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Montana - 2026 Contractor License Requirements

Official Montana contractor license lookup information, agency details, and homeowner notes for verifying a contractor before hiring.

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Construction Contractor Registration Search

Official search for active construction contractor registrations.

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About Montana contractor licensing

Montana uses a construction contractor registration system rather than a broad competency-based statewide general contractor license. For homeowners, the state registration search is still valuable because it confirms that the business is officially registered and gives you a concrete record to match against the contract before work begins.

How licensing works in Montana

Montana's approach is registration-based. That means the state keeps an official record of construction contractors, but homeowners should not assume that registration alone answers every question about specialty-trade authority or local permit compliance. The right verification path is usually: confirm the contractor registration first, then check any required trade credentials and local building rules depending on the job. That is especially important on remote or rural projects where permitting practices vary.

What to verify in Montana

Use Montana's contractor registration search to confirm the business is active and currently registered. Match the business name exactly to the contract, deposit instructions, and any insurance paperwork you receive. Ask who will perform licensed trade scopes and verify those separately when the project includes electrical, plumbing, or mechanical work. If the company cannot provide a registration number for a qualifying construction business, that is a useful signal to slow down.

State-specific tips

  • For rural builds, verify the registration before materials are ordered; distance can make contractor disputes harder to untangle later.
  • Treat state registration as proof of official presence, not automatic proof of specialty-trade qualifications.
  • If the project combines site work and home construction, ask which registered entity is responsible for the prime contract.
  • On mountain or seasonal jobs, confirm the registration remains active for the full planned build window.
  • Keep screenshots of the registration record because small contractors may change business names between bidding seasons.

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Montana Contractor Agreement Template

Download a free homeowner-contractor agreement template built for Montana law.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does Montana require contractors to be registered or licensed?
Yes. Montana requires contractors performing construction work for compensation to register with the Employment Relations Division (ERD) under Montana Code Annotated Title 39, Chapter 9. This is a registration system — it confirms the contractor is in the state system and maintains workers' compensation coverage — not a competency-based license board. Specialty trades such as electrical and plumbing require separate state licensing regardless of project size.
What is the difference between bonded, registered, and insured?
Registered means the contractor is in Montana's ERD system and has demonstrated compliance with workers' compensation and bond requirements as a condition of registration. Bonded means the contractor carries a surety bond required by ERD, providing limited recourse if work is incomplete or defective. Insured refers to general liability and workers' compensation; always request certificates and verify them independently with the insurer.
Is there a dollar threshold below which I don't need a registered contractor in Montana?
Montana generally requires registration for any contractor performing construction work for compensation — there is no meaningful dollar threshold exemption. Even small repair jobs performed for pay require ERD registration. The only exceptions are narrow: homeowners performing work on their own property, and a handful of specific exemptions under MCA Title 39, Chapter 9. Specialty trade licenses apply independently of project size.
Can I do my own home improvement work without a registered contractor in Montana?
Yes. Montana allows homeowners to perform work on their own primary residence without contractor registration. You must own and occupy the property. Permits may be required, and as owner-builder you accept responsibility for code compliance. The exemption does not apply to work done for others or to properties being built or renovated primarily for resale.
What registration does a general contractor need in Montana?
Montana ERD registration does not issue tiered license classes like statewide license board states. Contractors register to confirm compliance with workers' compensation and bonding requirements. Specialty trade licenses for electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and other regulated trades are issued separately by the relevant Montana state boards. Always verify the contractor's ERD registration and any specialty trade licenses relevant to your project scope.
How do I verify a contractor's registration in Montana?
Use the Montana ERD Construction Contractor Registration Search at erdcontractors.mt.gov. Search by contractor name or registration number. Confirm the registration is active and that workers' compensation and bond information are current. For specialty trade work, verify those credentials separately through the relevant Montana licensing boards. Match the legal business name on the ERD record to the name on your contract.
What does an active vs. inactive registration mean in Montana?
An Active registration means the contractor is in good standing with Montana ERD and legally authorized to perform construction work. An expired or inactive registration means the contractor cannot legally work until reinstated — and likely signals that workers' comp or bond coverage has lapsed. Always verify Active status on the ERD website immediately before hiring.
What insurance and bond does a registered contractor need in Montana?
Montana ERD requires registered contractors to carry a surety bond and maintain workers' compensation insurance as conditions of registration. Contractors with employees must have workers' comp coverage; sole proprietors without employees may qualify for an exemption. General liability insurance is strongly recommended; always request a certificate and verify it independently before work begins.
What happens if a contractor works without registration in Montana?
Performing construction work without ERD registration violates MCA Title 39, Chapter 9, subject to civil penalties and stop-work orders. The ERD can issue fines and refer cases to the Attorney General. An unregistered contractor likely has no workers' comp coverage, significantly increasing your liability as the property owner if a worker is injured on the job.
My contractor's registration expired mid-project — what now?
An expired ERD registration means the contractor is no longer authorized to perform work and workers' comp or bond coverage has likely lapsed. Stop payments for work performed after the expiration date and require reinstatement before continuing. Verify Active status on the ERD website before releasing further payments. Contact the ERD about options for recovering payment on post-expiration work.
Am I liable if an unregistered worker gets hurt on my property in Montana?
Potentially yes. If a contractor has no workers' compensation insurance and an employee is injured, Montana law may expose you to liability for medical costs and disability benefits as the de facto employer. Hiring an ERD-registered contractor with verified workers' comp coverage eliminates this risk; confirm coverage before work begins.
How do I file a complaint against a contractor in Montana?
File a complaint with Montana ERD through the contractor registration system at erdcontractors.mt.gov. For specialty trade violations, file with the relevant Montana licensing board. For consumer protection disputes, contact the Montana Attorney General's Consumer Protection Office. File as early as possible to preserve your options.