Resources

Wyoming Contractor License Lookup

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

Official agency

Department of Fire Prevention and Electrical Safety

No single statewide general-contractor board; use official state trade-license resources and local licensing where applicable.

Visit official lookup

About Wyoming contractor licensing

Wyoming does not have one broad statewide general contractor board for ordinary residential construction. Homeowners usually need to rely on local licensing or permit requirements while using state resources, including the Department of Fire Prevention and Electrical Safety, for specific trade credentials. The right verification path is often local first, trade second.

How licensing works in Wyoming

Wyoming is primarily local for general contractor oversight. Cities and counties may impose the meaningful contractor requirements for builders and remodelers, while statewide verification is more likely to matter for certain trades such as electrical work. That means homeowners should identify the governing local jurisdiction before assuming there is a single statewide contractor search to use. Trade licensing and local permit authority together usually provide the clearest picture of whether the contractor is properly positioned to do the job.

What to verify in Wyoming

Start with the city or county permit or building office where the property is located and ask whether the contractor must be locally licensed, registered, or otherwise approved. Then use the state's trade-license resources for any regulated work involved in the project. Match the legal business name on your contract to the official records you find. If the contractor works across Colorado, Utah, or Montana, verify Wyoming-specific compliance instead of assuming nearby-state approval carries over.

State-specific tips

  • Ask your local permit office first; in Wyoming, that is often more useful than searching for a nonexistent statewide GC license.
  • For electrical and fire-system work, use the state trade resources even if the general contractor is locally approved.
  • If the property is in a resort or fast-growth area, verify the local jurisdiction carefully because rules can be stricter there.
  • Keep the exact property county and municipality clear during verification; Wyoming oversight is heavily location-driven.
  • If the contractor says Wyoming has no licensing issue at all, ask what local permit authority governs your address.