Geographic Coverage Gaps and Expansion Plans Within the Contractor Authority Network
The Contractor Authority Network operates as a hub-and-spoke reference infrastructure spanning statewide, commercial, and metro-level contractor authority sites across the United States. At present, 73 member sites are indexed under the national hub at National Contractor Authority, covering licensing standards, regulatory frameworks, and professional classification across jurisdictions. Coverage depth is uneven: high-population states carry dedicated commercial and residential authority sites, while lower-density states and specific metro markets remain underserved by network depth. This page maps the current geographic footprint, identifies structural gaps, and outlines the expansion logic governing new member site deployment.
Definition and scope
Geographic coverage within the network refers to the degree to which a state, territory, or metro area is represented by at least one active member site that addresses contractor licensing standards, regulatory bodies, and professional qualification frameworks relevant to that jurisdiction. "Coverage" does not mean physical service delivery — it refers to reference depth: whether a practitioner, researcher, or service seeker can locate jurisdiction-specific licensing requirements, bond and insurance thresholds, and contractor classification structures through the network.
The network's coverage by state spans four structural layers:
- Statewide general authority sites — address residential and general contractor licensing, state board oversight, and trade-specific classifications across an entire state.
- Statewide commercial authority sites — focus on commercial contractor licensing, project thresholds, and commercial code compliance within a state.
- Metro and regional authority sites — target dense urban jurisdictions where local permitting, municipal licensing, and contractor registration requirements differ materially from state minimums.
- Specialty and certification authority sites — address cross-jurisdictional standards, certification bodies, and regulatory benchmarking applicable in multiple states.
The network verticals page classifies these layers by function, while the member directory indexes all launched member sites with their jurisdiction assignments.
How it works
New member sites enter the network through a structured deployment sequence governed by the criteria published at Network Standards and Criteria. Geographic priority is assigned based on three weighted factors: population of licensed contractor professionals in the jurisdiction (sourced from U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment Statistics), the regulatory complexity of the state licensing environment, and the absence of existing network coverage for that jurisdiction.
States with mandatory statewide licensing administered by a single authority — such as California's Contractors State License Board or Florida's Department of Business and Professional Regulation — receive priority because regulatory specificity generates higher reference demand. States where licensing is administered at the county or municipality level present a different challenge: coverage must account for layered authority, which often requires metro-level member sites rather than a single statewide resource.
The network's statewide member sites and commercial contractor authority sites are the two largest structural categories, and the ratio between them reflects demand signals from the licensed professional population in each state.
Existing statewide coverage — selected active members:
- Florida Contractor Authority covers residential contractor licensing, trade qualifications, and the Florida DBPR's examination and renewal requirements statewide.
- Florida Commercial Contractor Authority addresses commercial contractor classification under Florida Statute Chapter 489, project scope thresholds, and certificate of competency requirements.
- North Florida Contractor Authority focuses on the regional contractor market across the Panhandle and North Florida counties, where contractor licensing intersects with distinct hurricane-zone construction standards.
- California Contractor Authority maps the CSLB's 44 license classifications, examination pathways, and the contractor bond floor set at $25,000 (CSLB License Classifications).
- California Commercial Contractor Authority addresses commercial project requirements under California's Title 24 and the Division of the State Architect's oversight for public works.
- Texas Contractor Authority covers the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation's contractor registration requirements and the state's decentralized licensing structure across municipalities.
- Texas Commercial Contractor Authority focuses on commercial construction licensing, bonding, and local jurisdiction registration requirements for commercial contractors operating across Texas.
- Arizona Contractor Authority addresses the Arizona Registrar of Contractors, its 13 contractor license classifications, and complaint and bond enforcement procedures.
- Colorado Contractor Authority covers Colorado's hybrid licensing environment, where state licensing applies to select trades and municipal licensing governs general contractors in jurisdictions such as Denver.
- Georgia Contractor Authority maps the Georgia State Licensing Board for Residential and General Contractors, classification requirements, and reciprocity agreements with neighboring states.
- Illinois Contractor Authority addresses contractor licensing through the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation and Chicago's distinct local licensing overlay.
- Illinois Commercial Contractor Authority covers commercial trade licensing, prevailing wage requirements under the Illinois Prevailing Wage Act, and project-specific bond thresholds for public works.
- Indiana Contractor Authority maps Indiana's decentralized contractor licensing structure, where general contracting is not licensed at the state level but HVAC, plumbing, and electrical trades carry state board oversight.
- Maryland Contractor Authority covers the Maryland Home Improvement Commission's licensing requirements and the separate Maryland Department of Labor contractor registration for commercial work.
- Massachusetts Contractor Authority addresses the Office of Consumer Affairs and Business Regulation's Home Improvement Contractor registration and the state's Construction Supervisor License tiers.
- Michigan Contractor Authority covers Michigan's Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs residential builder and maintenance/alteration contractor licensing.
- Missouri Contractor Authority addresses Missouri's city-by-city licensing landscape, where Kansas City and St. Louis maintain distinct municipal contractor registration requirements.
- Ohio Contractor Authority maps the Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board's 5 license categories and the state's requirement for local jurisdiction registration in addition to state licensing.
- Pennsylvania Contractor Authority covers the Pennsylvania Home Improvement Contractor Act requirements and the Attorney General's contractor registration enforcement authority.
- Tennessee Contractor Authority addresses the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors' classification system, financial statement requirements, and project threshold triggers for state licensing.
- Washington Contractor Authority covers the Washington State Department of Labor and Industries' contractor registration, bonding minimums, and workers' compensation compliance requirements.
Secondary coverage — states with single-layer presence:
- Alabama Contractor Authority covers the Alabama Licensing Board for General Contractors, which administers licensing for projects with a contract value exceeding $50,000 (ALBGC).
- Alaska Contractor Authority maps Alaska's contractor registration through the Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development, including the state's unique geographic licensing challenges.
- Virginia Contractor Authority addresses the Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation's Class A, B, and C contractor license tiers and their corresponding project value thresholds.
- Oregon Contractor Authority covers the Construction Contractors Board's licensing, bonding, and insurance requirements and Oregon's mandatory contractor registration for all project values.
- Nevada Contractor Authority maps the Nevada State Contractors Board's licensing classifications and the bond schedule that scales with license classification category.
Common scenarios
Three operational scenarios generate the most visible coverage gaps in the network's current footprint.
Scenario 1: States with no active member site
States including Rhode Island, South Dakota, North Dakota, and New Mexico currently lack launched member sites. Practitioners and researchers seeking jurisdiction-specific licensing information for these states cannot access network-indexed reference pages. The network geographic gaps and expansion section of the hub tracks deployment status for these queued jurisdictions. Planned additions include resources mapped to Rhode Island Contractor Authority, South Dakota Contractor Authority, North Dakota Contractor Authority, and New Mexico Contractor Authority.
Scenario 2: States with statewide coverage but no commercial layer
States such as Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, and Mississippi have statewide general contractor authority coverage but no dedicated commercial contractor authority site. This creates a structural asymmetry: commercial contractors operating under separate licensing tiers, prevailing wage requirements, or public works bonding schedules have no dedicated reference point within the network.
- Arkansas Contractor Authority covers Arkansas Contractors Licensing Board requirements for residential and general contractors, but no commercial-specific counterpart is active.
- Iowa Contractor Authority addresses Iowa's contractor registration through the Iowa Division of Labor, without a dedicated commercial layer.
- [Kansas Contractor Authority](https