Construction Directory: Purpose and Scope
The National Handyman Authority construction directory indexes licensed and registered construction service providers operating across the United States, organized by trade category, service type, and geographic coverage. The directory serves service seekers, procurement professionals, property managers, and industry researchers who need structured access to verified contractor and handyman listings. Coverage spans residential, light commercial, and specialty trade work — from general handyman services to permit-required structural and mechanical trades. The scope of this directory and the standards that govern it are defined below.
How to use this resource
The directory is organized along two primary axes: trade category and service classification. Trade categories follow the Construction Specifications Institute (CSI) MasterFormat division structure, which groups construction work into defined scopes such as concrete, masonry, metals, wood and plastics, thermal and moisture protection, openings, finishes, conveying systems, mechanical, and electrical. Service classification distinguishes between:
- General handyman services — minor repairs, maintenance, and improvements that fall below state-defined contractor license thresholds, typically jobs valued under $500 to $1,000 depending on jurisdiction
- Specialty trade contractors — licensed professionals operating under regulated scopes including electrical, plumbing, HVAC, roofing, and structural work
- General contractors — licensed entities holding state-issued General Contractor (GC) or Residential Contractor (RC) licenses, authorized to oversee multi-trade projects and pull permits
- Design-build firms — entities providing combined architectural or engineering design alongside construction execution
Users navigating Handyman Listings can filter by these categories. For context on how the broader directory network is organized, the Handyman Directory Purpose and Scope page provides parallel reference framing for the handyman-specific segment of this resource.
Permit status is a key differentiator within the directory. Projects requiring building permits — as required under the International Building Code (IBC) and International Residential Code (IRC), adopted in 49 states — must be executed by appropriately licensed contractors. The directory flags trade categories where permitting is typically required so that service seekers can match project type to provider qualification.
Standards for inclusion
Listing eligibility within the National Handyman Authority construction directory is governed by documented qualification criteria rather than paid placement. Providers are assessed against three threshold criteria:
- Licensing verification: Active state contractor license or registration on file with the relevant state licensing board (e.g., California Contractors State License Board, Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation)
- Insurance documentation: General liability coverage at a minimum of $300,000 per occurrence is the baseline threshold applied during listing review, consistent with industry norms for residential trade work
- Geographic service declaration: Providers must declare a defined service area at the state, metro, or county level — national or multi-state blanket claims without supporting documentation are not accepted
Specialty trade providers — electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and similar — must hold valid journeyman or master licenses in the jurisdictions where they are listed, as these trades are regulated by the National Electrical Code (NEC, NFPA 70), Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC), and applicable mechanical codes enforced at the local authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) level.
Safety compliance is a secondary screening dimension. Providers operating under OSHA regulations — specifically 29 CFR Part 1926, which governs construction industry safety — and who have active EMR (Experience Modification Rate) records available are noted accordingly in applicable listings.
How the directory is maintained
Directory records undergo structured review on a rolling basis. License status is cross-referenced against state licensing board public databases, which are updated by agencies on schedules ranging from weekly to quarterly depending on the state. Listings flagged for expired licenses, lapsed insurance, or disciplinary actions recorded by state boards are placed under review and suspended pending resolution.
The How to Use This Handyman Resource page documents the operational review cycle in greater detail, including how providers can submit updated documentation and how listing disputes are processed.
User-submitted flags — such as reports of unlicensed work, unresolved complaints with the Better Business Bureau, or formal contractor board disciplinary actions — are triaged in a timely manner. Flagged listings are not removed on the basis of unverified user reports alone; corroborating official record is required before a listing is suspended.
What the directory does not cover
The directory does not function as a contractor vetting service, a warranty program, or a dispute resolution mechanism. Inclusion in the directory reflects documented licensing and insurance status at the time of listing review — it does not constitute endorsement, performance certification, or any guarantee of workmanship quality.
The following categories fall outside directory scope:
- Unlicensed handyman operators in states where licensure is required for the declared scope of work — including California (CSLB threshold: projects over $500 require a license), Nevada, and Florida
- Owner-builder projects — individuals pulling permits for personal-use construction under owner-builder exemptions are not directory-eligible providers
- Material suppliers, equipment rental companies, and design-only firms without a construction execution component
- Federal construction contractors operating exclusively under Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) Part 36 frameworks without state-licensed commercial operations
The directory also does not adjudicate disputes between service seekers and listed providers. Formal complaints are directed to the relevant state contractor licensing board, the applicable Better Business Bureau regional office, or — for OSHA-regulated safety violations — OSHA's construction enforcement division operating under 29 CFR Part 1926. Contact information for directory administrative matters is available separately from provider dispute channels.