Contractor licensing thresholds, regulator routing, requirements, reciprocity, and license types for West Virginia’s multi-board construction regulation model.
West Virginia uses a multi-board model with 5 separate regulatory agencies. Contractor licensing runs through the Contractor Licensing Board, electrical licensing through the State Fire Marshal, HVAC and plumbing certification through the Division of Labor, and highway prequalification through the DOT. All contractors must also register with the State Tax Department.
Always verify statutes, fees, and application details with the live regulator before making bidding, licensing, or legal decisions.
The fastest way to orient yourself in West Virginia is to know two dollar thresholds and the fact that all electrical, plumbing, and HVAC work requires separate credentials regardless of contract value.
Signal
Value
Commercial construction trigger
$25,000 or more (material and labor)
Residential construction trigger
$5,000 or more (material and labor)
Electrical work
All electrical work must be performed by a licensed electrician
Plumbing work
All non-exempt plumbing work requires a certified plumber
HVAC work
All non-exempt HVAC work requires a certified technician
Highway prequalification
Required for DOT projects over $200,000
Reciprocity model
Board-specific — Fire Marshal accepts all 50 states for electrical
Pick the tab that matches your situation. Each FAQ gives a direct answer and points you to the full detail below.
Contractors
Regulators
At what contract value does West Virginia require a contractor license?
Commercial construction triggers at $25,000 or more (including materials and labor). Residential construction triggers at $5,000 or more. These are separate thresholds for different work types. See Construction work regulated.
Does West Virginia require a license for electrical, plumbing, or HVAC work?
Yes — and there is no dollar threshold for these trades. All electrical work requires a licensed electrician (through the State Fire Marshal). All non-exempt plumbing and HVAC work requires certification through the Division of Labor. These are required even below the contractor licensing thresholds. See Construction work regulated.
Where do I go to get licensed in West Virginia?
West Virginia has 5 agencies: Tax Department (registration for all contractors), Contractor Licensing Board (general contractors), State Fire Marshal (electricians), Division of Labor (HVAC and plumbing), and DOT (highway prequalification). You may need to engage multiple agencies. See Who regulates construction.
How much does it cost to get licensed?
General contractor exam fee is $59.95, application and renewal are each $90. Electrician exam is $25, license and renewal are each $50. HVAC technician exam is $59.95, initial and renewal are $75. Plumber exam is $59.95, initial and renewal are $75. See Requirements.
What are the bonding and insurance requirements?
Commercial contractors must post a wage bond equal to four weeks gross payroll at full capacity plus 15% for benefits (unless exempt under section 21-5-14). Nonresident contractors must deposit 6% of the contract price in cash or a corporate surety bond. Public works require a bond equal to the cost of materials and labor. Highway projects require 102% performance bonding. See Requirements.
Can I use my out-of-state license in West Virginia?
The State Fire Marshal accepts electrician licenses from all 50 states with a Letter of Good Standing — one of the broadest reciprocity arrangements in the country. The Contractor Licensing Board has reciprocity with Tennessee (building, residential, masonry, multi-family, sprinkler) and North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee (electrical). HVAC has reciprocity with Alabama, Ohio, Tennessee. Plumbing with Ohio and Tennessee. See Reciprocal agreements.
What must nonresident contractors do?
Nonresident contractors must register with the State Tax Commissioner and deposit 6% of the contract price or post a corporate surety bond. This is in addition to any trade-specific licensing requirements. See Requirements.
Does West Virginia require a license for roofing work?
If the roofing work is part of a commercial project at $25,000 or more, a contractor license is required from the Contractor Licensing Board. If residential and over $5,000, a residential contractor license is required. Painting and landscaping are specifically exempt from licensing. See Construction work regulated.
Does West Virginia require a license for residential work?
Yes. Residential construction at $5,000 or more (including materials and labor) requires a contractor license from the Contractor Licensing Board. The same exam and application process applies as for commercial work. See Construction work regulated.
What about highway prequalification?
Highway prequalification routes to the DOT Division of Highways. Audited financial statements are required for projects over $200,000. Applications must be submitted 15 days before the bid letting date. All highway projects require 102% performance bonding. Prequalification is valid for 16 months from fiscal year end date. See Requirements.
Does West Virginia accept the NASCLA exam?
Yes. The Contractor Licensing Board accepts NASCLA Accredited Examination scores for Commercial General Building Contractors and Electrical Contractors (Master/Unlimited Electrician). Exams must have been passed on or after April 1, 2019. See Reciprocal agreements.
How does West Virginia's licensing model compare to other states?
West Virginia’s 5-agency model is moderately fragmented. The unique feature is the Fire Marshal’s all-50-state electrical reciprocity, which is one of the broadest in the country. The dual-threshold system ($25,000 commercial / $5,000 residential) with mandatory trade credentials regardless of value creates a layered regulatory structure. See Who regulates construction.
How do West Virginia's thresholds compare to other states?
The $25,000 commercial threshold matches Tennessee and is lower than Alabama ($100,000) or Mississippi ($50,000). The $5,000 residential threshold is lower than most states. The mandatory trade credentials (no dollar threshold for electrical, plumbing, HVAC) add a layer found in many states but not all. For cross-state comparison, see Licensing thresholds.
What types of construction work are regulated at the state vs. local level?
West Virginia regulates at the state level through 5 agencies: Tax Department (universal registration), Contractor Licensing Board (general contractors), Fire Marshal (electricians), Division of Labor (HVAC/plumbing), and DOT (highway). Painting and landscaping are specifically exempt. Local jurisdictions may impose additional requirements.
How does the Fire Marshal's all-50-state electrical reciprocity work?
The Fire Marshal accepts electrician licenses from all 50 states, requiring only a Letter of Good Standing from the issuing agency. The letter must include licensee name, license number, license type, initial issue date, expiration date, how the license was obtained, and disciplinary history. This is structurally unusual — most states have limited state-by-state agreements. See Reciprocal agreements.
What license classifications does West Virginia use?
The Contractor Licensing Board uses letter classifications (A through H) plus numbered specialties. The Fire Marshal issues Master, Journeyman, and Specialty electrician licenses. The Division of Labor certifies HVAC Technicians (full, residential, and in-training) and Plumbers (master, journeyman, and in-training). See Types of licenses.
How does reciprocity work across West Virginia's agencies?
Each agency manages its own reciprocity. The Fire Marshal’s all-50-state arrangement is the headline. The Contractor Licensing Board has targeted agreements with Tennessee (7 classifications), North Carolina and Ohio (electrical only). The Division of Labor has HVAC reciprocity with Alabama, Ohio, and Tennessee, and plumbing with Ohio and Tennessee. NASCLA exam scores are also accepted. See Reciprocal agreements.
What exam requirements exist across the agencies?
General contractors take an open-book business and law exam (70% minimum). Electricians take an NEC-based open-book exam (70% minimum, 4-hour limit). HVAC technicians and plumbers take exams at 70% minimum. The Contractor Licensing Board also accepts NASCLA and national exam scores from ICC, ProV, and PSI Services. See Requirements.
What are the renewal cycles across agencies?
General contractor licenses renew annually (one year from date of issuance). Electrician licenses renew annually. HVAC and plumbing certifications renew annually. Highway prequalification is valid for 16 months from fiscal year end date. See Requirements.
How does West Virginia compare to other Appalachian/Southern states?
West Virginia’s 5-agency model is more fragmented than Tennessee (primarily single board) but less so than Alabama (8 boards). The Fire Marshal’s all-50-state electrical reciprocity is a standout feature. The mandatory trade credentials regardless of dollar value align with states like Virginia. See the South region guide.
What is the nonresident contractor registration structure?
All nonresident contractors must register with the Tax Commissioner and deposit 6% of the contract price or post a corporate surety bond. This is a tax-based requirement separate from trade licensing. It applies regardless of whether the contractor needs a trade license. The wage bond requirement (four weeks gross payroll plus 15%) also applies to all contractors.
Different roles need different things from a West Virginia page. Use the tab that matches your situation to see what matters most before you read the full detail below.
Contractors
Regulators
Start with your contract value and work type. Commercial at $25,000 and residential at $5,000 trigger contractor licensing. Trade work (electrical, plumbing, HVAC) requires separate credentials at any dollar amount.
Commercial threshold: $25,000 or more including materials and labor.
Residential threshold: $5,000 or more including materials and labor.
All contractors must pass an open-book business and law exam (70% minimum).
Nonresident contractors must register with the Tax Commissioner and deposit 6% of contract price or post a surety bond.
Commercial contractors must post a wage bond equal to four weeks gross payroll plus 15% for benefits (unless exempt under section 21-5-14).
Painting and landscaping do not require a license.
West Virginia is best understood as a multi-board state with 5 agencies. The Fire Marshal handles individual electrician licensing and accepts all 50 states through reciprocity. The Contractor Licensing Board handles contractor classifications and accepts NASCLA exam scores.
Five agencies share regulation: Tax Department (registration), DOT (highway), Contractor Licensing Board, Fire Marshal (electrical), and Division of Labor (HVAC/plumbing).
The Fire Marshal’s all-50-state electrical reciprocity is unusual and worth noting in comparisons.
NASCLA accredited exam scores are accepted for commercial general building and electrical contractor classifications.
Separate dollar thresholds (contractor licensing) from trade mandates (electrical, plumbing, HVAC apply regardless of value).
The Fire Marshal’s all-50-state electrical reciprocity is structurally different from most states.
Highway prequalification requires audited financials for projects over $200,000 and 102% performance bonding.
Four things you need to confirm before you can treat West Virginia as “ready” for a bid or an application. If any of these are unclear, you are not ready yet.
Classify the project lane
Determine whether the work is commercial, residential, highway, or a regulated trade (electrical, plumbing, HVAC). Trade credentials are required even below the dollar thresholds.
Apply the right threshold test
Commercial: $25,000 or more. Residential: $5,000 or more. Highway: prequalification for projects over $200,000. Electrical, plumbing, and HVAC: no dollar threshold — always required.
Route to the correct agency
Use the regulator directory below. Contractor Licensing Board, Fire Marshal, and Division of Labor each own different lanes. All contractors must also register with the Tax Department.
Confirm the requirement set
Confirm exams, experience, fees, bonds, insurance, wage bond obligations, renewal cycle, and reciprocity rules for each applicable agency before filing.
If you can identify lane, threshold, agency, and requirement set — including any trade overlaps — you have the minimum package needed for a West Virginia readiness check.
West Virginia triggers contractor licensing based on contract value for commercial and residential work. Electrical, plumbing, and HVAC work require separate credentials regardless of dollar amount.
Work lane
What triggers regulation
Commercial construction
$25,000 or more including material and labor
Residential construction
$5,000 or more including material and labor
Electrical work
All electrical work — no dollar threshold
Plumbing work
All non-exempt plumbing work — no dollar threshold
HVAC work
All non-exempt HVAC work — no dollar threshold
Highway work
DOT prequalification required for projects over $200,000
Painting and landscaping do not require a state license. Trade credentials (electrical, plumbing, HVAC) may be required in addition to the contractor license when work overlaps.
If you are trying to figure out where to start, expand the scenario that is closest to your situation.
Commercial project at or above $25,000
Route to the Contractor Licensing Board. Pass the business and law exam (70% minimum). If the project includes electrical, plumbing, or HVAC work, those trades require separate credentials from the Fire Marshal or Division of Labor.
Residential project at or above $5,000
Route to the Contractor Licensing Board. The same exam and application process applies as for commercial work. Check whether trade overlaps require additional credentials.
Electrical work at any value
Route to the State Fire Marshal’s Office. Pass the NEC-based exam (70% minimum). Master requires 4,000 hours; journeyman requires 2,000 hours. The Fire Marshal accepts reciprocity from all 50 states with a Letter of Good Standing.
HVAC or plumbing work
Route to the Division of Labor. HVAC technicians need 2,000 hours of experience. Plumbers follow a journeyman-then-master progression with exams at 70% minimum.
Highway prequalification
Route to DOT Division of Highways. Submit experience records and audited financial statements for projects over $200,000. Applications must be submitted 15 days before the bid letting date. All highway projects require 102% performance bonding.
West Virginia splits construction regulation across 5 agencies. All contractors must register with the Tax Department in addition to obtaining board-specific licenses. Use this directory to find the agency that owns the lane you need.
All contractors — State Tax Department (registration)
Office of Business Registration, 1001 Lee Street East, Charleston, WV 25301Phone: (304) 558-3333 or (800) 982-8297Website:tax.wv.gov
General contractors — Contractor Licensing Board
1900 Kanawha Boulevard East, State Capitol Complex, Building 3, Room 200, Charleston, WV 25305Phone: (304) 558-7890 | Fax: (304) 558-5174Website:wvclboard.wv.gov
Electricians — State Fire Marshal, Regulatory & Licensing Division
Each West Virginia agency has its own exam standards, experience rules, fees, and renewal cycles. Expand the trade that applies to your situation. Fee tables are included in each section.
General Contractors
Requirement
Detail
Exam
Open-book business and law exam; additional trade exams may be required depending on scope of work; 70% minimum score
Documentation
Proof of tax registration, unemployment compensation coverage, and workers’ compensation coverage
Wage bond
Equal to four weeks gross payroll at full capacity plus 15% for benefits (unless exempt under section 21-5-14)
Nonresident deposit
6% of contract price in cash or corporate surety bond, plus registration with State Tax Commissioner
Public works bond
Equal to the cost of materials and labor (non-highway)
Renewal cycle
Annual (one year from date of issuance)
Exam Fee
Application Fee
Renewal Fee
$59.95
$90
$90
Contractor exams are administered by ProV, Inc. at (866) 720-7768 or provexam.com.
Electricians (Fire Marshal)
Requirement
Detail
Exam
Open-book exam based on the 2020 National Electrical Code; 70% minimum score; 4-hour time limit
Master experience
At least 2 years or 4,000 hours of hands-on electrical work
Journeyman experience
At least 1 year or 2,000 hours of hands-on electrical work
Specialty experience
1 year or 2,000 hours in the specialty area
Work type
All work must consist of above-ground structural wiring per the NEC
West Virginia has an unusual reciprocity structure. The State Fire Marshal’s Office recognizes electrician licenses from all 50 states, making it one of the broadest reciprocity arrangements in the country. Other boards have more targeted state-by-state agreements, primarily with Tennessee and Ohio.
The Fire Marshal’s all-50-state electrical reciprocity is the headline. For all other boards, check the specific classification and state before assuming reciprocity applies.
Contractor Licensing Board (Manufactured Home Installation)
Ohio, plus HUD Installer License holders
Limited
Fire Marshal reciprocity requirements
Applicants must submit a Letter of Good Standing from the issuing agency or licensing board, including: licensee name, license number, license type, initial issue date, expiration date, how the license was obtained (exam, reciprocity, grandfathering, etc.), and whether any disciplinary action has been taken. A copy of the out-of-state license must also be submitted.
NASCLA and national exam acceptance
The Contractor Licensing Board accepts:
NASCLA Accredited Examination for Commercial General Building Contractors (PSI Services)
NASCLA Accredited Trade Examination for Electrical Contractors (Master/Unlimited Electrician)
HUD Installer Licenses in lieu of the Manufactured Home Installation exam (WV Business & Law exam still required)
Exam scores from accredited national testing organizations (ICC, ProV, PSI Services)
Exams must have been passed on or after April 1, 2019.
West Virginia offers contractor classifications through the Licensing Board and individual trade credentials through the Fire Marshal and Division of Labor. Use these lists when you need to confirm the exact classification code for an application.
Contractor Licensing Board
A: Electrical
B: General Building
C: General Engineering
D: Heating, Ventilating, and Cooling
E: Multi-Family
F: Piping
G: Plumbing
H: Residential
002: Excavation
004: Masonry
005: Remodeling & Repair
007: Concrete
011: Structural Steel Erection
013: Manufactured Home Installation (HUD Certified Homes Only)