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Contractor Licensing Requirements in South Dakota
South Dakota has no statewide general contractor license — licensing runs through your city and the Department of Revenue instead. Get your coverage sorted fast with Trade Safe.
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Contractor Licensing Requirements in South Dakota
South Dakota is one of a handful of states where general contractors aren’t licensed by a state board at all. Instead, contractors deal with a state excise tax license, city-level permitting rules, and — for a few specific trades — real state licensing boards. Here’s how the whole system actually fits together.
South Dakota’s Contractor Licensing System
There is no statewide general contractor license in South Dakota; cities like Sioux Falls, Rapid City, Brookings, and Watertown each run their own local licensing and permitting programs with different fees and requirements. Every contractor performing construction services statewide must still hold a Contractor’s Excise Tax License from the South Dakota Department of Revenue, which applies a 2% excise tax to gross project receipts. Electricians and plumbers are the exception — those trades are licensed at the state level by the South Dakota Electrical Commission and the State Plumbing Commission.
License & Registration Types in South Dakota
- Contractor’s Excise Tax License (South Dakota Dept. of Revenue) — required statewide for anyone performing construction, remodeling, or repair work
- City/municipal contractor license — issued locally (e.g., Sioux Falls, Rapid City); requirements and fees vary by jurisdiction
- State Electrical License — issued by the SD Electrical Commission for electrical contractors and journeymen
- State Plumbing License — issued by the SD Plumbing Commission for plumbing contractors and journeymen
Exam & Experience Requirements
Because there’s no general statewide contractor license, there’s no statewide trade exam for general construction — exam requirements (if any) are set by the individual city. Rapid City, for example, requires passing a building exam as part of its local licensing process. Electricians and plumbers must meet the SD Electrical Commission’s and Plumbing Commission’s respective exam and journeyman/master experience requirements.
NASCLA Reciprocity
South Dakota does not participate in the NASCLA Accredited Examination program, since it has no statewide general contractor license for the exam to apply to.
Bonding & Insurance to Get Licensed
Corporations and LLCs typically need a Contractor’s Excise Tax License Bond sized to expected tax liability, and many cities layer on their own bond requirement (Sioux Falls requires a $20,000 compliance bond). General liability insurance is expected almost everywhere, usually $500,000–$2,000,000 depending on the city.
For exact GL and workers’ comp dollar minimums required to get licensed, see Insurance Minimums to Get Licensed.
Reciprocity with Other States
Because South Dakota doesn’t run a statewide general contractor license, there’s no formal reciprocity agreement to speak of for general contracting; any reciprocity that exists applies narrowly to the state-licensed electrical and plumbing trades.
South Dakota Licensing Fees & Timeline
| Item | Cost / Time |
|---|---|
| Contractor’s Excise Tax License (state) | No fee to register; 2% excise tax on gross receipts |
| Sioux Falls city license fee | $300 |
| Sioux Falls compliance bond | $20,000 |
| Local license renewal cycle | Typically annual (varies by city) |
Penalties for Unlicensed Contracting
Contracting without the required Contractor’s Excise Tax License can trigger back taxes, penalties, and interest from the SD Department of Revenue, and working without the applicable city license can mean permit denials, stop-work orders, or municipal fines.
Resources: SD Dept. of Revenue — Contractor’s Excise Tax, City of Sioux Falls — Contractor Licensing
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a state license to be a general contractor in South Dakota?
No. South Dakota has no statewide general contractor license — general contracting is regulated at the city level, though every contractor still needs a state Contractor’s Excise Tax License.
Which trades are actually licensed by the state?
Electricians and plumbers are licensed statewide by the SD Electrical Commission and SD Plumbing Commission, respectively; general contractors are not.
Does every South Dakota city require a contractor license?
Many do — Sioux Falls, Rapid City, Brookings, Watertown, and Sturgis all run their own programs — but requirements and fees differ by city, so you need to check locally.
What happens if I skip the excise tax license?
You can face back taxes, penalties, and interest from the SD Department of Revenue, since the 2% excise tax applies to your gross construction receipts regardless of local licensing.
Licensing rules and fees change; verify current requirements with the South Dakota Department of Revenue and the relevant city before applying.
Back to State Coverage
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