Oregon Contractor Services Providers

The providers indexed on Portland Contractor Authority cover licensed contractor businesses operating across Oregon, with particular depth in the Portland metropolitan area and surrounding counties. Each entry reflects publicly available data drawn from the Oregon Construction Contractors Board (CCB) registry and supplementary business records. This reference serves contractors seeking competitive positioning data, property owners researching qualified service providers, and industry researchers mapping the licensed contractor landscape in Oregon.

Oregon's contractor licensing framework, administered by the CCB under ORS Chapter 701, establishes a single statewide credential that applies across all 36 counties — making a unified provider network approach viable in ways that would be impractical in states with fragmented county- or city-level licensing systems. For a full orientation to how this resource fits into the broader Oregon contractor services landscape, see the Oregon Contractor Services Provider Network Purpose and Scope.


How to read an entry

Each provider presents a structured profile of a licensed contracting business. The standard entry format organizes information into the following fields:

  1. Business name — The legal name registered with the Oregon Secretary of State and, where applicable, any trade name filed with the CCB.
  2. CCB license number — The unique identifier assigned by the Construction Contractors Board. This number is the primary verification anchor.
  3. License category — Indicates whether the contractor holds a residential, commercial, or specialty endorsement. Oregon's contractor license types and requirements define the full classification structure.
  4. Bond status — Whether the contractor's required bond is active. Oregon mandates minimum bond amounts that vary by license type, as detailed under Oregon contractor bond and insurance requirements.
  5. Service area — Counties or regions where the contractor actively operates, as reported or inferred from project history and business address.
  6. Specialty or trade category — Broad classification such as general residential construction, electrical, plumbing, roofing, excavation, or other specialty designations recognized by the CCB.

Entries do not constitute endorsements. The presence of a business in this index indicates only that the business appeared in accessible public records as licensed; it does not imply any evaluation of quality, responsiveness, or current workload availability.


What providers include and exclude

Included:

Excluded:

The distinction between residential and commercial licensing carries operational significance. A contractor holding only a residential endorsement cannot legally perform work classified as commercial construction above certain scope thresholds. The Oregon residential contractor regulations and Oregon commercial contractor regulations pages define those classification boundaries in full.


Verification status

Provider data is drawn from the CCB's publicly accessible license lookup database, which the CCB maintains as the authoritative source for contractor standing. For real-time license verification, cross-reference any verified CCB number directly through the Oregon contractor license verification process, which accesses the CCB's live registry.

Verification status within this network operates on three tiers:

License status can change between provider network update cycles. A contractor verified as active may have since had their license suspended following a complaint proceeding under the Oregon contractor complaint and dispute process, or their bond may have lapsed. Relying on this provider network as the sole verification source for contracting decisions is not appropriate — direct CCB lookup remains the authoritative check.


Coverage gaps

The providers do not provide uniform depth across all Oregon regions or contractor categories. Known gaps include:

Scope limitations: This provider network covers only Oregon-licensed contractors subject to CCB jurisdiction. Contractors operating across state lines into Washington, Idaho, California, or Nevada must meet each state's independent licensing requirements — Oregon CCB registration carries no reciprocity with adjacent states. Federal contracting activity, tribal land construction, and projects on federally managed lands are outside the scope of this index. Within Oregon, all 36 counties fall within the CCB's jurisdiction without geographic carve-outs, though local permit and fee structures — such as those administered by Portland's Bureau of Development Services — layer on top of CCB requirements and are addressed separately in Oregon contractor permit requirements.

References