FIDIC · Pre-Event

Early Warning Notice Generator

See a problem coming before it hits the programme? Describe it in plain English and ChatNotice drafts a professional early warning notice in minutes.

Generate an early warning
How it works

From plain English to finished notice in three steps

1

Describe what’s coming

Tell ChatNotice what you can see ahead, in your own words — “the soil report suggests the east zone may need dewatering that isn’t in the programme.”

2

Answer a couple of questions

It asks only what the warning needs — the probable event, when it might bite, and what it could affect: works, programme, or price.

3

Get a finished notice

ChatNotice drafts a forward-looking warning that flags the risk professionally and invites early discussion — ready to review and send.

Why use it

A warning that protects without escalating

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A warning, not a claim

An early warning flags a probable future event so both sides can manage it — it opens a conversation, not a dispute. The tone is collaborative by design.

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The 2017 advance-warning duty

The FIDIC 2017 forms expect each Party to advise the other in advance of known events that may affect the works, the programme, or the price. This notice discharges that duty on the record.

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Protects the later claim

If the risk does materialise, a dated early warning becomes powerful context for the formal notice that follows — evidence the Contractor saw it, said it, and managed it properly.

FAQ

Questions, answered

What is an early warning notice generator?

It is an online tool that drafts a professional advance-warning letter for you. Instead of starting from a blank page, you describe the emerging problem in plain English; ChatNotice asks a couple of follow-up questions and produces a forward-looking notice that flags the probable event and its possible effects — ready to review and send.

Is an early warning notice the same as a claim notice?

No — and keeping them separate matters. A claim notice responds to an event that has happened and preserves an entitlement, usually against a strict deadline. An early warning is forward-looking: it flags a probable future event so it can be managed before it bites, and it carries no day-count sanction. If the event then occurs, serve the formal claim notice within its own deadline — the early warning does not replace it.

How fast is it, and does it cost anything?

Most notices take two to three minutes — describe the emerging problem, answer a couple of questions, get the draft. ChatNotice is free to use during the beta. Sign up with a work email; no credit card required.

Put the risk on the record today.

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