Michigan Contractor Authority
Michigan's contractor services sector encompasses a structured network of licensed trades, regulatory requirements, and enforcement mechanisms that govern construction, renovation, and specialty work across the state. The Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA) administers the licensing framework that determines which professionals may legally perform and bid on contractor work within state borders. This page describes the structure of that system — its classifications, regulatory bodies, licensing thresholds, and the common points of confusion that affect both property owners and trade professionals operating in Michigan.
Why This Matters Operationally
Unlicensed contractor activity in Michigan is not a minor administrative issue. Under the Michigan Occupational Code (MCL 339), performing residential construction work without the appropriate license exposes contractors to civil and criminal penalties, and property owners who hire unlicensed trades may lose mechanic's lien protections and face insurance claim complications. LARA's Bureau of Professional Licensing handles complaints and disciplinary actions, and enforcement has a direct financial impact on contractors — license revocation, fines, and stop-work orders can halt projects mid-build.
Michigan operates a trade-specific licensing model rather than a single general contractor license for all work. Electrical, plumbing, mechanical, and residential building each fall under distinct statutory authority with separate examination, experience, and insurance requirements. This means a contractor licensed in one trade cannot legally perform work in another without holding the corresponding credential — a structural reality that shapes how larger projects are staffed and subcontracted.
For property owners, the stakes are practical: work performed by an unlicensed contractor may not pass inspection, cannot be permitted retroactively in most jurisdictions, and can complicate a property sale. For contractors, operating outside license scope risks disciplinary action tracked by Michigan's Bureau of Construction Codes.
What the System Includes
Michigan's contractor licensing and regulation system is administered across several overlapping agencies:
- LARA Bureau of Professional Licensing (BPL) — Issues and renews licenses for residential builders, maintenance and alteration contractors, and specialty trades including electrical and plumbing.
- Bureau of Construction Codes (BCC) — Enforces the Michigan Construction Code, conducts plan review, and administers electrical, plumbing, and mechanical inspector certifications.
- Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administration (MIOSHA) — Governs job site safety standards applicable to all contractor classifications.
- Department of Treasury — Administers contractor obligations under Michigan sales and use tax, particularly relevant for material supply and lump-sum contracts.
Licensing is required for residential builders performing work on one-to-two family dwellings, and for specialty trades regardless of whether the project is residential or commercial. The Michigan contractor licensing requirements framework distinguishes between license classes based on project scope, dollar value, and whether the contractor employs or supervises others.
Michigan contractor insurance and bonding requirements apply at the point of licensure — residential builders and maintenance and alteration contractors must demonstrate minimum liability coverage to obtain and maintain state credentials. The specific minimums are set by administrative rule under the Michigan Occupational Code.
Core Moving Parts
The licensing structure in Michigan separates into three primary tiers:
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Residential Building Licenses — The Michigan residential builder license authorizes construction, renovation, and repair of one-to-two family dwellings. Applicants must pass a state examination, document 3 years of full-time experience in the trade, and carry general liability insurance. A maintenance and alteration contractor license covers a narrower scope — repair and improvement work under a defined dollar threshold without new construction authority.
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Specialty Trade Licenses — Michigan requires separate licensure for electrical, plumbing, and HVAC (mechanical) contractors. The Michigan electrical contractor requirements establish journeyman and master classifications with distinct examination and experience standards. Michigan plumbing contractor licensing follows a parallel structure under the Bureau of Construction Codes. Michigan HVAC contractor requirements are governed by the Michigan Mechanical Code and require licensed contractors to operate under a qualified master mechanic.
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Commercial Contractor Activity — Michigan does not issue a separate "commercial general contractor" license at the state level. Commercial projects are governed primarily through the building permit process under local jurisdiction enforcement, with specialty trades still requiring state-issued credentials for electrical, plumbing, and mechanical scopes of work.
Residential Builder vs. Maintenance and Alteration Contractor — Key Distinction:
A residential builder may construct a new home and contract for the full scope of a major renovation. A maintenance and alteration contractor is limited to repair and improvement work and cannot contract for new construction of dwellings. The distinction affects what work can be legally bid, how subcontractors are organized, and what licensing the project prime must hold.
This network belongs to the broader National Contractor Authority industry reference system, which covers contractor licensing structures across all 50 states.
Where the Public Gets Confused
Scope and geographic coverage: This authority covers contractor licensing, regulatory structure, insurance requirements, and trade classifications as they apply within the State of Michigan under Michigan law. It does not address contractor licensing requirements in other states, federal contractor registration (such as SAM.gov for federal procurement), or municipal licensing requirements that cities like Detroit or Grand Rapids may impose independently of state credentials. Local permit requirements, zoning restrictions, and municipal business licensing fall outside this scope.
Common misconceptions in the Michigan contractor sector:
- Property owners frequently assume that a state-licensed contractor is automatically authorized for all construction trades. Michigan's trade-specific model means electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work each require separate credentials.
- Contractors operating across state lines from Ohio, Indiana, or Wisconsin cannot apply their home-state license reciprocally — Michigan does not maintain blanket reciprocity agreements for residential or specialty trade licenses.
- The distinction between a "licensed" and "registered" contractor matters legally. Michigan licenses authorize independent contracting; working under another licensee's credential without disclosure is a violation of the Occupational Code.
- Permit requirements are not waived by licensure. A licensed contractor still must pull permits for regulated work — licensure and permitting are parallel obligations, not interchangeable ones.
Detailed answers to the most common threshold questions appear in the Michigan contractor services frequently asked questions reference.