three years for contract actions under Alaska Stat. § 09.10.053 and two years for fraud or many tort claims under § 09.10.070. Deadlines can turn on discovery, written versus oral terms, arbitration clauses, and prior payments, so this is a planning summary, not legal advice.
Key refs: Alaska Stat. §§ 09.10.053, 09.10.070
Official complaint resource
Use the state complaint resource for consumer-protection triage, and keep a dated copy of every contract, notice, receipt, photo, and message.
Source: ProFix Editorial Team. Last updated 2026-06-09. This guide is informational and is not legal advice.