Checklist for Hiring a Licensed Contractor in New Hampshire
Hiring a licensed contractor in New Hampshire requires navigating a structured verification process governed by state statutes, licensing boards, and trade-specific regulatory requirements. This reference covers the sequential steps a property owner or project manager must complete before engaging a contractor — from credential verification through contract execution. The distinctions between license types, insurance thresholds, and permit obligations directly affect project legality, lien exposure, and dispute resolution outcomes.
Definition and scope
A licensed contractor in New Hampshire holds credentials issued or recognized by the New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification (OPLC), or by a trade-specific board operating under New Hampshire statute. Licensing requirements vary significantly by trade: electricians, plumbers, and HVAC technicians operate under mandatory state licensing, while general contractors performing residential work above $1,000 in total project value must register under the Home Improvement Contractor statute (RSA 310-A:188–209).
The distinction between registration and full licensing is material. Registration confirms a baseline identity and bonding requirement; licensing confirms examination passage, continuing education compliance, and trade competency. For a detailed breakdown of these credential tiers, see New Hampshire Contractor Registration vs. Licensing.
Scope and geographic coverage: This checklist applies exclusively to contracting work performed within the state of New Hampshire. Projects in Maine, Vermont, Massachusetts, or other adjacent states fall under those states' licensing jurisdictions and are not covered here. Federal projects, tribal land projects, and military installation work involve separate procurement frameworks not addressed in this reference. Contractors operating across state lines should also consult New Hampshire Out-of-State Contractor Requirements.
How it works
The hiring verification process in New Hampshire follows a defined sequential structure. Skipping steps — particularly insurance confirmation before contract signing — creates enforceable liability exposure for the property owner.
Step-by-step verification checklist:
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Confirm license or registration status via the OPLC's public license lookup at oplc.nh.gov. The database reflects active, expired, suspended, and revoked credentials in real time. For trade-specific categories, review New Hampshire Contractor License Types.
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Verify insurance coverage. New Hampshire home improvement contractors must carry general liability insurance. Request a certificate of insurance (COI) naming the property owner as certificate holder. Minimum coverage thresholds differ by trade and project scale; structural details are available at New Hampshire Contractor Insurance Requirements.
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Confirm bonding status. Home improvement contractors are required to carry a surety bond under RSA 310-A. Bond confirmation is separate from liability insurance. See New Hampshire Contractor Bonding Requirements for statutory minimums.
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Check permit requirements before work begins. Permits for electrical, plumbing, HVAC, structural, and demolition work are legally required in New Hampshire. Verify which permits apply via the municipality's building department and cross-reference New Hampshire Contractor Permit Requirements.
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Review the written contract. New Hampshire law requires home improvement contracts exceeding $1,000 to be in writing and to include specific disclosures — including the contractor's registration number, a description of work, and cancellation rights. See New Hampshire Contractor Contract Requirements.
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Confirm worker classification compliance. Misclassification of employees as subcontractors exposes property owners to secondary liability in some circumstances. Review New Hampshire Contractor Worker Classification for the applicable statutory tests.
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Verify lien exposure. New Hampshire's mechanic's lien statute (RSA 447) permits subcontractors and material suppliers to file liens against a property even if the property owner paid the general contractor. Understand this risk before execution.
Common scenarios
Residential renovation vs. specialty trade work: A homeowner hiring a general contractor for a kitchen renovation faces a different verification profile than one hiring an electrician for a panel upgrade. The electrician must hold a license issued under RSA 319-C through the Electricians' Board, while the renovation contractor may operate under home improvement registration. Both require separate insurance confirmation.
Licensed vs. unlicensed subcontractors: A licensed general contractor may engage subcontractors. Property owners should request a list of subcontractors and verify each one independently. A general contractor's license does not extend licensing coverage to unlicensed subs performing trade work that legally requires a license.
New construction vs. home improvement: New construction in New Hampshire typically falls under municipal building codes enforced by local building officials. Home improvement work on existing structures triggers the RSA 310-A registration requirement if the value exceeds $1,000. The permit-issuing authority differs between these two categories.
Out-of-state contractors: Contractors licensed in Massachusetts, Maine, Vermont, or other states are not automatically authorized to perform licensed trade work in New Hampshire. Reciprocity agreements exist for some trades but are trade-specific. Verify reciprocity status at New Hampshire Contractor Reciprocity Agreements.
Decision boundaries
The critical decision points in this checklist separate compliant engagements from those carrying regulatory, financial, or legal risk.
- Project value below $1,000: Home improvement registration is not triggered, but trade licensing for electrical, plumbing, and HVAC work still applies regardless of project cost.
- Project involves structural changes: Building permits are mandatory; proceeding without a permit can void homeowner's insurance coverage and create title complications on resale.
- Contractor cannot produce a COI: Work should not commence. An uninsured contractor performing work on a property transfers risk directly to the property owner for injuries and third-party damage.
- Contract is verbal: Under RSA 310-A, verbal contracts for home improvement work above $1,000 are not compliant. In the event of a dispute, an unwritten contract significantly weakens the property owner's position in proceedings before the OPLC or in civil court. For dispute pathways, see New Hampshire Contractor Dispute Resolution.
The OPLC complaint process is the primary administrative remedy for licensing violations and contractor misconduct. Documentation collected during the checklist process — license numbers, COIs, signed contracts, permit numbers — forms the evidentiary record for any complaint or lien defense.
References
- New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification (OPLC)
- RSA 310-A: Home Improvement Contractor Registration, New Hampshire General Court
- RSA 319-C: Electricians' Licensing, New Hampshire General Court
- RSA 447: Mechanic's Liens, New Hampshire General Court
- New Hampshire OPLC License Lookup Portal
- New Hampshire Building Codes — Division of Fire Safety