Tennessee Contractor License Reciprocity Agreements with Other States

Tennessee's contractor licensing framework includes reciprocity provisions that allow licensed contractors from other states to obtain Tennessee licensure through an expedited pathway, bypassing standard examination requirements in qualifying cases. These agreements reduce duplication of credentialing for contractors operating across state lines while maintaining minimum competency standards enforced by the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors. Understanding the scope, conditions, and limitations of these arrangements is essential for any contractor seeking to work legally in Tennessee after being licensed elsewhere.

Definition and scope

Reciprocity, in the context of Tennessee contractor licensing, refers to a formal or informal arrangement under which the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors (TBLC) acknowledges licensure from another state as satisfying part or all of Tennessee's own licensing requirements. The Board operates under Tennessee Code Annotated (TCA) Title 62, Chapter 6, which governs contractor licensing statewide.

Tennessee does not maintain blanket reciprocity with all states. Instead, the TBLC evaluates applications from out-of-state licensees on a case-by-case or state-specific basis, assessing whether the originating state's licensing standards are substantially equivalent to Tennessee's. Contractors holding active licenses in states that use the same National Examination Service (NES) or PSI examination platforms — used across multiple U.S. jurisdictions — may receive examination waivers.

Scope limitations: This page covers reciprocity as it applies to the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors and the general and specialty contractor classifications it regulates. It does not address electrical, plumbing, or HVAC contractor licensing, which fall under separate boards — see Tennessee Electrical Contractor Licensing, Tennessee Plumbing Contractor Licensing, and Tennessee HVAC Contractor Licensing for those distinct regulatory frameworks. Reciprocity arrangements for those trades are governed by different statutes and agencies.

How it works

The reciprocity application process through the TBLC involves the following structured steps:

  1. Verify active licensure — The applicant must hold a current, unrestricted license in good standing in the originating state. Expired, suspended, or restricted licenses do not qualify.
  2. Submit a reciprocity application — A separate application form is filed with the TBLC, distinct from the standard new-applicant form.
  3. Provide license verification — The originating state's licensing board must transmit a license verification letter directly to the TBLC confirming the license classification, issuance date, and standing.
  4. Demonstrate equivalent classification — The Tennessee Board maps the out-of-state license classification against its own classification tiers. A contractor licensed for projects above $25,000 in their home state may satisfy Tennessee's monetary threshold requirements for the analogous license tier.
  5. Submit financial documentation — Regardless of reciprocity, Tennessee requires proof of financial responsibility, including net worth statements or surety arrangements consistent with Tennessee Contractor Bonding Requirements.
  6. Pay applicable fees — Reciprocity applicants pay a processing fee set by the TBLC; the Board's fee schedule is published on the Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance website.

The TBLC does not issue a provisional license during reciprocity review. Contractors must hold a valid Tennessee license before performing regulated work on any Tennessee project.

Common scenarios

Scenario 1: Contractor licensed in a PSI-exam state
A contractor holding a general contractor license in Georgia — which also administers the PSI Business and Law exam — may request an examination waiver when applying in Tennessee. Because both states use a comparable examination structure, the TBLC may waive the written trade examination while still requiring the Business and Law component if not previously taken in an equivalent form.

Scenario 2: Contractor licensed in a non-reciprocal state
A contractor licensed exclusively in a state whose licensing standards the TBLC determines are not substantially equivalent must complete Tennessee's standard licensing pathway, including passing both the trade examination and the Business and Law examination. States with limited or no formal contractor licensing programs (some states exempt residential contractors below certain thresholds) typically fall into this category.

Scenario 3: Multi-state operators
A contractor already licensed in Tennessee and one additional state does not receive automatic expansion of their Tennessee license scope based on the other state's classifications. Each classification — including specialty categories described under Tennessee Specialty Contractor Classifications — must be individually qualified.

Reciprocity vs. Endorsement: Some states use the term "endorsement" for cross-state recognition, which typically involves a streamlined administrative transfer without re-examination. Tennessee's process is closer to a reciprocity application with equivalency review — distinct from a purely administrative endorsement. Contractors familiar with endorsement-only models should expect additional documentation requirements in Tennessee.

Decision boundaries

Several factors determine whether a reciprocity pathway is available and how it proceeds:

For a comprehensive orientation to Tennessee's contractor regulatory landscape, the Tennessee Contractor Authority index provides structured access to licensing, registration, and compliance resources across all contractor categories operating in the state.


References

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