Snow Removal Intake Forms: What Ice Management Companies Need to Capture at Client Intake
A snow removal crew that arrives at a commercial property during a storm and discovers the parking lot has 200 spaces, three loading docks, a row of decorative bollards nobody mentioned, and no designated snow stacking area is not going to deliver the service the client expects. They are going to improvise. Improvisation during a nor'easter is how plows clip fire hydrants, salt gets dumped on pavers that cannot handle it, and snow gets stacked in front of the emergency exit. Every one of those mistakes is preventable with a proper intake.
Most snow removal companies collect an address, a rough property description, and a handshake agreement about when they will show up. That is not intake — that is guessing. A real snow removal intake form captures every detail your crew needs to price the job accurately, service the property safely, and protect your business from the slip-and-fall claims that define liability in this industry. Here is what that form should include.
Property information: the foundation of every snow contract
Snow removal pricing and logistics are entirely driven by property characteristics. A 2,000-square-foot residential driveway and a 40,000-square-foot commercial parking lot are not just different sizes — they require different equipment, different crews, different trigger protocols, and completely different liability frameworks. Your intake should capture:
- Property address and type — residential, commercial, HOA, multi-family, industrial, municipal. Property type determines everything from equipment selection to insurance requirements. A commercial property with public foot traffic has fundamentally different slip-and-fall exposure than a single-family home.
- Lot size and total square footage of paved surfaces — this is the number your pricing formula runs on. Break it out: driveway area, sidewalk area, parking lot area, loading areas, walkways. Total paved square footage, not just lot size, because a property with 60% green space prices very differently from one that is 90% asphalt.
- Driveway details — length, width, material (asphalt, concrete, pavers, gravel), and grade. A steep driveway changes the equation entirely. A plow that can clear a flat driveway in one pass may need to make multiple runs on a grade, and a gravel driveway requires blade height adjustment to avoid tearing up the surface. Material matters for de-icing — rock salt damages concrete and is destructive to pavers.
- Sidewalks — linear feet, width, and responsibility. Many municipalities require property owners to clear sidewalks within a set number of hours after snowfall. Your client may assume sidewalks are included in the contract; your crew may assume they are not. Document it at intake. Note whether the sidewalk is public (city-owned) or private, since liability shifts accordingly.
- Parking lot — number of spaces, traffic lanes, entry and exit points. A 150-space lot with two entrances plows differently than a 150-space lot with one narrow entrance. Entry and exit points must be prioritized — they get cleared first so vehicles can enter and leave while the rest of the lot is still being worked.
- Loading docks — number, location, and access requirements. Loading docks often require hand shoveling or small equipment because full-size plows cannot maneuver in the confined space. They also tend to accumulate drifts against building walls, which adds time.
Service scope: plowing is not the whole job
Clients who call and say "I need snow removal" are usually thinking about plowing. But snow management is a suite of services, and each one has different equipment requirements, different pricing, and different trigger conditions. Your intake should present these as distinct service categories and let the client select what they need:
- Plowing — mechanical snow removal from paved surfaces using truck-mounted or skid-steer plows. The core service for parking lots and large driveways.
- Shoveling — manual snow removal from sidewalks, walkways, stoops, stairs, and areas too narrow or delicate for plows. Often priced separately from plowing.
- Salting and de-icing — and material matters. Rock salt is the cheapest but damages concrete, kills vegetation, and is ineffective below 15 degrees Fahrenheit. Calcium chloride works to negative 25 degrees but costs three to four times as much. Magnesium chloride is gentler on concrete but less effective on thick ice. Brine pre-treatment prevents ice from bonding to pavement but requires specialized spray equipment. Your intake should capture the client's material preference — or document that they defer to your recommendation.
- Sanding — traction material applied to surfaces where de-icing chemicals are not desired or effective. Common on gravel surfaces, steep grades, and environmentally sensitive areas near waterways.
- Snow stacking and hauling — on-site stacking means pushing snow to a designated corner of the property. Off-site hauling means loading snow into trucks and removing it entirely. Hauling is expensive and usually reserved for properties with nowhere to stack or for mid-season situations where stacking areas are already full. Your intake should identify which approach the client expects and, for on-site stacking, where the designated stacking area is.
- Ice management only — some clients only need de-icing and anti-icing services, not plowing. This is common for properties with in-house maintenance that handles plowing but outsources chemical treatment.
- Roof snow removal — a specialized service for flat-roof commercial buildings and residential properties at risk of ice dams or structural overload. Different insurance, different equipment, different crew training. If you offer it, capture it separately.
Trigger levels: when does your crew deploy?
This is where snow removal contracts generate the most disputes. The client thinks you should have been there. You think the accumulation had not hit the trigger. Nobody documented what the trigger was. Your intake form needs to lock down trigger levels for every service type:
- Plowing trigger — the accumulation threshold that triggers a plow dispatch. Common levels are two inches, three inches, and four inches. Zero-tolerance contracts trigger at any measurable accumulation — these are typically commercial properties with high foot traffic where any snow on the ground is unacceptable.
- Salting trigger — accumulation-based (salt at one inch or less, plow above), temperature-based (salt when surface temperature drops below 32 degrees regardless of precipitation), or event-based (salt after every plow pass). Each approach has different cost implications. Temperature-based salting can result in applications on dry, cold nights with no precipitation — the client needs to understand that and agree to pay for it.
- Pre-treatment — automatic or on-request. Automatic pre-treatment means your crew applies brine or liquid de-icer before a forecasted storm, which prevents ice from bonding and makes plowing more effective. On-request means the client calls and authorizes each application. Automatic is better service but generates charges the client did not specifically approve in the moment, which creates billing disputes if you did not define it at intake.
- Monitoring frequency — 24/7 monitoring means your dispatch team is watching conditions around the clock and deploying crews based on real-time accumulation and forecast data. Business-hours-only monitoring means the client may need to call for overnight or weekend service. Document which model the contract uses.
Priority and timing: who gets plowed first?
Every snow removal company with more than a handful of accounts has a priority system. When a storm drops six inches overnight, your crews cannot be everywhere simultaneously. The intake form is where you establish each client's priority level and timing expectations:
- Service priority level — zero tolerance (hospitals, emergency facilities, 24-hour operations), commercial-before-open (retail, offices, schools — lot must be clear before business hours), and residential-by-morning (homeowners who need the driveway clear before their commute). Priority level directly affects pricing — zero-tolerance clients pay a premium because they require dedicated resources.
- Business hours — for commercial clients, when must the lot be clear and safe for foot traffic? A retail store that opens at 7 AM needs a different dispatch schedule than an office building that opens at 9 AM. Capture opening time, closing time, and whether the client has overnight operations.
- Overnight service — will your crew service this property during overnight hours? Some residential clients do not want plow trucks in their driveway at 3 AM. Some commercial clients require exactly that. Document the preference.
- Holiday coverage — does the client expect service on Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year's Day? Many snow contracts include holiday surcharges, and some crews do not work holidays at all. This needs to be established at intake, not discovered when the client calls on Christmas morning asking where the plow is.
Contract type: how the money works
Snow removal contracts come in several structures, and each one allocates weather risk differently between you and the client. Your intake should identify which structure the client is signing up for — and more importantly, make sure the client understands what it means:
- Seasonal contract — a fixed price for the entire season regardless of snowfall. The client pays the same whether it snows three times or thirty times. This is the most predictable for the client and the riskiest for the contractor in heavy-snow years. Common for commercial properties that need budget certainty.
- Per-push / per-event — the client pays for each plow visit. Lower cost in light-snow years, potentially very expensive in heavy years. Most common for residential clients. Your intake should document whether "per-push" means per-visit or per-storm — a 14-hour storm where your crew visits three times is either one event or three pushes, and that distinction matters enormously on the invoice.
- Time and material — the client pays for actual hours of equipment and labor plus materials used. Common for large commercial properties and municipal contracts where scope varies significantly from storm to storm.
- Retainer plus per-event hybrid — a monthly retainer guarantees availability and priority placement on your route, with additional charges per service event. This balances the contractor's need for guaranteed revenue with the client's desire to pay proportionally to actual snowfall.
- Multi-year contract — a two- or three-year agreement, often with a locked-in seasonal rate. Provides revenue stability for the contractor and price protection for the client. Your intake should note the term length, renewal provisions, and any annual escalation clauses.
Pricing: rates for every service line
Your intake form should establish pricing for each service the client is contracting for. Leaving pricing vague at intake and sorting it out after the first storm is how you lose clients — and how you end up in small claims court:
- Per-push rates by trigger level — many contracts price differently based on accumulation bands. A two-to-four-inch push might be $150, four-to-eight inches $225, and eight-plus inches $325. Document the bands and the corresponding rates.
- Seasonal price — if the contract is seasonal, the total season price and the payment schedule (lump sum, monthly installments, pre-season/post-season split).
- Salting per application — flat rate per application, per-ton of material, or included in the plow price. If material type affects the rate, document each material's per-application cost.
- Hauling — per load or per hour. Snow hauling is one of the most expensive line items in snow management. A per-load rate gives the client cost certainty; a per-hour rate protects you if the dump site is far from the property or if traffic delays extend haul time.
- Sidewalk surcharge — if sidewalk clearing is priced separately from lot plowing, document the rate. Per linear foot, flat rate per visit, or included in the lot price.
- Emergency and holiday rates — premium rates for service outside normal storm response. Holiday surcharges, after-hours callout fees, and rates for storms that exceed a certain accumulation threshold (for example, a blizzard surcharge above 18 inches). These rates need to be in the contract before the storm, not negotiated during it.
Site-specific details: what is on the ground?
A parking lot is not just a rectangle of asphalt. It has obstacles, hazards, and features that affect how your crew plows, where they stack, and what they might damage. Your intake should capture a site map level of detail:
- Obstacles — fire hydrants, traffic islands, speed bumps, bollards, curb stops, light poles, dumpster enclosures, landscaping beds, retaining walls. Every obstacle is something a plow blade can hit in low visibility during a storm. Document their locations.
- Snow stacking locations — where on the property is snow stacking permitted? Designated areas prevent your crew from blocking fire lanes, covering storm drains, or pushing snow onto neighboring properties. If the client has no preference, your intake should note that you will select stacking locations at your discretion, and that the client agrees to that arrangement.
- Damage concerns — pavers, decorative curbing, landscape borders, irrigation heads near pavement edges, specialty surfaces. A plow blade that catches the edge of a decorative stone curb will chip it. A loader bucket that scrapes a paver driveway will gouge it. If the property has features that are easily damaged by heavy equipment, document them and discuss blade height and approach with the client.
- Gate and access codes — gated communities, secured parking garages, fenced commercial properties. Your crew may be arriving at 3 AM when nobody is available to open a gate. Capture all access codes, key box locations, and after-hours contact numbers. If access requires a specific vehicle pass or transponder, document how your crew obtains it.
Liability: the slip-and-fall reality
Snow removal is one of the highest-liability service trades. A customer or employee who slips on a commercial property that was supposed to be cleared and salted represents a significant legal exposure — and that exposure flows in both directions. Your intake form needs to address liability head-on:
- Slip-and-fall exposure — commercial properties with public foot traffic carry the highest risk. Your intake should identify whether the property serves the public (retail, medical offices, restaurants), employees only (office buildings, warehouses), or residents (HOA, multi-family). Each category has different duty-of-care standards.
- Documentation and service logs — time-stamped records of every service visit, including arrival time, departure time, services performed, accumulation at time of service, materials applied, and photographs. This is not administrative overhead — it is your primary defense in a slip-and-fall claim. Your intake should establish that you will maintain these logs and that the client agrees to cooperate with documentation requests.
- Indemnification — who holds liability after your crew completes service? If a patron slips four hours after your crew salted the lot, is that your responsibility or the property owner's? Indemnification language belongs in the contract, but the intake form is where you flag the issue and ensure both parties understand the allocation of risk.
- Insurance requirements — certificate of insurance (COI) required? Per-occurrence and aggregate limits? Additional insured endorsement naming the property owner? Many commercial property managers will not sign a snow removal contract without reviewing the contractor's COI and confirming minimum coverage limits. Capture the client's insurance requirements at intake so your agent can issue the appropriate certificate before the first storm.
Season parameters: start, end, and territory
Snow removal is a seasonal business with hard start and end dates that vary by region. Your intake should establish the boundaries of the contract:
- Contract start and end dates — in the northern United States, a typical season runs November 1 through April 15, but early and late storms happen. Does the contract cover any snowfall during the contract period, or only between specific dates? An October surprise storm or a late-April snowfall that falls outside the contract dates creates a dispute if the boundaries are not clear.
- Service area and territory — if your company operates within a defined service radius, confirm the property falls within it. Properties at the edge of your territory may receive lower-priority service during major storms simply because of travel time between accounts. The client should understand where they fall on your route.
- Multiple properties — commercial clients, HOAs, and property management companies often contract for multiple addresses. List every property on the intake form with its own address, square footage, site details, and priority level. A five-property HOA contract where three properties are documented and two are "we will add those later" is a contract that will generate disputes when those two properties do not get serviced during the first storm.
Building trust before the first flake falls
A thorough intake form communicates something important to your client: this company has managed enough winters to know exactly what can go wrong. When a property manager fills out a form that asks about trigger levels, stacking locations, de-icing material preferences, and loading dock access, they understand they are working with a professional operation — not someone with a plow truck and a cell phone.
Snow removal shares significant operational overlap with other outdoor service trades. Landscaping companies service many of the same properties during the opposite season, and the property details — lot size, obstacles, access codes, damage-sensitive surfaces — transfer directly between the two intake processes. Companies that offer both services can reuse much of the site data.
If you are building documentation across a multi-trade operation, the Trade Services Bundle includes snow removal alongside 51 other service categories, each with trade-specific intake fields.
Snow removal has one of the tightest seasonal windows of any service trade — you often have just a few weeks between signing contracts and deploying crews for the first storm. Getting your intake forms, trigger-level documentation, and site surveys finalized before the season starts is not optional. Our guide to preparing your intake forms for peak season covers how to build a pre-season documentation checklist so nothing gets missed when the weather turns.
Snow removal intake forms — $12.99 complete set
Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Property details, service scope, trigger levels, priority and timing, contract type, pricing, site hazards, liability, and season parameters. Built for snow removal and ice management companies.
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