Door Repair Contractor (Residential) Licensing
States Licensed
29
of 50 states and D.C.
Burden Rank
46th
for average burdens 1st is worst
Combined Rank
44th
for states licensed x average burdens 1st is worst
Change from 2017 to 2022, if any:
- ↑
- Burden increased
- ↓
- Burden decreased
- ↕
- Mixed burden change
- N
- New license
- E
- Eliminated license
2022 Licensing Burden Rank
How does my state compare to others?
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Door repair contractors, or door installer contractors or garage door mechanics, contract with clients to install, service or repair the opening and closing mechanisms of automatic and hydraulic doors. See Appendix B for details on how we observed contractor occupations.2022 Snapshot
- 22 unlicensed states
- Days lost range from 0 (16 states) to 1,460 (4 states)
- Fees range from $0 (Nebraska) to $1,040 (Nevada)
- 14 states require 1+ exam
- 13 states set minimum age
- 0 states set minimum grade
Changes Since 2017
- No licenses created or removed
- Fees changed most often and usually increased; Utah decreased days lost to education and experience
- Burden rank worsened 1 spot, largely because other occupations improved more; combined rank stayed the same, largely because of similar burden reductions among similarly ranked occupations
2022 Licensing Burden in Detail
Data Notes: 2022 data collected between February 3, 2020, and March 18, 2022. Fees include charges for application review and license issuance; exams; background checks, credit reports and fingerprinting; recovery fund contributions; third-party certification; and certain fees for training courses. Calendar days lost were estimated based on required education and experience; except for amounts smaller than one day, days lost are rounded to whole days and thus may not reflect very small changes between 2017 and 2022. Appendix A details methods for estimating days lost and calculating burden ranks. Complete data, including revised 2017 data, are available at https://ij.org/report/license-to-work-3/ltw3-data/.