New Hampshire Contractor Services Providers

The providers compiled on this page represent contractor service providers operating across New Hampshire's 10 counties, organized by trade category, service type, and geographic coverage area. Entries span licensed general contractors, specialty trades, residential operators, and commercial construction firms regulated under New Hampshire statutes and administered primarily through the New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification (OPLC). Understanding how these providers are structured — and what they do and do not verify — is essential for any property owner, project manager, or procurement officer using this resource.


Geographic Distribution

New Hampshire's contractor service landscape concentrates in three primary market clusters: the southern tier (Hillsborough and Rockingham counties), the Lakes Region and central corridor (Merrimack and Belknap counties), and the Seacoast and Upper Valley zones. The southern tier, anchored by Manchester and Nashua, accounts for the largest share of licensed contractor registrations in the state, driven by population density and sustained residential construction activity.

Providers are organized first by county, then by municipality, and finally by trade discipline. The county-level provider network provides the most granular breakdown, while Concord and Portsmouth entries reflect contractors serving both state government facilities and the dense Seacoast residential market respectively.

Rural counties — Coös, Grafton, and Sullivan — contain fewer active registrations per capita but include contractors licensed for excavation, site preparation, and infrastructure work common to northern New England terrain. Entries for these areas reflect actual OPLC license data where available and self-reported service areas where licensing does not require county-specific registration.

Scope and coverage limitations: This provider network covers contractors operating under New Hampshire jurisdiction exclusively. Contractors licensed in Maine, Vermont, or Massachusetts who have not established New Hampshire licensure or registration are not verified here, even if they perform work across state lines. Out-of-state contractor requirements and applicable reciprocity agreements govern whether such operators may lawfully work in New Hampshire. Federal contractors working exclusively on federally administered lands within the state fall outside this provider network's scope. Projects on tribal lands, U.S. Forest Service properties, or federal installations are not covered.


How to Read an Entry

Each provider entry follows a standardized structure designed to convey the maximum regulatory and operational detail in a compact format. The following numbered breakdown defines each field:

  1. Business Name — Registered trade name or legal entity name as filed with the New Hampshire Secretary of State or OPLC.
  2. License Type and Number — The specific credential class (e.g., Master Electrician, Mechanical Contractor, Home Improvement Contractor) and the OPLC-assigned license number.
  3. License Status — Active, Expired, Suspended, or Conditional, drawn from OPLC public records at the time of last data refresh.
  4. Trade Category — Primary discipline: general contracting, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, roofing, excavation, or home improvement.
  5. Service Area — Counties or municipalities declared by the contractor, not verified by physical office presence.
  6. Insurance on File — Whether a certificate of insurance was submitted as part of licensing or registration; this does not confirm current policy validity.
  7. Bonding Status — Whether a surety bond is on file per New Hampshire bonding requirements.
  8. Last Verified Date — The date on which the entry was cross-referenced against OPLC records.

Entries marked with a data flag indicate that one or more fields could not be confirmed against primary source records during the last verification cycle.


What Providers Include and Exclude

Included:
- Contractors holding active OPLC licenses in at least 1 regulated trade discipline
- Registered home improvement contractors operating under RSA 329-A
- Commercial general contractors with documented New Hampshire project history
- Specialty subcontractors whose primary license is issued by a New Hampshire regulatory board

Not included:
- Unlicensed handyman operators performing work below the statutory threshold requiring licensure
- Contractors whose licenses lapsed more than 24 months prior to the last data refresh
- Contractors operating exclusively under federal contracting vehicles without state-side licensure
- Design-build firms where the entity's primary registration is as an engineering or architectural firm rather than a contractor

The distinction between general contractor services and specialty contractor services is maintained throughout the provider network. A general contractor entry does not imply the firm holds independent specialty trade licenses; residential and commercial contractor categories are verified separately because New Hampshire's licensing framework treats residential home improvement contractors and commercial general contractors under different statutory instruments.


Verification Status

Provider data is cross-referenced against the OPLC public license lookup database, the New Hampshire Secretary of State's business registry, and, for insurance certificates, documents submitted directly to the OPLC. No entry constitutes an endorsement, and verification status is not equivalent to a current-standing guarantee.

Three verification tiers apply to entries in this network:

Readers performing due diligence on a specific contractor should consult the OPLC contractor license lookup directly and review the contractor verification tools available through state channels. The purpose and scope of this provider network clarifies the methodological standards applied across all providers and the limitations inherent in any third-party compilation of regulatory data.

References