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How to Become a California Contractor

Complete 2026 step-by-step guide to getting your CSLB Class A, B, or C-XX license — from your first application to your first job.

Quick facts

Total cost to license
$700-$1,200
Time to license
3-4 months
Experience required
4 years journey-level
Exam passing score
73% on each section
Median income
$65K-$95K solo
Top specialty trades
$120K-$200K+

Why become a California contractor?

California has more licensed contractors than any other state — more than 280,000 active CSLB licenses cover roughly 40 trades. Demand is steady because the state requires anyone performing work valued at $500 or more (labor and materials combined) to hold a CSLB license. That includes everything from new home construction to a fence repair, a kitchen remodel, or a solar install.

The licensing path isn't fast — you need 4 years of journey-level experience and you need to pass two exams. But it doesn't require a college degree, and once you're licensed, you can either work for someone else at higher pay or start your own business.

Step 1 — Choose your license class

California CSLB licenses come in three classifications:

  • Class A — General Engineering. Highways, bridges, large excavation, dams, sewers. Big-money infrastructure work. Less than 10% of CA contractors hold Class A.
  • Class B — General Building. Anyone who builds or modifies a structure using 2+ unrelated trades. This is the path for general home builders and remodel contractors. About 40% of CA contractors are Class B.
  • Class C — Specialty. One specific trade. Most common: C-10 Electrical, C-36 Plumbing, C-39 Roofing, C-33 Painting, C-13 Fencing, C-27 Landscaping. About 50% of CA contractors are Class C.

Step 2 — Verify your 4 years of experience

Under Business and Professions Code §7068, you must have at least 4 years of journey-level, foreman, supervising employee, or contractor experience within the last 10 years. "Journey-level" means you've performed the work yourself — not just observed it.

Up to 3 years can be substituted with accredited trade school or a state-approved apprenticeship. So the minimum is 1 year of real on-the-job experience if you complete a full trade school program.

You'll need a former employer or qualifying party to sign a certification form attesting to your experience. CSLB audits roughly 10% of applications, so be honest.

Step 3 — Submit your CSLB application

Apply online or by mail. The non-refundable application fee is $450. You can only apply for one classification at a time. Submit:

  • Completed CSLB Application for Original Contractor License
  • $450 application fee
  • Certification of work experience (signed by qualifier)
  • Live Scan fingerprint receipt (Form BCIA 8016)
  • If applying as a corporation/LLC: corporate documents

Step 4 — Pass two exams (Law & Business + Trade)

Both exams are at PSI testing centers. Both are 3.5 hours, 115 multiple-choice questions, computer-based, and you need 73% to pass. Results show immediately as PASS or FAIL.

The Law & Business exam is the same for every classification. It covers contracts, employment law, business finance, safety, and California-specific code. Available in English and Spanish at the testing center.

The Trade exam is specific to your classification (Class A general engineering, Class B general building, or the specific Class C-XX). Available in English only at most centers — translator requests take 4-6 weeks.

📚 Study the Law & Business exam first.It's considered the harder of the two and the topics overlap with what you'll need to know to run a contracting business. PrepPass has 610 free practice questions covering every topic of the Law & Business exam, with California code citations on every answer.

Step 5 — Get your contractor bond + initial license

After you pass both exams, CSLB mails instructions for:

  • $25,000 contractor bond. Required of every active CSLB license. Cost varies by credit — most applicants pay $200-$400 per year.
  • $200 initial license fee (paid to CSLB).
  • Workers' compensation insurance — required if you have any employees (Labor Code §3700). Solo operators can submit an Exemption Form instead.

Step 6 — Start your first job

Two paths:

  • Work for a licensed contractor. Higher hourly than journeyman rates, often $40-$80/hour for licensed help. Lower stress because you're not running the business.
  • Start your own business. Higher ceiling — median is $65-$95K solo, but specialty trades can push $200K+. More risk: you handle estimates, billing, taxes, liability, and crew management.

Salary expectations

Earnings vary dramatically by trade and business model:

TradeYear 1 soloEstablished
General Building (Class B)$55K-$80K$120K-$300K+
Electrical (C-10)$60K-$90K$130K-$200K+
Plumbing (C-36)$60K-$90K$130K-$220K+
HVAC (C-20)$55K-$85K$120K-$200K+
Painting (C-33)$45K-$70K$80K-$140K+
Roofing (C-39)$50K-$80K$100K-$180K+

Ranges based on California Employment Development Department and BLS regional data. Top earners typically run small crews and specialize in commercial or high-end residential work.

Cost breakdown

  • CSLB application fee — $450 (non-refundable)
  • Live Scan fingerprints — $58
  • Exam fee — $51.43 per exam × 2 = $102.86
  • Initial license fee — $200 (paid after passing)
  • $25,000 contractor bond — $200-$400/year
  • Workers' comp (if you have employees) — varies
  • Total cash outlay before first job: ~$700-$1,200

How to study for the Law & Business exam

Most candidates pass on their first try with 40-80 hours of focused study. The exam favors specific dollar amounts, time periods, and code citations — multiple-choice with one clearly correct answer.

The most effective study approach:

  • Read the official CSLB Law and Business Study Guide (free PDF on cslb.ca.gov)
  • Take practice tests on every topic — Contracts (21%), Employment (20%), Business Finance (15%), Safety (14%), Business Org (13%), Insurance & Liens (12%), and Public Works (5%)
  • Focus extra time on Contracts + Employment — they're 41% of the exam combined
  • Take a full-length mock exam under timed conditions (3.5 hours, 115 questions) before your real test

Free CSLB Business & Law practice — no signup

610 original practice questions across all 7 exam topics, with California statute citations on every answer. Full mock exam available. In English, Chinese, Spanish, and Vietnamese.

Start CSLB practice →

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to become a contractor in California?

Plan for $700-$1,200 total before you can take a job. CSLB application fee is $450. PSI exam fee is $51.43 (per exam, you take two — Law & Business plus your trade). After passing, you'll need a $25,000 contractor bond (about $200-$300/year for most applicants) and an initial license fee of $200. Workers' compensation insurance is required only if you have employees, but most contractors carry general liability insurance ($500-$1,500/year typical).

How long does it take to get a California contractor license?

After you submit your application, expect 8-12 weeks for CSLB to process it, Live Scan fingerprinting to clear, and your exam to be scheduled at PSI. The exam itself is 3.5 hours (Law & Business) plus another 3.5 hours for the trade exam (often scheduled the same day or shortly after). If you pass both, the license is mailed within 2-3 weeks. Total: roughly 3-4 months from application to license.

Do I need 4 years of experience to apply?

Yes — California Business and Professions Code §7068 requires four years of journey-level experience in your trade within the last 10 years. Up to 3 of those 4 years can be satisfied by accredited trade school or apprenticeship training. If you don't have 4 years yet, you cannot apply for your own license — but you can work for a licensed contractor while you accumulate experience.

What's the difference between Class A, B, and C contractor licenses?

Class A is for general engineering contractors (highways, bridges, dams, large excavation). Class B is for general building contractors who build structures (homes, commercial buildings) that combine 2+ unrelated trades. Class C is specialty — there are 40+ C-XX sub-classifications (C-10 Electrical, C-33 Painting, C-36 Plumbing, C-39 Roofing, etc.) and you specialize in one trade.

Is the California contractor exam hard?

The Law & Business exam is widely considered the harder of the two. 73% passing score on each section. It covers contracts, employment law, business finance, safety, and California-specific code. Most candidates need 40-80 hours of study to pass on the first try. Practice questions help significantly because the exam favors specific dollar amounts, time periods, and code section recall.

Can I take the California contractor exam in Spanish?

Yes. The CSLB Law & Business exam is offered in both English and Spanish directly at PSI testing centers. Other languages (Vietnamese, Chinese, Korean) may be available by requesting a CSLB-approved translator — allow 4-6 weeks for that approval. PrepPass practice content is available in English, Chinese, Spanish, and Vietnamese.

How much do California contractors make?

Median earnings for licensed California contractors run $65,000-$95,000 per year for solo operators, with experienced specialty contractors (electrical, plumbing, HVAC) often clearing $120,000-$200,000+. General building contractors managing crews on residential projects routinely earn $150,000-$300,000+. The single biggest leverage point is moving from working solo to managing 2-3 crews.