How to Select a Licensed Electrical Contractor in Texas

Selecting a licensed electrical contractor in Texas involves navigating a structured licensing hierarchy, state regulatory requirements, and project-specific qualification criteria. The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) administers the electrical contractor licensing framework that governs who may legally perform and oversee electrical work across the state. Matching contractor credentials to project scope — whether residential, commercial, or industrial — is a regulatory requirement, not merely a best practice.

Definition and scope

A licensed electrical contractor in Texas is a business entity or individual who holds a valid Electrical Contractor License issued by TDLR, authorizing the firm to enter contracts for electrical construction, installation, maintenance, and repair. This license is distinct from the individual trade licenses — Master Electrician and Journeyman Electrician — that govern hands-on electrical work performed on-site.

Under Texas Occupations Code, Chapter 1305, no person or entity may engage in or offer to perform electrical work for compensation without holding the appropriate license. The Electrical Contractor License requires that the contracting business be associated with a licensed Master Electrician who serves as the responsible party for electrical work performed under that license.

Scope of this page: This page applies to electrical contractor selection within the State of Texas, governed by TDLR and applicable state statutes. It does not address licensing requirements in other U.S. states, federal procurement rules for government contracts (which may impose additional contractor qualification standards beyond TDLR requirements), or unlicensed low-voltage work exemptions that may fall under separate regulatory categories. Municipal requirements that exceed state minimums — such as those imposed by the City of Houston or City of Austin — are not covered in detail here.

How it works

The contractor selection process in Texas follows a defined sequence grounded in regulatory verification and project qualification.

  1. Verify TDLR licensure. TDLR maintains a publicly searchable license verification database at tdlr.texas.gov. A valid Electrical Contractor License must be active, not expired or suspended, before any contract is executed.
  2. Confirm the associated Master Electrician. Each Electrical Contractor License must list a responsible Master Electrician. Verify that the named Master Electrician's individual license is also active and in good standing through the same TDLR search tool.
  3. Match license class to project scope. TDLR classifies Electrical Contractor Licenses by the scope of work authorized. Residential-only contractors are not authorized for commercial or industrial installations. Projects governed by the National Electrical Code (NEC) as adopted by Texas require contractors whose license scope covers the applicable occupancy classification.
  4. Confirm permit authority. For any project requiring a permit under Texas electrical inspection processes, the contractor must be eligible to pull permits in the applicable jurisdiction. Some municipalities require local registration in addition to TDLR licensure.
  5. Review insurance and bonding. TDLR requires electrical contractors to carry general liability insurance. Minimum coverage thresholds are established by rule under 16 Texas Administrative Code, Chapter 73.
  6. Assess project-specific qualifications. Specialized work — such as EV charging infrastructure, generator and backup power systems, or renewable energy electrical integration — may require demonstrated experience or additional certifications beyond the base TDLR license.

For a broader orientation to the regulatory landscape governing electrical work in Texas, the regulatory context for Texas electrical systems provides foundational reference on applicable codes and oversight bodies.

Common scenarios

Residential remodel or panel upgrade. A homeowner or general contractor hiring an electrical firm for a panel upgrade or wiring upgrade must confirm the contractor holds an active Electrical Contractor License with residential scope. A permit is required in most jurisdictions, and inspection by a TDLR-licensed Electrical Inspector is mandatory upon completion.

New commercial construction. Commercial projects — covered under commercial electrical systems in Texas — require a contractor licensed for commercial scope. Bidding documents typically require proof of TDLR licensure, certificate of insurance, and identification of the responsible Master Electrician at bid submission.

Industrial facility work. Industrial electrical systems operating at higher voltages or involving specialized equipment such as motor control centers require contractors with industrial license scope and verifiable experience with applicable NFPA 70E (2024 edition) and NEC Article 670 requirements.

Rural or agricultural installations. Agricultural electrical systems and rural electrical systems sometimes involve utility interconnection questions governed by the local electric cooperative or transmission utility, in addition to TDLR licensing requirements.

Decision boundaries

The central distinction in contractor selection is license class alignment with project type:

Project Type Required License Scope Permit Required
Residential (1-4 units) Residential Electrical Contractor Yes, in most jurisdictions
Commercial / Multifamily Commercial Electrical Contractor Yes
Industrial Industrial Electrical Contractor Yes
Low-voltage only (Class 2) May qualify for separate exemption Varies

A Residential Electrical Contractor license does not authorize commercial work. Hiring a contractor whose license scope does not match the project type exposes the project owner to liability for unpermitted or non-code-compliant work, and may void insurance coverage.

TDLR enforces this classification. Under Texas Occupations Code §1305.151, performing electrical work without the appropriate license is a Class A misdemeanor, and civil penalties may reach $2,000 per violation per day under TDLR's administrative enforcement authority.

For the full context of Texas licensing tiers — including the distinction between Apprentice Electrician, Journeyman Electrician, Master Electrician, and Electrical Contractor classifications — see Texas electrical licensing requirements. The Texas Electrical Authority home reference provides the broader sector map for navigating contractor categories, code requirements, and inspection workflows across all project types.

References

📜 3 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026  ·  View update log