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Arkansas Contractor License Lookup

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

Official agency

Arkansas Contractors Licensing Board

Official board page with "Find A Licensed Contractor."

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About Arkansas contractor licensing

Arkansas uses a statewide licensing board for contractors, which gives homeowners a direct official source to confirm credentials. The Arkansas Contractors Licensing Board is especially important for larger projects, where the licensing threshold is clear and the contractor should be able to point you straight to an active state record.

How licensing works in Arkansas

Arkansas relies on statewide contractor licensing rather than leaving major project verification entirely to cities. For homeowners, the key issue is whether the size and scope of the project trigger the board's licensing rules and whether the contractor's classification fits the work. Statewide licensure is more likely to be relevant for larger additions, major rebuilds, and substantial remodeling than for very small handyman tasks. Specialty trade licensing may also matter separately depending on the job.

Project thresholds

Arkansas contractor licensing is widely tied to projects of $20,000 or more, counting labor and materials together.

What to verify in Arkansas

Use the board's Find a Licensed Contractor search and look up the company by business name or license number. Confirm the license is active, review the classification, and make sure the legal entity on the board record matches the one on your contract. If the job price is near or above the state threshold, be careful with contractors who say a license is unnecessary. For electrical, plumbing, or HVAC portions, verify any separate trade credentials as well.

State-specific tips

  • If a contractor suggests splitting one project into smaller invoices, treat that as a warning sign and compare the full scope to Arkansas's threshold.
  • On large repairs after storm damage, verify the board record before allowing emergency work to turn into a full reconstruction contract.
  • Ask whether the company is acting as prime contractor or only as a specialty subcontractor; the distinction matters on bigger projects.
  • Match the business suffix on the proposal, such as LLC or Inc., to the board record exactly.
  • For rural properties, do not assume county permit habits replace state contractor licensing requirements.