New York Contractor Services Listings
The New York contractor services landscape spans licensing regimes, registration categories, insurance requirements, and permit frameworks that vary by municipality, trade, and project type. This page organizes the listings structure used across the New York Contractor Authority reference network, describing how contractor categories are classified, how listing data is maintained, and how the two borough-level member sites relate to the statewide reference. Navigating this sector requires understanding both statewide regulatory standards and the distinct local requirements imposed by New York City agencies.
Listing categories
Contractor listings within this network are organized across two primary classification axes: trade discipline and project scope.
By trade discipline, listings cover:
- General contractor services — firms holding or operating under general contractor qualifications for multi-trade or whole-project oversight
- Specialty contractor services — trade-specific firms licensed or registered in a single discipline
- Electrical contractor services — contractors operating under New York State Department of Labor electrical licensing requirements or local equivalents
- Plumbing contractor services — firms licensed under the New York State Education Department master plumber framework or applicable municipal codes
- HVAC contractor services — mechanical contractors covering heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems
- Roofing, masonry, and concrete contractor services — exterior and structural trade specialists
- Demolition and excavation contractor services — firms operating under specific permit and environmental compliance requirements
By project scope, listings are segmented into:
- Residential contractor services — work on one- to four-family dwellings, subject to the New York State Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration framework administered by the Department of State
- Commercial contractor services — firms working on commercial, mixed-use, or industrial structures
- New construction contractor services — ground-up project specialists distinct from renovation and remodeling work
- Renovation and remodeling contractor services — alteration-focused firms subject to certificate-of-occupancy and permit requirements
The distinction between residential and commercial classifications carries regulatory weight. Home improvement contractors operating in New York State must register under General Business Law Article 36-A, while commercial contractors face different insurance thresholds and bond requirements depending on jurisdiction and contract value.
How currency is maintained
Listing accuracy depends on monitoring regulatory status through official state and municipal channels. Contractor license verification in New York flows through the New York State Department of State Business Licenses for home improvement registrations and through the New York City Department of Buildings for city-specific contractor licenses. The license verification reference on this network identifies the controlling verification sources by license type.
Listing records are cross-referenced against:
- Department of State Home Improvement Contractor registration status
- New York City Department of Buildings contractor license lookup (for the five boroughs)
- Workers' compensation certificate of compliance records maintained by the New York State Workers' Compensation Board
- Certificate of insurance documentation aligned with New York contractor insurance requirements
Listings flagged with compliance exceptions — including lapsed insurance certificates, expired registrations, or disciplinary actions — are reviewed against the contractor disciplinary actions and complaints reference. Disciplinary records in New York are publicly maintained through the Department of State and the Department of Buildings enforcement databases.
How to use listings alongside other resources
Listings function as an entry point, not a compliance determination. A contractor's presence in a listing category does not substitute for independent license verification or confirmation that a firm holds current bonding documentation for the project type in question.
Researchers and project owners using this network should cross-reference listings against:
- The New York contractor regulatory agencies reference, which maps the 7 primary agencies with jurisdictional authority over contractor operations in the state
- The permit requirements reference for project-level compliance verification
- The prevailing wage requirements reference for any public works engagement, where New York Labor Law Article 8 and Article 9 thresholds apply
For borough-specific project work within the five boroughs, two member sites carry distinct jurisdictional reference depth. The Brooklyn Contractor Authority covers contractor licensing, permit structures, and compliance requirements specific to Kings County, including the Department of Buildings filing categories and community board considerations that affect project timelines in Brooklyn. The Queens Contractor Authority addresses the regulatory landscape for Queens County, including the dual-jurisdiction complexity that arises from both New York City agency oversight and state-level registration requirements affecting the borough's high volume of residential and mixed-use construction activity.
How listings are organized
Listings within this network follow a hierarchical structure: statewide categories at the top level, borough-specific sub-listings nested under the relevant municipality, and trade-specific entries cross-referenced where a single firm operates across multiple disciplines.
Statewide vs. municipal scope is the primary organizational boundary. Firms registered only under the New York State Home Improvement Contractor program but not holding a New York City contractor license appear exclusively in statewide residential listing categories and are explicitly excluded from listings covering the five boroughs, where separate Department of Buildings licensing is required.
Scope and coverage limitations: This directory covers contractor services operating under New York State jurisdiction and New York City municipal authority. Listings and regulatory references do not apply to contractors operating exclusively in New Jersey, Connecticut, or Pennsylvania, even where those firms may advertise service into New York border counties. Federal contractor classifications — including those governed by the Federal Acquisition Regulation — fall outside the scope of this reference network. Minority- and women-owned business certification listings are cross-referenced against the New York State MWBE certification program, administered by Empire State Development, but federal MWBE designations are not covered here.
Public works contractors — those bidding on state agency or municipal contracts subject to New York Labor Law prevailing wage schedules — appear in a dedicated listing category and are cross-referenced with the public works contractor requirements reference, which addresses the Wicks Law thresholds and certified payroll obligations that distinguish public-sector engagement from private project work.