Oregon Contractor License Requirements

Oregon's contractor licensing framework is administered by the Construction Contractors Board (CCB), a state agency that regulates residential and commercial construction activity across all 36 Oregon counties. Licensing requirements vary by contractor type, business structure, and project scope — with distinct pathways for residential, commercial, and specialty trades. Understanding which license category applies to a given business operation is the first practical challenge every contractor entering the Oregon market must resolve.


Definition and Scope

Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS) Chapter 701 establishes the legal foundation for contractor licensing in Oregon. Under ORS 701.021, any person or business entity that performs, offers to perform, or solicits work covered under the statute must hold a valid CCB license before beginning construction activity. This applies to general contractors, subcontractors, and specialty contractors operating on residential or commercial projects within state boundaries.

The CCB defines "contractor" broadly: any entity that, for compensation, undertakes or offers to undertake construction, improvement, repair, or demolition of structures. This definition captures sole proprietors, partnerships, limited liability companies, and corporations alike. Unpaid labor between immediate family members on a personal residence and certain government entities fall outside CCB jurisdiction, but those exemptions are narrow and subject to specific statutory conditions described under Oregon owner-builder exemptions.

Scope and limitations: This page covers licensing requirements imposed by the Oregon CCB under state law. It does not address federal contractor registration requirements (such as SAM.gov registration for federal projects), city or county business licenses, or trade-specific certifications administered by separate Oregon agencies — for example, the Oregon Building Codes Division oversees plumbing and electrical licensing independently of the CCB. Municipal permits are addressed separately under Oregon contractor permit requirements.


Core Mechanics or Structure

Every CCB license application requires the applicant to complete four foundational requirements before a license number is issued:

  1. Business registration — The entity must be registered with the Oregon Secretary of State if operating as an LLC, corporation, or partnership.
  2. Surety bond — Residential contractors must carry a minimum $20,000 surety bond; commercial contractors must carry a $10,000 bond (Oregon CCB Bond Requirements).
  3. General liability insurance — Residential contractors must carry at minimum $500,000 per occurrence; commercial contractors must carry $500,000 per occurrence (Oregon CCB Insurance Requirements).
  4. CCB registration — The completed application, applicable fees, and supporting documentation must be submitted through the CCB's online licensing portal (Oregon CCB Registration).

License fees are established by the CCB under administrative rulemaking authority. As of the fee schedule published on the Oregon CCB website, residential contractor license fees and commercial contractor license fees differ based on contractor category and business structure. The CCB issues licenses for 2-year terms, with renewal required to maintain active status (Oregon contractor license renewal).

Certain license categories require applicants to pass a written examination administered through PSI Examination Services, the CCB's designated testing vendor. The exam covers Oregon construction law, business practices, and trade-specific knowledge. Details on which categories require testing appear under Oregon contractor exam requirements.

Workers' compensation insurance is a separate but parallel requirement. Any contractor with employees must demonstrate coverage through the Oregon Workers' Benefit Fund or a private insurer before a license is issued. Solo owner-operators with no employees may qualify for an exemption, but that status must be documented. The full framework is addressed under Oregon contractor workers' compensation.


Causal Relationships or Drivers

Oregon's licensing structure was shaped by legislative responses to documented consumer harm in the construction sector. The 1971 legislative session that created the CCB's predecessor framework was a direct response to complaints about unlicensed contractors abandoning projects, performing defective work, and leaving homeowners with no financial recourse. Subsequent amendments to ORS Chapter 701 strengthened bond requirements and expanded disciplinary authority after the 2008 housing crisis produced a spike in CCB complaint filings.

The bond and insurance minimums are calibrated to provide baseline consumer protection, not to reflect actual project values — a design tension that surfaces frequently in high-value residential construction. The $20,000 bond minimum for residential contractors, for example, does not scale with contract size, meaning a single failed project can exhaust bond coverage entirely. This is why lien law, addressed under Oregon contractor lien laws, operates as a parallel protection mechanism.

Labor shortages in the Oregon construction industry have also driven policy discussions about apprenticeship pathways. The CCB and Oregon's Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI) coordinate on apprenticeship standards that feed licensed contractor pipelines, particularly in residential trades. The apprenticeship framework is documented separately under Oregon contractor apprenticeship programs.


Classification Boundaries

The CCB issues licenses across three primary structural categories, each with sub-classifications:

Residential Contractor — Authorizes work on single-family dwellings, duplexes, and multi-family structures up to a certain threshold. Residential licensees can be classified as:
- General residential contractor (unrestricted residential work)
- Residential specialty contractor (limited to specific trades or scopes)
- Home services contractor (repair and maintenance work under $2,000 per project)

Commercial Contractor — Authorizes work on structures not classified as residential, including office buildings, retail spaces, and industrial facilities. Sub-classifications mirror residential categories in structure.

Developer — Applies to entities that build structures for sale without performing physical construction work themselves. Developers must still hold CCB registration.

The distinction between residential and commercial licensing carries significant implications for bond amounts, insurance requirements, and exam obligations. A licensed residential contractor cannot legally perform commercial work without obtaining the appropriate commercial endorsement or license. The full comparison is documented under Oregon residential contractor vs. commercial.

Specialty contractor classifications — covering trades such as roofing, siding, painting, landscaping, and HVAC — operate under their own scope limitations. A licensed roofing specialty contractor cannot legally perform foundation work, for example. The complete taxonomy of specialty classifications is published by the CCB and cross-referenced under Oregon specialty contractor classifications.

Lead and asbestos abatement work requires separate certification through the Oregon Health Authority, independent of CCB licensing. Contractors performing this work must hold both credentials (Oregon lead and asbestos contractor certifications).


Tradeoffs and Tensions

The two-year license cycle creates administrative continuity but introduces a gap risk: a contractor whose bond or insurance lapses mid-cycle technically holds an inactive license even if the CCB registration has not formally expired. The CCB monitors bond and insurance status through direct reporting from sureties and insurers, but the notification-to-deactivation timeline is not instantaneous, creating brief windows of apparent validity for lapsed credentials. Consumers verifying contractor status should always check the live CCB license lookup rather than relying on a contractor-supplied license number. The verification process is described under verifying Oregon contractor license.

Subcontractors face a distinct structural tension: they must hold their own CCB license regardless of whether the general contractor on the project is licensed. There is no "covered by the prime" doctrine in Oregon licensing law. Unlicensed subcontractors expose the general contractor to disciplinary action as well. This interdependency is addressed in full under Oregon subcontractor requirements.

Public works contracting adds a third layer: the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI) administers prevailing wage requirements under the Oregon Prevailing Wage Rate Law (ORS Chapter 279C), which applies to public contracts above the $50,000 threshold. CCB licensing and BOLI prevailing wage compliance are separate obligations that must both be satisfied. The public works framework is covered under Oregon public works contractor requirements.


Common Misconceptions

Misconception: A federal contractor registration substitutes for Oregon CCB licensing.
Correction: Federal registration (e.g., SAM.gov) and Oregon CCB licensing are entirely separate systems with no cross-recognition. A contractor holding a federal registration but no CCB license is unlicensed for purposes of Oregon state law.

Misconception: A homeowner acting as their own general contractor needs no registration.
Correction: Oregon's owner-builder exemption applies only under specific conditions tied to the homeowner's intent to occupy the property and limitations on resale within 24 months. The exemption is not automatic and does not extend to hired subcontractors.

Misconception: Passing the contractor exam in another state creates reciprocity with Oregon.
Correction: Oregon has no broad reciprocity agreement with other states for contractor licensing. Out-of-state licensed contractors must satisfy Oregon's full application requirements, including Oregon-specific examination where applicable.

Misconception: The CCB license covers all trade work on a project.
Correction: Electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work requires licensing through the Oregon Building Codes Division, not the CCB. A licensed general contractor cannot self-perform electrical work without a separate electrical license.


Checklist or Steps

The following sequence reflects the Oregon CCB's published application process for a new residential contractor license:

  1. Determine the applicable license category (residential, commercial, specialty) based on intended scope of work.
  2. Register the business entity with the Oregon Secretary of State if operating under any structure other than a sole proprietorship under the owner's legal name.
  3. Obtain a surety bond meeting CCB minimum requirements from a licensed surety; bond must name the CCB as obligee.
  4. Obtain general liability insurance at or above CCB minimums; insurer must be authorized to transact business in Oregon.
  5. Obtain workers' compensation insurance or document eligibility for the sole proprietor exemption.
  6. Complete the CCB license application through the online portal, attaching bond certificate, insurance certificate, and Secretary of State registration confirmation.
  7. Pay the applicable license fee as published in the current CCB fee schedule.
  8. If the selected license category requires examination, schedule and pass the PSI-administered exam before or as part of the application process.
  9. Receive CCB license number upon application approval; display the license number on all contracts, invoices, and advertising as required by ORS 701.

Continuing education requirements apply at renewal for certain residential contractor categories. The structure of those requirements is documented under Oregon contractor continuing education.

Contractors operating in public-facing consumer contexts should also review Oregon contractor consumer protections and the complaint and disciplinary framework at Oregon contractor complaint process and Oregon contractor disciplinary actions.


Reference Table or Matrix

License Category Bond Minimum GL Insurance Minimum Exam Required Renewal Period
Residential General Contractor $20,000 $500,000/occurrence Yes (category-dependent) 2 years
Residential Specialty Contractor $20,000 $500,000/occurrence Yes (category-dependent) 2 years
Home Services Contractor $10,000 $300,000/occurrence No 2 years
Commercial General Contractor $10,000 $500,000/occurrence Yes 2 years
Commercial Specialty Contractor $10,000 $500,000/occurrence Yes (category-dependent) 2 years
Developer (Residential) $20,000 $500,000/occurrence No 2 years

Bond and insurance figures reflect CCB-published minimums. Actual project contracts and lender requirements may impose higher thresholds. Verify current figures directly with the CCB before application.

For a structured entry point into Oregon's contractor service landscape, the Oregon Contractor Authority home provides an overview of how these regulatory dimensions interconnect across license types and project categories.


References

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