How to File a Complaint Against a Tennessee Contractor
Filing a complaint against a contractor in Tennessee triggers a formal regulatory process administered by state licensing boards with the authority to investigate, sanction, and revoke licenses. The complaint mechanism exists to protect consumers and uphold professional standards across licensed trades — from general contractors to electrical, plumbing, and HVAC specialists. Understanding which agency holds jurisdiction and what documentation is required determines whether a complaint advances to investigation or is closed for procedural deficiencies.
Definition and scope
A contractor complaint in Tennessee is a formal allegation submitted to a state regulatory authority asserting that a licensed or unlicensed contractor violated applicable statutes, administrative rules, or professional standards. The primary receiving body for most residential and commercial contractor complaints is the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors (TBLC), housed within the Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance (TDCI).
The TBLC holds jurisdiction over contractors licensed under Tennessee Code Annotated (TCA) Title 62, Chapter 6, which governs contractors performing work on projects valued at $25,000 or more (TCA § 62-6-103). Separate licensing boards handle specialty trades: the Tennessee Electrical Contractors Licensing Board and the Tennessee Plumbing Examining Board each operate distinct complaint channels. Home improvement contractors — those performing work between $3,000 and $24,999 on residential property — fall under the Tennessee Home Improvement Contractor Registration program, a separate regulatory tier with its own complaint pathway. For a detailed look at how the TDCI structures its oversight functions, see Tennessee Department of Commerce Contractor Oversight.
Scope and coverage limitations: This page addresses complaints arising from contractor work performed in Tennessee and governed by Tennessee state law. Federal contractor disputes, disputes involving federally licensed trades operating exclusively under federal authority, and civil litigation matters fall outside this regulatory complaint framework. Complaints against contractors operating in border counties may involve jurisdictional questions where the work site — not the contractor's business address — determines which state's rules apply. Disputes purely over contract price without an underlying licensing or regulatory violation are not covered by the TBLC complaint process; those proceed through civil channels such as small claims court or mediation.
How it works
The TBLC complaint process follows a structured sequence:
- Complaint submission — The complainant submits a completed complaint form to the TBLC, available through the TDCI online portal. Submissions require a written description of the alleged violation, copies of the contract, invoices, photographs of defective work, and any prior written communications with the contractor.
- Initial review — TBLC staff perform a threshold review to confirm the contractor holds or was required to hold a Tennessee license and that the alleged conduct falls within the board's jurisdiction.
- Investigation — Complaints that pass initial review are assigned to an investigator. The contractor receives formal notice and has the opportunity to respond in writing. Site inspections may be conducted.
- Board action — The investigator's findings are presented to the TBLC. The board may dismiss the complaint, issue a consent order, impose a civil penalty, require remediation, suspend the license, or revoke it entirely. Civil penalties under TCA § 62-6-120 can reach $500 per violation per day for unlicensed activity (TCA § 62-6-120).
- Appeal — License holders subject to adverse action may appeal under the Tennessee Uniform Administrative Procedures Act (TCA Title 4, Chapter 5).
The TBLC complaint process does not function as a mechanism to compel monetary restitution directly. Complainants seeking damages must pursue civil remedies independently, though a disciplinary record can support such proceedings. For payment-specific disputes, the Tennessee contractor payment disputes reference covers available remedies, including mechanic's lien law and the contractor-client arbitration landscape.
Common scenarios
Complaints filed with the TBLC and related boards typically fall into four categories:
- Unlicensed contracting — A contractor performs work requiring a state license without holding one. This is among the most frequently cited violations. The Tennessee unlicensed contractor risks reference details exposure for both the contractor and the property owner.
- Defective workmanship — Completed work fails to meet the applicable Tennessee building code or accepted trade standards. Complaints in this category require documentation such as inspection reports or third-party professional assessments. For code standards that apply, see Tennessee building codes for contractors.
- Abandonment — A contractor accepts payment and fails to complete the project without legal justification. Documentation of payment dates, project scope, and timeline is critical.
- Misrepresentation — A contractor makes false statements about licensure status, insurance coverage, or bonding. Cross-reference with Tennessee contractor bonding requirements and Tennessee contractor insurance requirements for the minimum standards against which claims are measured.
Home improvement contractor complaints follow a parallel but distinct track through the HIC registration program rather than the TBLC — an important distinction when the project value falls below $25,000. The Tennessee home improvement contractor rules page outlines where that threshold applies.
Decision boundaries
Not every dispute against a contractor constitutes a regulatory complaint. The following distinctions govern whether the TBLC complaint process is the appropriate channel:
Regulatory complaint vs. civil dispute — If the core grievance is breach of contract without an underlying licensing, code, or fraud violation, the TBLC has no authority to award damages or compel contractor performance. Civil court or arbitration is the appropriate forum. The Tennessee contractor contract requirements page outlines the contractual terms that affect enforceability.
Licensed vs. unlicensed contractor — Complaints against licensed contractors proceed through formal board adjudication. Complaints against unlicensed contractors can be filed with the TBLC's unlicensed activity enforcement unit, and may also generate referrals to the Tennessee Attorney General's office for consumer protection action under TCA Title 47, Chapter 18 (the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act).
Specialty trade boards vs. TBLC — Electrical work complaints route to the Tennessee Electrical Contractors Licensing Board; plumbing complaints route to the Tennessee Plumbing Examining Board. Filing against the TBLC when a specialty board holds jurisdiction — or vice versa — causes delays. Verify the correct board before submission by reviewing Tennessee electrical contractor licensing and Tennessee plumbing contractor licensing.
The Tennessee contractor disciplinary actions reference provides historical context on outcomes following sustained complaints, including license revocation patterns and consent order terms. For a broad orientation to Tennessee contractor licensing and regulatory structure, the Tennessee Contractor Authority index serves as the primary entry point across all regulated contractor categories.
References
- Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors (TBLC) — TDCI
- Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance (TDCI)
- Tennessee Code Annotated Title 62, Chapter 6 — Contractors
- TCA § 62-6-103 — License requirement threshold
- TCA § 62-6-120 — Civil penalties for unlicensed activity
- Tennessee Home Improvement Contractor Registration — TDCI
- Tennessee Electrical Contractors Licensing Board — TDCI
- Tennessee Uniform Administrative Procedures Act — TCA Title 4, Chapter 5
- Tennessee Consumer Protection Act — TCA Title 47, Chapter 18
- TBLC Complaint Submission Portal — TDCI