Florida’s construction industry is heavily regulated. Operating a construction company requires proper licensing, insurance, bonding, and ongoing compliance with state and federal requirements. Missing any of these can result in fines, loss of license, or criminal charges. Here’s what Florida contractors need to know.
Contractor Licensing
State Licensing Overview
Florida requires licenses for most construction work. The Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB) under DBPR regulates these licenses.
License Types
Certified Contractors (statewide license):
- Can work anywhere in Florida
- Requires state exam and qualification
- Issued by Construction Industry Licensing Board
Registered Contractors (local license):
- Limited to specific county or municipality
- Meets local requirements
- Cannot work outside jurisdiction
License Categories
| Category | Description |
|---|---|
| General Contractor | Any non-residential construction |
| Building Contractor | Commercial buildings up to certain limits, all residential |
| Residential Contractor | Residential up to certain limits |
| Roofing Contractor | Roofing installation and repair |
| Sheet Metal Contractor | Sheet metal work |
| Class A Air Conditioning | HVAC unlimited |
| Class B Air Conditioning | HVAC up to 25 tons |
| Class C Air Conditioning | HVAC up to 15 tons |
| Mechanical Contractor | Mechanical systems |
| Pool/Spa Contractor | Swimming pools and spas |
| Plumbing Contractor | Plumbing systems |
| Underground Utility Contractor | Underground utilities |
| Solar Contractor | Solar installations |
| Pollutant Storage Contractor | Storage tank systems |
Licensing Requirements
To become a certified contractor:
- Education/Experience
- Typically 4 years of experience in the trade
- Or combination of education and experience
- Application
- Submit to DBPR
- Background check
- Credit check
- Financial statement (for some categories)
- Examination
- Pass business and finance exam
- Pass trade-specific exam
- Proctored at testing center
- Insurance/Bonding
- Workers’ compensation (or exemption)
- General liability insurance
- Bond if required
- Fees
- Application fee: $249
- License fee: $209 (2-year cycle)
- Exam fees: vary
License Renewal
- Licenses renew every 2 years (odd years for contractors)
- Continuing education required (14 hours per renewal)
- Late renewal penalties apply
Workers’ Compensation
Construction Industry Requirement
Critical: Florida requires workers’ compensation insurance for ALL construction employers, regardless of employee count.
Unlike other industries (4+ employees), construction has no exemption threshold.
Who Needs Coverage
| Situation | WC Required? |
|---|---|
| Contractor with 1 employee | Yes |
| Sole proprietor working alone | See exemption rules |
| Subcontractor with employees | Yes |
| General contractor using subs | Must verify subs have coverage |
Officer/Owner Exemptions
Corporate officers and LLC members in construction may elect exemption:
- Maximum 3 exempt officers/members per entity
- Must file exemption with state
- Exempt individuals have no WC coverage
- Must meet specific criteria
Certificates of Insurance
General contractors must:
- Obtain certificates of insurance from all subcontractors
- Verify coverage is current
- Maintain certificates on file
- Confirm coverage meets contract requirements
Non-Compliance Penalties
Operating without workers’ compensation in construction:
- Stop-work order (immediate)
- Penalty: $1,000 per day of non-compliance
- Minimum penalty: 2 days ($2,000)
- Criminal charges possible
Business Entity Compliance
Florida Annual Report
- Due: May 1 each year
- Fee: $138.75 (LLC) or $150 (Corporation)
- Late fee: $400 after May 1
- File at: Sunbiz.org
BOIR Filing
Beneficial Ownership Information Reporting with FinCEN:
- Most construction companies must file
- Deadlines: 30 days for new companies (2025+)
- Updates: Within 30 days of ownership changes
EIN
Obtain federal EIN from IRS for:
- Tax filings
- Employee payroll
- Bank accounts
- Subcontractor W-9s
Insurance Requirements
Required Insurance
Workers’ Compensation:
- Required for all construction employers
- Coverage must meet state requirements
- Certificates must be on file
General Liability:
- Not legally required but practically essential
- Most clients and general contractors require it
- Typical minimums: $1M per occurrence, $2M aggregate
Recommended Insurance
| Insurance Type | Purpose |
|---|---|
| General Liability | Third-party property damage and bodily injury |
| Professional Liability | Design errors (if providing design services) |
| Builder’s Risk | Projects under construction |
| Commercial Auto | Business vehicles |
| Umbrella/Excess | Additional coverage above primary limits |
| Equipment/Inland Marine | Tools and equipment |
Bond Requirements
Some projects and licenses require surety bonds:
License Bond:
- Some local jurisdictions require
- Protects public from contractor non-performance
Performance Bond:
- Guarantees project completion
- Required for public projects over certain thresholds
Payment Bond:
- Guarantees payment to subcontractors and suppliers
- Required for public projects
Employment Compliance
Labor Law Posters
Display required federal and Florida posters:
- [ ] OSHA Job Safety and Health
- [ ] Fair Labor Standards Act
- [ ] Equal Employment Opportunity
- [ ] Florida Minimum Wage
- [ ] Workers’ Compensation Notice
- [ ] Other applicable posters
I-9 Compliance
Construction has high I-9 audit rates:
- Complete for every employee within 3 days
- Use current I-9 form version
- Verify documents properly
- Retain for required period
E-Verify
Florida requires E-Verify for:
- State agencies and contractors
- Private employers with 25+ employees (verify current law)
Employee vs. Contractor
Misclassification is a major compliance issue in construction.
Signs of employee status:
- You control when, where, how work is done
- Worker uses your tools/equipment
- Worker only works for you
- You provide training
- Ongoing relationship
Misclassification risks:
- Back taxes and penalties
- Workers’ compensation penalties
- Unemployment tax liability
- IRS penalties
Safety Compliance
OSHA Requirements
Construction has specific OSHA standards (29 CFR 1926).
Key requirements:
- Written safety program
- Hazard communication
- Personal protective equipment
- Fall protection (6+ feet in construction)
- Scaffolding safety
- Excavation/trenching safety
- Electrical safety
- Tool safety
OSHA Training
Required training includes:
- 10-hour OSHA construction (recommended for workers)
- 30-hour OSHA construction (recommended for supervisors)
- Task-specific training (fall protection, scaffolds, etc.)
- Refresher training
OSHA Record Keeping
Companies with 10+ employees (at peak):
- Maintain OSHA 300 Log
- Post OSHA 300A Summary (February 1 – April 30)
- Report fatalities within 8 hours
- Report hospitalizations within 24 hours
Job Site Safety
- Safety meetings (toolbox talks)
- Site-specific safety plans
- Incident investigation and reporting
- First aid provisions
- Emergency action plans
Permit and Inspection Compliance
Building Permits
Most construction requires permits from local building department:
- New construction
- Renovations affecting structure, electrical, plumbing, HVAC
- Roofing
- Many other projects
Process:
- Submit permit application with plans
- Plans review
- Permit issuance
- Inspections during construction
- Final inspection and certificate of occupancy
Permit Violations
Working without permits can result in:
- Stop-work orders
- Fines
- Required demolition/correction
- License discipline
- Difficulty selling property
Inspection Requirements
Schedule required inspections:
- Foundation
- Framing
- Electrical rough-in
- Plumbing rough-in
- HVAC rough-in
- Insulation
- Final
Lien Law Compliance
Florida Construction Lien Law
Florida has specific notice and lien requirements:
Notice to Owner:
- Subcontractors and suppliers must serve within 45 days of first work/delivery
- Required to preserve lien rights
- Specific form requirements
Contractor’s Final Affidavit:
- Required before final payment
- Lists all lienors
- Certifies payment or amounts owed
Claim of Lien:
- Must be recorded within 90 days of last work
- Strict form requirements
- Must enforce within 1 year
Payment Bond Claims
For bonded projects:
- Notice to contractor within 45 days
- Suit within 1 year of last work
Local and Specialty Licenses
Local Business Tax Receipts
Most counties and cities require:
- County contractor registration or business tax receipt
- City business tax receipt (if in city limits)
- Annual renewal
Specialty Permits
Depending on work type:
- Asbestos abatement license (FDEP)
- Lead paint certification (EPA)
- Mold remediation (if offering)
- Well drilling license
- Septic system contractor license
Compliance Calendar
Monthly
- [ ] Verify subcontractor insurance certificates
- [ ] Safety meetings/documentation
- [ ] Payroll tax deposits (if applicable)
Quarterly
- [ ] Form 941 (employment taxes)
- [ ] Workers’ compensation reporting
- [ ] Estimated tax payments
Annually
- [ ] Florida annual report (May 1)
- [ ] License renewal (check cycle)
- [ ] Continuing education
- [ ] Local business tax receipt renewal
- [ ] Workers’ compensation renewal
- [ ] Update labor law posters (September 30)
- [ ] OSHA 300A posting (February)
Get Construction Compliance Help
Construction compliance is complex with serious consequences for violations. Critical Compliance Services helps Florida contractors stay compliant.
Our services include:
- Annual report filing
- BOIR filing
- Compliance monitoring
- Labor law poster packages
- Deadline reminders
Check Your Contractor Compliance
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I do construction work without a contractor’s license?
Very limited. Owner-builders can work on their own property. Unlicensed work for others can result in fines, criminal charges, and inability to enforce contracts.
How long does it take to get a contractor’s license?
Varies. Application processing: 4-8 weeks. But exam preparation and scheduling may add months. Plan for 3-6 months from start to license.
What insurance do I need to start a construction company?
At minimum: workers’ compensation (if you have any employees, including yourself in some cases) and general liability. Most clients require both.
What happens if my subcontractor doesn’t have workers’ comp?
You may be liable for their injuries and face penalties. Always verify insurance before work begins and maintain certificates.
Do I need a license for handyman work?
Small repairs/maintenance under $1,000 (labor and materials) may not require a license. But licensed work by unlicensed persons is illegal regardless of amount.