The short answer: Hire someone with a contractor’s license: Licensed, bonded, and insured.
Qualified general contractors are licensed by the state. If your job will cost $1,000 or more—including materials and labor—you should ask the contractor to show you his license.
Before you sign a contract or hand over your deposit, check with the Arizona Registrar of Contractors to make sure the license is valid and has not expired. To do that on the Internet, visit www.azroc.gov and click on “contractor info and searches.”
The license should be for the kind of work the contractor will perform. If you’re hiring someone to work on your roof, for example, the contractor needs a roofer’s license. That roofer is not allowed to replace your dishwasher unless he also has a plumber’s license.
A tip: You often can find good contractors by asking your friends and neighbors for referrals, or by asking contractors you’ve used in the past to recommend people they like to hire themselves. You also can find a list of the contractors Rosie on the House has “certified” as well-qualified and trustworthy by visiting the Rosie on the House Referral Network.
Still, you should check beyond the license before you make your decision:
Consumers file more complaints against remodelers, handymen and other home improvement contractors than against any other kind of service provider. Hundreds of thousands of businesses and individuals call themselves home improvement contractors or handyman companies. Make sure the one you let into your home has all of his paperwork in order.
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