Elevator Mechanic License Requirements

Installs, maintains, and repairs elevators, escalators, and lifts Requirements are tracked across all 50 states and DC from official state licensing boards and NASCLA; see our methodology.

36
States Require License
71%
of All Jurisdictions
15
No State License

States Requiring a Elevator Mechanic License (36)

State License Type Exam Bond Insur. Fee
Alabama Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Alaska Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Arizona Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Arkansas Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
California Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Colorado Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Connecticut Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
District of Columbia Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Florida Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Georgia Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Hawaii Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Illinois Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Indiana Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Kentucky Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Louisiana Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Maryland Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Massachusetts Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Michigan Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Minnesota Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Mississippi Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Nevada Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
New Jersey Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
New Mexico Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
New York Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
North Carolina Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Ohio Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Oklahoma Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Oregon Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Pennsylvania Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Rhode Island Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
South Carolina Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Tennessee Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Utah Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Virginia Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
Washington Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400
West Virginia Elevator Mechanic/Contractor License Yes No $500K $100-$400

States Without State Elevator Mechanic License (15)

In these states, elevator mechanic contractors do not require a state license. Local permits and municipal registration may still apply.

What the Elevator Mechanic Licensing Landscape Shows

PlainHireCheck's elevator mechanic dataset covers 51 US state-level jurisdictions. Of these, 36 (71%) require a state-issued elevator mechanic license and 15 do not — a distribution that reveals how the trade is regulated nationally. Elevator Mechanic sits in the middle of the licensing spectrum: roughly half of states license it at the state level, while the rest delegate regulation to cities, counties, or industry self-governance.

Across the 36 licensing states, 36 (100%) require a qualifying exam, 0 (0%) mandate a surety bond, and 36 (100%) set a minimum liability-insurance floor. These three screens — exam, bond, insurance — are the strongest signals of regulatory intent: an exam guards competence, a bond protects consumers financially if work fails, and insurance covers on-site liability. States that stack all three typically run the most protective elevator mechanic regimes in the country; states that require only a simple registration reflect lighter-touch oversight. Fee ranges and bond amounts in the table above vary widely by state — bond sizes alone span several orders of magnitude, reflecting differences in typical project value and consumer-exposure risk across jurisdictions.

For consumers and contractors planning multi-state work, the practical takeaway is that a elevator mechanic license rarely transfers automatically across state lines — each licensing state runs its own application, vetting, and renewal cycle. Reciprocity agreements exist but are selective, and an out-of-state elevator mechanic contractor working in a licensing state without credentials may void warranty protections, lose access to licensing-board complaint channels, and expose homeowners to liability. When hiring a elevator mechanic contractor, start by confirming your state's requirements on the state detail page linked above, then verify the specific license number against the state board's public lookup. In states without a state license, shift the verification burden to local building-department registration, insurance certificates, workers' compensation coverage, and references — the absence of state licensing does not mean the absence of risk.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a licensed and unlicensed contractor?

A licensed contractor has met state-specific requirements including education, experience, exams, and background checks. They carry required insurance and bonds. An unlicensed contractor has met none of these requirements. Hiring an unlicensed contractor may void your homeowner's insurance, expose you to liability if a worker is injured, and leave you with no legal recourse for defective work.

Does a license guarantee quality work?

No. A license means the contractor met minimum standards at the time of licensing. Always check reviews, ask for references, and see past project photos. However, a licensed contractor provides legal protections that an unlicensed contractor does not.

What is a contractor bond and why does it matter?

A contractor bond (surety bond) is a three-party agreement between the contractor, a bonding company, and you. If the contractor fails to complete a job or causes damage, you can make a claim against the bond. Bonds typically have limits ($5K-$100K) — they are a baseline protection, not comprehensive coverage.

What is contractor liability insurance?

General liability insurance covers property damage and bodily injury caused by the contractor. Always ask for a Certificate of Insurance showing at least $500,000-$1,000,000 in general liability coverage.

What is workers compensation and why do I care?

Workers' compensation covers contractors and their employees if injured on your property. Without it, an injured worker could potentially sue you as the property owner. Always verify workers' comp coverage before work begins.

Can I hire an unlicensed contractor to save money?

The risks are significant: work may not pass inspection, homeowner's insurance may deny claims, you could be liable for injuries, and you have limited legal recourse. Where contractor licensing is required by law, hiring unlicensed is also illegal.

Licensing Breakdown

License required 36 states
With exam requirement 36 states
With bond requirement 0 states
With insurance requirement 36 states

Disclaimer: Requirements shown are from state licensing boards, NCSL, and NASCLA data. Always verify current requirements directly with your state's licensing board.

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Data sourced from official state contractor licensing board records. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainHireCheck Editorial