Construction Providers

The construction providers on this provider network cover installation contractors, specialty trades, and related service providers operating across the United States. Entries are organized by trade category, geographic market, and licensing classification. The providers function as a reference index for service seekers, procurement professionals, and researchers navigating the US construction installation sector — not as a ranked or endorsed provider list.

Geographic distribution

Construction installation services in the United States are regulated at the state and local level, producing a highly fragmented licensing landscape. Contractor licensing requirements differ across all 50 states, with states such as California (Contractors State License Board, CSLB), Florida (Department of Business and Professional Regulation, DBPR), and Texas (Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, TDLR) maintaining distinct examination, bonding, and insurance thresholds.

This provider network spans the national scope, with entries clustered in high-density construction markets including the Northeast corridor, the Sun Belt, and the Pacific Coast. Metro statistical areas with the highest volume of verified contractors include Los Angeles, New York City, Houston, Phoenix, and Chicago — reflecting Bureau of Labor Statistics data on construction employment concentration.

Entries are grouped by state, then by county or metro area, allowing searchers to filter the Installation Providers index by jurisdiction. Rural and low-density markets are represented where licensed contractors have submitted qualifying information, but coverage is denser in urban and suburban markets by default.

How to read an entry

Each provider entry is structured around a fixed data schema. The fields present in a standard entry are:

  1. Business name — The legal or trade name of the contracting entity as registered with the relevant state licensing board.
  2. License number and issuing authority — The state-issued contractor license number and the name of the issuing regulatory body (e.g., CSLB License #, Florida CGC number).
  3. Trade classification — The specific installation specialty covered by the license, such as General Building, Electrical (C-10 in California's classification system), Plumbing, HVAC, Roofing, or Glazing/Windows.
  4. Geographic service area — The counties, metro areas, or states in which the contractor is authorized to operate under the verified license.
  5. Bonding and insurance status — Whether the contractor carries general liability insurance and a contractor's surety bond, as required by most state licensing statutes.
  6. Verification date — The calendar quarter in which the provider data was last cross-referenced against the issuing state board's public license lookup database.

The Provider Network Purpose and Scope page provides additional context on how these fields are defined and maintained across the broader reference network.

What providers include and exclude

Providers include:

Providers exclude:

The distinction between a General Building contractor and a Specialty contractor is operationally significant: a General Building contractor can coordinate and subcontract across trades on a single project, while a Specialty contractor is authorized to perform only the specific trade classification verified on the license. This boundary is enforced by state licensing boards and affects project bidding eligibility under public procurement rules.

For context on how to navigate these distinctions within the network interface, see How to Use This Installation Resource.

Verification status

Providers in this network are assigned one of three verification status designations:

Verification is a data accuracy function, not an endorsement. A "Verified" designation confirms that a license number matches a record in the state board's public system at the time of the check — it does not confirm insurance coverage amounts, claim history, financial standing, or workmanship quality. State licensing board public lookups, including the CSLB license check portal and the Florida DBPR licensee search, remain the authoritative sources for real-time license status.

Permitting status is not tracked at the provider level. Permit issuance and inspection records are maintained by local Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) offices — typically municipal or county building departments — and are not centralized in any national database accessible to this provider network. Contractors verified here are expected to pull required permits under applicable codes, including those adopted from the International Code Council (ICC) family of model codes, but permit compliance verification falls outside the scope of this index.