Home › Virginia Contractor License Classes

Virginia Contractor License Courses & Exam Prep

The Virginia contractor exam is specific. Your prep should be too. Pass the first time — with courses and materials built around exactly what’s on your exam.

Why Contractors Trust Us

90% First-Time Pass RateBecause everything is built around your exact exam.
60,000+ Professionals TrainedTrusted by contractors nationwide. You can too.
Select Your Trade:
Pick Your License

Every Virginia contractor license – and the exam behind it.

Virginia Construction Contractor Exam Prep Courses

NASCLAMulti-State Exam

NASCLA Commercial Builder

Full-scope commercial construction — multi-state exam.

Learn more →
CBC

Commercial Building Contractor

Ground-up commercial, industrial, and institutional construction — no residential or MEP trades.

Learn more →
RBC

Residential Building Contractor

Ground-up residential — new homes, additions, and accessory structures.

Learn more →
HIC

Home Improvement Contractor

Improvements to existing homes — no new construction or MEP trades.

Learn more →
CIC

Commercial Improvement Contractor

Improvements to existing commercial buildings — no new construction or MEP trades.

Learn more →
FRM

Framing Subcontractor

Structural rough framing only — residential and commercial subcontract work.

Learn more →

Virginia Electrical Contractor Exam Prep Courses

NASCLAMulti-State Exam

NASCLA Master/Unlimited Electrical Contractor

Full-scope electrical contracting — multi-state exam, all project types.

Learn more →
NASCLAMulti-State Exam

NASCLA Journeyman Electrician

Electrical installation and repair under master electrician supervision — multi-state.

Learn more →
ELE

Master and Journeyman Electrician

Installation, maintenance, and repair of electrical systems — Journeyman or Master.

Learn more →

Virginia Highway & Paving Contractor Exam Prep Courses

H/H

Highway Heavy Contractor

Roads, bridges, utilities, and heavy civil infrastructure.

Learn more →
PAV

Asphalt, Paving, and Sealcoating Contractor

Asphalt paving, parking lots, driveways, and sealcoating.

Learn more →
CEM

Concrete Contractor

Concrete flatwork, foundations, walls, and structural concrete.

Learn more →

Virginia Masonry Contractor Exam Prep Courses

BRK

Masonry Contractor

Brick, block, and stone masonry construction — residential and commercial.

Learn more →

Virginia Painting Contractor Exam Prep Courses

PTC

Painting and Wall Covering Contractor

Interior and exterior painting, staining, and wallcovering — all project types.

Learn more →

Virginia Plumbing Contractor Exam Prep Courses

PLB

Master and Journeyman Plumber

Water supply, drainage, and gas piping installation and repair — Journeyman or Master.

Learn more →

Virginia Roofing Contractor Exam Prep Courses

ROC

Roofing Contractor

Roof installation, repair, and replacement — all project types.

Learn more →

Not sure which license fits?

Book a free 20-minute call with one of our licensing advisors. They’ve helped hundreds of contractors figure out exactly where to start — from license class and experience requirements to NASCLA and everything in between.

Book your free call →
Before You Buy

Do I qualify for a Virginia contractor license?

These are the questions Virginia contractors ask before they start studying.

View State requirements

How many years of experience do I need?

Contractor (RBC/CBC): 2 yrs - Class C; 3 yrs - Class B; 5 yrs - Class A

Tradesman: 2-7 yrs, depending on training

Master: 1 yr as Journeyman, or 10 yrs total practical.

Tradesman Pathways (Electrical, Plumbing, HVAC)
  • 2 yrs + Associate degree or 2-yr trade program
  • 4 yrs + 240 hrs formal vocational training
  • 5 yrs + 160 hrs formal vocational training
  • 6 yrs + 80 hrs formal vocational training
  • 7 yrs + 40 hrs formal vocational training
What DPOR accepts as experience

Full-time trade work, apprenticeship hours, military trade training, documented sub-contract work. Hobby work and classroom-only hours don’t count.

For a step-by-step walkthrough of the licensing process, including eligibility requirements, read our guide: How to Get Licensed as a Contractor in Virginia in 2026.

Do I need money in the bank?

Class A: $45,000 net worth (or surety bond).

Class B: $15,000 net worth (or surety bond).

Class C & tradesman: No requirement.

How net worth is calculated

Total assets minus total liabilities. Personal or business assets count, but you’ll need a CPA-prepared statement or notarized affidavit.

Surety bond alternative

If you don’t have the net worth on paper, post a surety bond through any bonding company. Typical premium: 1–3% of the bond face value/year. A $45,000 bond runs $450–$1,350/year for most contractors.

What if I have a criminal record?

DPOR reviews case-by-case. Most non-violent offenses, DUIs, and older charges do not automatically disqualify you. Disclosure is mandatory — hiding a record causes denial even if the offense itself wouldn’t have.

What typically passes review
  • Non-violent misdemeanors and most felonies older than 5–7 yrs
  • DUIs, especially with no repeat offenses
  • Charges resolved without conviction
What triggers extra scrutiny
  • Fraud, embezzlement, or theft convictions
  • Violent felonies within the last 5 yrs
  • Recent license revocations from other states

Do I need to live in Virginia?

No. Out-of-state contractors can hold a VA license — but you must register your business with the Virginia State Corporation Commission. Limited reciprocity applies to Master Electricians from MD, NC, WV, AL, KY.

Out-of-state contractor requirements
  • Register your entity (LLC, corp, etc.) with the VA SCC
  • Designate a registered agent with a VA physical address ($50–150/yr)
  • Get a federal EIN and any required VA tax accounts
Reciprocity (Master Electrician only)

Active Masters from MD, NC, WV, AL, or KY may qualify for VA licensure without re-testing. Reciprocity does not apply to Journeyman, contractor (RBC/CBC), or plumbing/HVAC licenses.

Do I need a business set up first?

Contractor (RBC/CBC/HIC): Yes — license is issued to the business.

Tradesman (Journeyman/Master): No — license is issued to you personally.

Setting up your business
  • Choose entity type — LLC is most common for small contractors
  • Register with the Virginia State Corporation Commission
  • Federal EIN from the IRS (free, takes minutes online)
  • Open a business bank account
  • Register for any required VA tax accounts

Our Full-Service Package handles entity setup, SCC registration, EIN, and license paperwork end-to-end.

Is the 8-hour Pre-License Course mandatory?

Yes — for Class A, B, and C contractors. Tradesman licenses (Electrical, Plumbing, HVAC) don't require it.

This course only needs to be completed once, and your certificate remains valid for future license applications. CTC students can access their certificate anytime through their student dashboard.

What’s covered

Virginia contracting laws, ethics, lien law basics, insurance requirements, business practices. DPOR-approved, online and self-paced.

The 8-Hour Pre-License Course is available as a standalone for $89.

CLASSES A, B & C

Find the right license class for your work.

Virginia issues three contractor license classes. The class you need comes down to the dollar value of your work. All three require the 8-Hour Pre-License Course.

ClassProject SizeExperience RequiredFinancial Requirement
A $150K per projector over $1MM annual gross revenue 5 yearswithin full scope of work for license type $45,000 net worthor a surety bond
B $30K – $150K per projector over $250K, but under $1MM annual gross revenue 3 yearswithin full scope of work for license type $15,000 net worthor a surety bond
C Up to $30K per projectand annual gross revenue under $250K 2 yearswithin full scope of work for license type No specific financial requirement

What Our Students Say

I completed the pre-license course and had a great experience. The online format made it convenient to work at my own pace, and the platform was easy to navigate, even for someone who isn’t very tech‑savvy.

Virginia CTC Student

The exam covers a lot of material. The course sifted through all of that content and highlighted the relevant information I needed. It takes time and commitment to get through it, but it's worth it.

Virginia CTC Student

I highly recommend taking advantage of instructor office hours. That's where the course really started to click for me.

Virginia CTC Student
Learn More

Frequently Asked Questions

  • The Virginia state licensing exam for CBC is equivalent to the NASCLA Commercial Building Contractor exam. Applicants applying with CBC exam scores and those using NASCLA exam transcripts receive the exact same state license. The only difference is that CBC exam transcripts have no reciprocal agreements with other state boards, while the NASCLA Commercial Builder exam is accepted by over 16 state boards. If applying to any of those states in the future, the applicant can provide exam scores from the NED database and waive that state's licensing exam (which is also equivalent to the NASCLA exam), including North Carolina Building Contractor, Georgia Unlimited Building Contractor, South Carolina Unlimited Builder, Florida Certified General Contractor, and others.

  • Journeyman Electrician: Entry-level licensed electrician. You can perform electrical work under a Master’s supervision. Requires 2–7 years experience or apprenticeship.

    Master Electrician: Run your own electrical contracting business in Virginia. Supervise journeymen, pull permits. Requires 1 year as Journeyman + the Master exam.

    NASCLA Electrical Contractor: NASCLA exams are accepted by more states than Virginia Electrical Exams.

    The Virginia Electrician Exam currently has reciprocal agreements with Alabama, Washington, D.C., Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina, Ohio, and Washington.

    Keep in mind that reciprocity for the Virginia Electrician Exam differs from the states that accept NASCLA Electrical Exam transcripts. Some states that accept Virginia exam scores do not accept NASCLA Electrical Exam transcripts, and vice versa.

    For the most current lists, review:

    1. Set up your business entity — VA contractor licenses are issued to businesses, not individuals. Register with the Virginia State Corporation Commission and designate your qualified individual, designated employee, and responsible manager.
    2. Complete the 8-Hour Pre-License Course — Required for Class A, B, and C. DPOR-approved, online and self-paced.
    3. Pass the Business Law exam — Class B requires the Virginia and General portions. Class A requires all three, including the Advanced portion.
    4. Submit your application to DPOR — Include all required documentation and your licensing fee ($385 for A, $370 for B, $235 for C). Allow approximately 30 days for board review and approval.
    5. Take and pass your technical licensing exam — Once DPOR approves your application, your qualified individual takes the trade-specific exam through PSI.
    6. Get insured and start working — Secure liability insurance before accepting your first job.
  • Yes. The 8-Hour Pre-License Course is required for Class A, Class B, and Class C contractor licenses.

  • Booking your exam: For Class A/B Business law exams, schedule directly with PSI after completing your 8-Hour Pre-License Course. For construction and tradesman licensing exams, schedule your exams after receiving license application approval from DPOR.

    What you can bring: Most construction licensing exams are open-book — which means the real skill isn’t memorization, it’s knowing how to find answers fast under pressure. You may bring approved reference books with permanent tabs, highlighting, and underlining (no loose papers or removable tabs).

    That’s why our books come pre-tabbed and pre-highlighted: so you’re not scrambling to find answers during the exam. They ship PSI-compliant and ready to use.

  • Yes — exam prep isn't required. But CTC students pass at a 90% first-time rate. Self-studiers navigating the material without a structured, exam-aligned system see significantly lower results. The exam is specific; winging the prep rarely is.

  • Virginia contractor licenses must be renewed every two years.

    Construction licenses do not have any CE requirements in Virginia.

    Tradesman license holders must complete CE during each two-year renewal cycle as follows:

    • Plumbers — 3 hours
    • Electricians — 3 hours
    • HVAC Technicians — 3 hours
    • Gas Fitters — 1 hour (1 hour total for NGF, LPG, or GFC licenses)
    • Certified Elevator Mechanics — 8 hours*
    • Certified Water Well Systems Providers — 8 hours*

    *Certified elevator mechanics and certified water well systems providers should contact the Licensing Staff at 804-367-8511 if they need information on continuing education requirements for their certificates/licenses.

    All continuing education requirements must be completed during the two-year license term. For example, if your license expires on December 31, 2012, all required continuing education hours must be completed before that date. Your next renewal cycle would run from January 1, 2013, through December 31, 2014, and all continuing education requirements for that term must be completed before the December 31, 2014 expiration date.

Not sure which license fits?

Book a free 20-minute call with one of our licensing advisors. They’ve helped hundreds of contractors figure out exactly where to start — from license class and experience requirements to NASCLA and everything in between.

Book your free call →