Get General Contractor License NC: Requirements Guide 2026 July
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Who Needs a NC General Contractor License?
North Carolina General Statute 87-1 requires anyone who builds, repairs, or remodels any building or structure under contract for $30,000 or more to hold a valid general contractor license issued by the North Carolina Licensing Board for General Contractors. This threshold applies to the total cost of the project including labor and materials — not just the contractor's profit or labor component. A single project that crosses the $30,000 line triggers the licensing requirement regardless of whether it spans residential, commercial, or industrial work.
The requirement applies broadly across construction activities. General building contractors, residential remodelers, and contractors who perform structural work on commercial buildings are all covered. Specialty subcontractors — electricians, plumbers, HVAC technicians — hold separate licenses under different boards, but a general contractor who subcontracts that work while managing the overall project must hold a GC license if the total project value exceeds $30,000. Many contractors are surprised to learn that the threshold covers the project value, not just the portion they personally perform.
Several categories of work are exempt from the general contractor licensing requirement. Property owners performing work on their own primary residence, provided they personally perform the work and do not immediately resell the property, may be exempt in certain circumstances. Licensed architects and engineers performing incidental construction work within their design scope may also be exempt. However, these exemptions are narrow and frequently misapplied. If you are performing construction work for compensation on behalf of others and the project value approaches or exceeds $30,000, you should verify your licensing status with the NCLBGC before starting work.
Unlicensed contractors who perform work requiring a license face significant consequences in North Carolina. The NCLBGC actively investigates complaints, and performing unlicensed work is a Class 1 misdemeanor under NC law. Beyond criminal exposure, unlicensed contractors cannot enforce contracts in NC courts — if a homeowner refuses to pay for work performed without a required license, the contractor has no legal remedy. Licensed general contractors who subcontract to unlicensed parties also face potential disciplinary action. The regulatory framework is designed to protect consumers, and enforcement is real.
The $30,000 threshold is a cumulative project threshold, not a per-visit or per-invoice figure. A contractor who performs multiple phases of work on a single project — site preparation in one month and framing the next — counts the full project value when determining whether licensing is required. Some contractors attempt to structure projects as multiple small contracts to stay under the threshold; NC courts and the board have consistently found such arrangements to constitute a single project requiring licensure when they are part of a unified scope of work for the same owner at the same location.
Out-of-state contractors working in North Carolina must also hold a valid NCLBGC license. There is no reciprocity agreement that allows contractors licensed in other states to automatically work in NC without obtaining a NC license. However, some reciprocal exam credit arrangements exist with other states, meaning you may be able to have certain exam sections waived based on passing equivalent exams in your home state. Check with the NCLBGC for current reciprocity policies, as these arrangements change periodically based on agreements between state licensing boards.
| Section | Questions | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Business, Law and Finance | 80 | — |
| Trade Knowledge | 80 | — |
NC General Contractor License Classifications
The NCLBGC issues licenses in three classifications that determine the maximum single-project contract value you are authorized to accept. Your classification is determined at the time of application based on the financial information you submit, and it can be upgraded as your business grows and your financial position strengthens.
The Limited classification authorizes contractors to bid and contract on projects valued up to $500,000. This is the entry-level classification appropriate for smaller residential builders and remodelers who are building their business. The financial requirements for Limited are the lowest of the three tiers — applicants typically need to demonstrate a net worth sufficient to support the $500,000 project limit, though the board evaluates the complete financial picture rather than applying a single fixed formula.
The Intermediate classification authorizes projects up to $1,000,000. This tier is appropriate for established residential contractors moving into light commercial work or commercial contractors building mid-size projects. Financial requirements are proportionally higher, reflecting the greater bonding capacity and liquidity needed to manage million-dollar projects. Contractors upgrading from Limited to Intermediate must submit updated financial statements and may need to demonstrate a track record of successfully completing projects at or near the Limited threshold.
The Unlimited classification has no cap on project value and is the standard for commercial general contractors bidding on large institutional, industrial, or infrastructure projects. Financial requirements are the most stringent at this level, as the board must be confident that applicants can financially support large multi-year construction contracts. Many state and local government procurement requirements mandate Unlimited classification for projects above certain thresholds, making this classification essential for contractors competing for public work.
Beyond the financial classification, applicants must select one or more specialty designations that define the type of construction they are licensed to perform. The primary designations include Building (commercial and residential structures), Residential (single-family and multi-family residential up to four stories), Highway (roads, bridges, grading), Public Utilities (water/sewer infrastructure), and Specialty. Most general building contractors apply under the Building or Residential designation, or both if they work across both sectors. You must select at least one designation, and your exam content will reflect the designations you select.
Choosing your classification strategically at initial application can affect your business for years. Some contractors underestimate their financial position and apply for Limited when they would qualify for Intermediate, unnecessarily capping their bidding opportunities. Others overestimate and apply for Unlimited with financial statements that fall short, leading to application delays or downward classification by the board. Reviewing the NCLBGC's current published financial requirements for each classification before preparing your CPA statements ensures your application targets the appropriate tier without surprises.
Classification upgrades require a formal application to the board and submission of updated financial statements. There is no waiting period before you can request an upgrade — if your financial position strengthens in the first year after receiving your Limited license, you can apply to upgrade immediately.
Many contractors plan their classification path deliberately: they start at Limited or Intermediate, build a track record of completed projects, grow their retained earnings, and upgrade to the next tier once their CPA confirms the financial statements support it. This incremental approach reduces initial financial risk while preserving the option to pursue larger contracts as the business grows.

Max project value: $500,000 per contract
Best for: Residential remodelers, smaller home builders, entry-level commercial contractors
Financial requirement: Lower net worth threshold — contact NCLBGC for current minimums
Exam: Same two-part exam as all classifications (Business/Law + Trade Knowledge)
Upgrade path: Can upgrade to Intermediate after building financial strength; submit updated CPA-reviewed financial statements
NC General Contractor License Requirements
Qualifying for a North Carolina general contractor license requires meeting several distinct requirements that the NCLBGC evaluates through the application process. Understanding each requirement before you begin saves time and prevents incomplete applications that delay your approval. The board processes applications on a rolling basis, but incomplete submissions can add weeks to the timeline while you gather missing documentation.
The examination requirement is the most universally known component. All applicants must pass the two-part open-book exam administered by PSI Services: the Business, Law and Finance section and the Trade Knowledge section. Both sections consist of 80 questions each with a four-hour time limit per section. You must achieve a minimum score of 70% on each section, and scores from the two sections are independent — passing one does not waive the other.
Many applicants take a prep course or use a study guide specific to the NC General Contractor exam, as the business and finance section in particular covers construction accounting, lien law, and business entity requirements that are not intuitive for tradespeople coming from a field background.
Financial responsibility is the second major requirement. The NCLBGC requires all applicants to submit current financial statements prepared or reviewed by a licensed Certified Public Accountant. The financial statements must demonstrate sufficient net worth relative to the classification requested. For Limited classification, the financial bar is lower; for Unlimited, the board applies a much more rigorous analysis. Your CPA should be familiar with NCLBGC financial statement requirements before preparing the submission — boards have specific formatting expectations and will return non-conforming statements.
Applicants must also designate a qualifier — the individual who passed the licensing exam and whose qualifications support the license. In North Carolina, the license is issued to a business entity (sole proprietorship, LLC, corporation, or partnership), not to an individual. The qualifier is the person who passed the exam and whose financial information was submitted with the application.
If the qualifier leaves the company, the license may need to be re-qualified by a new exam passer within a specified period. This entity-based licensing structure differs from some states where licenses follow the individual, so understanding this distinction is important for business planning.

Annual renewal deadline: December 31 — submit renewal application + 8 CE hours
CE providers: Must be NCLBGC-approved; NC Home Builders Association and online providers available
Qualifier change: Notify the board promptly if your qualifier leaves — license may be suspended until a new qualifier is designated
Insurance: General liability required by most contracts; workers' comp required for 3+ employees under NC law
Insurance, Lien Law, and Professional Obligations
The continuing education requirement for license renewal is 8 hours annually. CE providers must be approved by the NCLBGC, and course topics typically cover changes to the NC Building Code, updated safety regulations, business law developments relevant to contractors, and environmental compliance. Many contractors complete their CE through online courses offered by approved providers, industry associations like the North Carolina Home Builders Association, or professional development programs offered by the NCLBGC itself. Keeping a CE completion record and submitting proof of completion with your renewal application by December 31 each year prevents late fees and license lapses.
Insurance and bonding requirements for NC general contractors are separate from the NCLBGC licensing requirements. The board does not mandate specific insurance minimums as a condition of licensure, but your contracts with owners — and any subcontracts you enter — will almost certainly require general liability insurance, workers' compensation coverage (if you have employees), and potentially umbrella coverage for larger projects. Many homeowners and commercial owners require contractors to provide certificates of insurance before work begins. Maintaining adequate coverage protects your license from claims that could trigger NCLBGC disciplinary proceedings and protects your business assets from project liability exposure.
Understanding the NC mechanic's lien law is an essential part of practicing as a licensed general contractor in the state. North Carolina has one of the more complex lien schemes in the country, with separate rights for contractors, subcontractors, and material suppliers that arise at different points in the project.
The Business, Law and Finance section of the licensing exam tests this material, and passing that section requires genuine familiarity with lien notice requirements, filing deadlines, and the lien agent system introduced in 2013. After licensing, staying current with lien law developments is a practical business necessity — lien rights are your primary tool for collecting on disputed accounts.
Building permit requirements in North Carolina apply independently of contractor licensing. Every project must comply with local building department permit requirements. Your license gives you the legal authority to contract for work; the building permit authorizes the specific construction activity at a specific location. Pulling required permits is both a legal obligation and a professional practice — unpermitted work exposes you to licensing disciplinary action, stop-work orders, and contract disputes if inspections reveal non-compliant work after completion.
Workers' compensation insurance is legally required for all North Carolina employers with three or more employees, including contractors. Even sole proprietors who use subcontractors regularly must understand the distinction between employees and independent contractors under NC law. The NC Industrial Commission audits contractors, and misclassifying workers as independent contractors to avoid coverage requirements carries significant financial penalties. Many general contractors purchase workers' compensation coverage that includes subcontractor labor as a risk management practice, regardless of whether the subcontractors qualify as independent contractors under NC rules.
Use written contracts on every project — verbal agreements are unenforceable in NC courts and the most common trigger for board complaints.
Pull all required permits — unpermitted work exposes you to stop-work orders and disciplinary action.
Respond promptly to NCLBGC inquiries — non-responsiveness escalates complaints.
Document change orders in writing — scope disputes resolved in your favor require paper trails.
Maintaining Your NC Contractor License
Maintaining a clean disciplinary record with the NCLBGC protects your license and your business reputation. The board receives consumer complaints and investigates allegations of fraud, project abandonment, failure to complete contracted work, and code violations. A license suspension or revocation ends your ability to legally work in North Carolina and is a matter of public record that clients can look up on the NCLBGC website.
Responding promptly to board inquiries, maintaining thorough project documentation, and using written contracts on every project over the threshold are the practices that protect you from the most common complaint triggers that lead to disciplinary proceedings.
Project management practices directly affect your licensing standing. Written contracts should include detailed scope of work descriptions, payment schedules tied to verified completion milestones, dispute resolution procedures, and clear change order authorization requirements. North Carolina courts and the NCLBGC consistently find that contractors who operate without written contracts bear more liability in disputes than those who document their agreements thoroughly. A simple contract template reviewed by a construction attorney costs far less than defending a board complaint or navigating a payment dispute in superior court.
The exam preparation process deserves serious planning. Most successful first-time applicants spend 60–120 hours studying across both sections, focusing especially on the Business, Law and Finance material, which covers topics that field-experienced contractors often find less familiar. Approved study materials include the NC Building Code books (which you may use during the open-book exam), contractor business law reference guides, and commercial prep courses offered by providers like the American Contractors Examination Services (ACES). Scheduling your exam with adequate preparation time — rather than cramming — significantly improves your first-attempt pass rate.

The NC Licensing Board for General Contractors (NCLBGC) is located in Raleigh, NC. Key details:
Website: nclbgc.org
Phone: (919) 571-4183
Exam Administrator: PSI Services — schedule at psiexams.com
Annual renewal deadline: December 31 each year
CE requirement: 8 hours per renewal period (some exemptions apply)
- ✓Register with PSI Services and schedule both exam sections
- ✓Study Business, Law and Finance section (construction contracts, lien law, business entities)
- ✓Study Trade Knowledge section (building codes, estimating, safety)
- ✓Pass both exam sections with 70% or higher
- ✓Engage a CPA to prepare NCLBGC-compliant financial statements
- ✓Select license classification (Limited, Intermediate, or Unlimited)
- ✓Select license designation(s) (Building, Residential, Highway, etc.)
- ✓Identify the business entity that will hold the license
- ✓Complete the NCLBGC application form online or by mail
- ✓Submit exam score reports with application
- ✓Pay the $75 application fee
- ✓Upon approval, display license at principal office as required
- ✓Complete 8 CE hours before annual December 31 renewal
- +Access to projects valued at $30,000+ — required by law for all such work
- +Credibility with homeowners and commercial clients who verify licensure
- +Required for many government and institutional bidding pre-qualifications
- +NCLBGC open-book exam reduces memorization pressure versus closed-book states
- +Classification upgrade path allows business growth without re-examination
- −Two-part exam requires preparation time — business section surprises many tradespeople
- −Financial statement requirement adds CPA costs ($500–$2,000 for review/audit)
- −Entity-based licensing means qualifier tied to business entity, not portable like individual license
- −Annual renewal with 8 CE hours adds ongoing time and cost
- −Classification limits (Limited at $500K) can restrict bidding until you upgrade
General Contractor License NC Questions and Answers
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Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.
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