How to Become a General Contractor in Texas: 2026 Guide
How to become a general contractor in Texas: licensing requirements by city, exam prep, insurance, bonding, and the step-by-step process to get your GC license.

Texas is one of the biggest construction markets in the country — and one of the most unusual when it comes to licensing. If you're researching how to become a general contractor in Texas, you'll quickly run into an apparent paradox: Texas doesn't have a statewide general contractor license.
That doesn't mean you can just grab a hammer and start bidding jobs. It means licensing authority sits with individual cities and counties rather than the state. In practice, this makes licensing more complex, not simpler — requirements vary dramatically depending on where you want to work.
This guide walks through exactly what's required, city by city, along with the insurance, bonding, and business registration steps that apply everywhere in Texas.
Does Texas Require a General Contractor License?
At the state level, no — Texas does not require a general contractor license for most residential or commercial construction work. Unlike California, Florida, or North Carolina, which have statewide licensing boards and exams, Texas delegates this authority to local jurisdictions.
However, a few specialty trades do have statewide licensing requirements through the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) or other state agencies:
- Electricians — licensed by TDLR (Master Electrician, Journeyman Electrician)
- Plumbers — licensed by the Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners
- HVAC — licensed by TDLR
- Air Conditioning and Refrigeration — TDLR
If your general contracting work involves managing licensed subcontractors in these trades, you're responsible for ensuring they hold valid licenses. Knowingly employing unlicensed tradespeople can create significant liability.

Texas City Licensing Requirements for General Contractors
Here's what the major Texas cities actually require. Verify current requirements directly with each city before you start working there — these rules change and online information goes stale.
Houston
Houston requires general contractors to register with the city before pulling permits. You'll need proof of general liability insurance (minimum $500,000), workers' compensation (or a written waiver if you have no employees), and to pay a registration fee. Houston does not require a written exam for general contractors, but you must demonstrate proof of insurance and register each year.
For roofing specifically, Houston requires a separate roofing contractor registration with higher insurance minimums ($1 million liability). If you do any roofing work, that's a separate registration process.
Dallas
Dallas requires building contractors to obtain a contractor registration before pulling city permits. Requirements include liability insurance ($500,000 minimum), workers' comp coverage, and a registration application with the City of Dallas Development Services Department. No exam is required for general contractors, though specialty trade work still requires the relevant state license.
Austin
Austin requires a Building Contractor Registration for general contractors performing work that requires a permit. You'll need $1 million in general liability insurance and workers' compensation coverage. Austin is more stringent than Houston and Dallas in terms of insurance minimums. The registration is renewed annually.
Austin also has additional requirements for contractors working on projects within specific overlay districts or doing work that involves historic structures — check with Austin Development Services for your specific project type.
San Antonio
San Antonio requires a contractor registration through the Development Services Department. Insurance requirements are similar to other major cities. No exam is required for general contractors, but you must show proof of liability coverage and workers' comp before permits will be issued.
Fort Worth
Fort Worth requires contractor registration with the Building Inspection Division. General liability insurance and workers' comp are required. As with other cities, specialty trades (electrical, plumbing, HVAC) require the relevant state license on top of any city registration.
How to Get a General Contractor License in Texas: Step by Step
While the specifics vary by city, the general process for setting up a legitimate general contracting business in Texas follows a common path.

Form Your Business Entity
Obtain an EIN
Get General Liability Insurance
Obtain Workers' Compensation Insurance (or Document Exemption)
Register with Your Target City
Get Your State Specialty Licenses (If Needed)
Open a Business Bank Account and Track Finances Separately
Insurance and Bonding for Texas General Contractors
Even though Texas doesn't require a contractor bond at the state level (unlike some states that require a surety bond as part of licensing), many project owners — especially commercial clients and homeowners associations — will require a contractor to be bonded before awarding contracts.
A surety bond (also called a contractor's license bond or performance bond) protects the client if you fail to complete the work or meet contractual obligations. A $10,000–$25,000 contractor bond typically costs $200–$500 per year depending on your credit history.
Being bonded is also a marketing advantage. "Licensed, bonded, and insured" is shorthand that communicates professionalism to residential clients who may not know the details of Texas licensing. Even if a bond isn't legally required in your city, carrying one differentiates you from less established competitors.
Insurance Checklist for Texas GCs
- General liability: $1 million per occurrence, $2 million aggregate is standard for most commercial work
- Workers' compensation: required if you have employees; strongly recommended even for small crews
- Commercial auto: if you or employees drive vehicles for work
- Tools and equipment floater: covers tools and equipment on job sites (often excluded from general liability)
- Umbrella policy: adds additional liability coverage above your primary policies — often required for larger commercial contracts

Do You Need to Pass an Exam?
For a general contractor in most Texas cities — no, there's no written exam requirement. This contrasts with states like Florida and California where a standardized exam is required for licensure.
However, if you want to work in multiple states (which many Texas contractors do, especially those near state borders), you'll need to understand the licensing requirements elsewhere. Florida requires passing the Florida Contractor Licensing exam. North Carolina requires a contractor exam and experience verification. If you want to expand operations, pursuing a nationally recognized credential or understanding multi-state licensing makes sense.
Some Texas GCs voluntarily pursue certifications like the National Center for Construction Education and Research (NCCER) credentials or the U.S. Green Building Council's LEED Accredited Professional designation. These aren't licensing requirements, but they demonstrate verified competence and can open doors with commercial clients who require proof of qualifications.
For exam prep resources covering general contractor concepts, the general contractor license study guide covers the content tested in states with formal exam requirements — useful if you're planning to expand to licensure-required states.
Starting a General Contracting Business in Texas: Practical Considerations
Getting your registration in order is just the first step. A few additional points that matter for actually running the business successfully.
Contracts and Lien Rights
Texas has specific lien law requirements for construction contracts. Residential contracts over $5,000 must include specific disclosures. You must send preliminary lien notices (called "Notice to Owner" in Texas) within specific timeframes to preserve your right to file a lien if you're not paid. Failing to follow the lien notice rules can cost you the right to secure payment for work you've already completed.
Get a construction attorney to review your standard contract template before you use it. This is one area where the upfront cost of good legal advice pays for itself repeatedly.
Permit Pulling and Inspection
As a registered general contractor, you'll be the permit holder for the projects you manage. This means you're responsible for scheduling inspections, ensuring the work passes, and resolving any code violations — even if a subcontractor created the problem. Track your permit history carefully; a pattern of failed inspections affects your reputation with the building department.
Subcontractor Verification
Always verify that your licensed subcontractors (electricians, plumbers, HVAC techs) have current, active licenses before they start work. You can check TDLR's online license verification tool for most trades. An unlicensed sub whose work fails inspection — or worse, causes injury — puts you in a difficult legal and financial position.
General Contractor Salary in Texas
What can you expect to earn as a general contractor in Texas? The answer depends heavily on whether you're an employee of a construction company or running your own business.
Employed project managers and superintendents working for large Texas construction firms typically earn $75,000–$120,000 per year depending on experience and project complexity. Owner-operators of small to mid-size GC businesses can earn significantly more — or significantly less — depending on their ability to price jobs accurately, manage costs, and maintain consistent project flow.
The construction boom in Texas metro areas (DFW, Houston, Austin corridor) has been strong, and labor shortages have kept margins reasonable for contractors who can deliver quality work reliably. For a deeper breakdown of career trajectory and earning potential, see the general contractor career and salary guide.
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.
Join the Discussion
Connect with other students preparing for this exam. Share tips, ask questions, and get advice from people who have been there.
View discussion (2 replies)