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The Northeast includes 9 jurisdictions where regulation tends to focus on specialty trades and public-works prequalification rather than comprehensive general contractor licensing. Several states (Massachusetts, Pennsylvania) lean heavily on prequalification for highway and public works. Others (Connecticut, Rhode Island) maintain broader licensing or registration programs. New York is notably light on state-level requirements outside specialty areas.

Connecticut

Department of Consumer Protection licenses multiple contractor classifications at the state level.

Maine

State regulates plumbing, electrical, asbestos, lead abatement, and underground oil tank work.

Massachusetts

Prequalification required for highway and non-building contracts over $50,000; specialty trades licensed separately.

New Hampshire

State regulates electrical, plumbing, asbestos abatement, and lead abatement trades.

New Jersey

Registration-based system for new home construction and home repair work.

New York

Minimal state-level requirements; licensing limited to asbestos handling and elevator/conveyance work.

Pennsylvania

Highway construction regulated through state prequalification; other trades regulated locally.

Rhode Island

Residential and commercial construction regulated by multiple state departments via registration or licensing.

Vermont

State regulates residential construction, asbestos/lead abatement, plumbing, heating, and electrical.