CONTRACTOR LICENSING GUIDE
Contractor License Renewals & Continuing Education Requirements
Your license doesn’t maintain itself. Here’s what’s required at renewal, how often renewals happen, and what CE credits you need to keep your license active.
- ✓ Most states renew every 1-2 years
- ✓ Proof of current insurance and bond required at renewal
- ✓ CE hours required in most licensing states (14–28 hrs typical)
- ✓ Lapsed license = can’t legally contract — don’t let it happen
✓ 20+ Years Experience
✓ Same-Day COI
✓ Licensed All 50 States
What Renewal Actually Requires
Contractor license renewal is not just paying a fee and moving on. For most licensing states, renewal requires confirming that your insurance and bond are still active at the required minimums, completing any required continuing education, and in some cases confirming that no disciplinary actions are pending against your license.
The renewal requirements that trip contractors up most often: (1) an insurance policy that has lapsed or whose limits dropped below the licensing minimum, (2) a bond that was canceled and not replaced, or (3) CE requirements that were not completed in time. Each of these will block your renewal until resolved.
Typical renewal cycle
CE requirement per cycle
Grace period after expiration
Typical renewal fee range
Continuing Education Requirements
Most states that require licensing also require continuing education at renewal. CE requirements serve two purposes: keeping contractors current on code changes and safety standards, and maintaining professionalism across the licensed contractor pool.
CE content varies by state. Common required topics include:
- OSHA safety regulations and updates
- Current building code editions (IBC, IRC, NEC)
- Business practices and contract law updates
- Workers compensation and insurance requirements
- Green building / energy code compliance (some states)
CE can typically be completed online through state-approved providers. Florida requires 14 hours per renewal cycle with specific required topics. Alabama requires 6 hours per year for Class A licensees. Always verify your state’s current CE requirements with the licensing board — they change when code editions update.
Why Contractors Choose Trade Safe Insurance
Independent agency. 20+ years. We shop dozens of A-rated carriers to find the right coverage at the right price.
Independent Agency
We shop dozens of A-rated carriers — not one company, not one rate.
20+ Years Experience
Contractor insurance specialists — we know the trades, the risks, and the carriers that cover them.
Same-Day COI
Certificates of insurance issued the same day — so you never hold up a job start.
Hard-to-Place Risks
Roofers, excavators, demo contractors — we cover the trades others turn away.
License Renewal FAQs
How often do contractor licenses need to be renewed?
Most states renew every 1 or 2 years. Florida and California renew biennially. Your renewal date is tied to your original issue date or a fixed board calendar date.
What is required at renewal?
Renewal fee, proof of current insurance and bond at required minimums, and CE completion certificates in states that require continuing education.
What happens if my license lapses?
You cannot legally contract. Most states have a 30–90 day grace period with a late fee. After that, you may need to reapply as a new applicant and retake exams.
Can I renew online?
Yes — most state boards have online renewal portals. You upload insurance/bond proof, CE certificates, and pay by credit card.
Does my insurance need specific limits at renewal?
Yes. Your COI must show GL at or above the minimum for your license class. Some states require the board to be named as certificate holder. Lapsed or insufficient coverage blocks renewal.
Don’t Let an Insurance Lapse Hold Up Your Renewal
We keep your certificates current and issue new COIs the same day. Never miss a renewal because of a coverage gap.