By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Carpentry Intake Forms: What to Capture Before Cutting the First Board

A carpenter who walks onto a job site without knowing whether the project is rough framing or custom crown molding, whether the client wants paint-grade poplar or clear-coat walnut, or whether the subfloor is level is going to waste the first hour figuring out what should have been settled before the truck was loaded. Carpentry is one of the most variable trades in construction — the gap between framing a wall and hand-fitting a curved staircase railing is enormous — and the intake process needs to reflect that range.

Most carpentry businesses collect a name, address, and a vague project description. That is not intake — that is a lead form. A real carpentry intake form captures everything you need to classify the project, source materials, estimate accurately, and protect both parties when the scope inevitably changes. Here is what that form should include.

Client and project information: who you are working for and where

Carpentry work happens in a chain of relationships. The person calling you might be the homeowner, a property manager, an interior designer, or a general contractor who is subcontracting the trim package on a new build. Each of those relationships changes how you communicate, who approves changes, and who pays. Your intake should capture:

Project classification: what kind of carpentry this actually is

Carpentry is not one trade — it is at least eight, and your intake form needs to classify the project accurately because your tools, materials, crew composition, and pricing model all change based on category. The major classifications:

Site assessment: what you need to know before you start

Carpentry is unusually sensitive to existing conditions. A trim carpenter who discovers that no wall in the room is plumb and no corner is square — common in houses built before 1970 and not rare in houses built last year — has to adjust every single piece they cut. That is not a problem if you know about it from the site visit. It is a massive problem if you priced the job assuming plumb walls and square corners. Your intake should drive a thorough site assessment:

Site assessment for carpentry shares common ground with what a general contractor captures at intake — access logistics, trade coordination, and permit requirements appear on both forms. The difference is that a GC is orchestrating the entire project while the carpenter is focused on wood, and the carpenter's site assessment drills deeper into wall plumb, subfloor condition, and material access than a GC's broader overview.

Materials: species, grade, finish, and sourcing

Materials are where carpentry pricing gets complicated fast. The difference between paint-grade poplar and clear-coat quartersawn white oak can be a factor of five or more in material cost alone, before accounting for the additional labor that hardwoods require. Your intake needs to capture material decisions early because they drive everything downstream:

Measurements and specifications: the precision layer

Carpentry is a measurement-driven trade. The phrase "measure twice, cut once" exists because materials are expensive and cuts are permanent. Your intake should establish what measurement and design work has been done, and what still needs to happen:

Pricing, payment terms, and change orders

Carpentry pricing varies more widely than almost any other trade because the work ranges from commodity framing to one-of-a-kind furniture. Your intake needs to establish the pricing model and terms before you start, because custom work almost always involves changes, and how those changes are handled determines whether the project stays profitable:

Building the relationship from the intake forward

A thorough intake process tells the client that you are a professional who has done this before. When a prospective client receives a form that asks about wall plumb, wood species, custom milling requirements, and change order procedures, they understand that this carpenter has built enough projects to know where the problems hide. That level of detail builds trust — and trust is what wins the job when you are competing against three other bids.

Carpentry frequently intersects with other trades. If you are also handling deck and patio construction, the exterior carpentry sections overlap significantly. If you are working as a sub under a general contractor, your intake needs to align with theirs on scope, schedule, and trade coordination. For shops that specialize in one-of-a-kind furniture pieces, dining tables, or bespoke built-ins, a custom furniture and woodworking intake form goes deeper on design consultation, joinery selection, and finish specification than a general carpentry intake covers. Having a structured intake process that accounts for these intersections puts you ahead of competitors who are still scribbling job notes on the back of a material receipt.

If you are building documentation across a multi-trade operation, the Trade Services Bundle includes carpentry alongside 51 other service categories, each with trade-specific intake fields.

Carpentry intake forms — $12.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Project classification, site assessment, wood species and grade, measurements, material sourcing, pricing structure, and change order terms. Built for carpentry businesses.

View Carpentry Forms