Does this contractor actually pull permits?

Angi and HomeAdvisor check state license. We check whether contractors actually file permits when required. Free lookup across 18 states.

Why this exists

A licensed contractor who skips permits leaves the homeowner with the liability, code violations, insurance complications, and problems at resale. The big contractor-matching sites check license status but not permit-pulling behavior. The difference is a meaningful quality signal.

This directory shows every contractor in our dataset who has filed at least 25 permits in their state. The higher the volume, the more likely the contractor is used to working within the system, not around it.

Top 25 contractors nationwide by permit volume

High volume means active and permit-compliant, not necessarily higher quality.

# Contractor State Permits Last permit
1 Centerpoint Energy Resource Corp MN 24,535 2026-03-13
2 Robert Trethewey MA 7,036 2026-04-14
3 Warners Stellian Co Inc MN 5,601 2026-04-14
4 Andamio Scaffolding Llc NY 5,125
5 1 800 Heaters Inc PA 4,634 2026-04-15
6 Sunrun Installation Services Inc. NV 4,616 2026-04-10
7 Richard Fallone MA 4,573 2026-03-31
8 American Residential Services Llc NV 4,550 2026-04-10
9 Spring Scaffolding Llc NY 4,468
10 Platinum Services Ny Llc NY 4,273
11 Standard Heating And Air Conditioning Inc MN 4,233 2026-04-14
12 Core Scaffold Systems Inc NY 4,110
13 Shawn Leahy MA 3,878 2026-04-10
14 Goettl Air Conditioning & Plumbing NV 3,643 2026-04-10
15 Sunrun Installation Svc NY 3,321
16 Momentum Solar NY 3,280
17 Posigen Provider Llc PA 2,991 2025-08-20
18 John Guarracino MA 2,858 2026-04-14
19 David Noon MA 2,838 2026-04-08
20 Mn Plumbing & Home Services Inc MN 2,797 2026-04-13
21 Brian Murphy MA 2,748 2026-04-13
22 Oneworldenergy Llc AZ 2,626 2026-04-14
23 Mark Brophy MA 2,576 2016-05-25
24 Roma Scaffolding Inc NY 2,568
25 Reliable Enterprises Inc NY 2,561

FAQ

Is every US contractor in this directory?

No. We only include contractors who appear in the public permit records we've ingested, currently 31 cities across ~20 states. If a contractor works exclusively in jurisdictions we don't cover, they won't appear.

Why is my contractor's count lower than I expected?

A few reasons: their legal entity name on permits may differ from their DBA, they may work in cities we haven't ingested, or they may use sub-contractors who pull the permits in their own names.

Does a high permit count mean a contractor is good?

Not directly. It means they're active and work within the permit system rather than around it. That's a baseline quality signal but not a substitute for references, insurance verification, and a physical walk-through of past projects.

Data source: Public permit records from 31+ US cities via their official open-data APIs. We report what the city shows; we don't verify license status, insurance, or workmanship.