Scott C Anderson & Associates Llc

Public permit-pulling record, New Mexico. Last permit filed 2024-02-23.

30 Permits filed
1 City worked in
2023 First permit on record

Permits filed by year

Volume trend in New Mexico.

29 2023 1 2024

Why this page exists

Most contractor-finder sites check state license status but don't verify that the contractor actually pulls permits when required. A licensed contractor who skips permits leaves the homeowner holding the bag, code violations, insurance complications, and problems at resale.

This page shows Scott C Anderson & Associates Llc's public permit-pulling record in New Mexico. It's sourced from official city open-data feeds, not self-reported. If you're interviewing contractors, ask the ones you're considering to explain any gaps or closed permits you see here.

Cities worked in (New Mexico)

Permit counts per city for Scott C Anderson & Associates Llc.

Albuquerque 30 permits

Most common project types

Based on permit_type codes in the underlying city data.

Residential 30

Recent permits

The 20 most recent permits filed by Scott C Anderson & Associates Llc across all New Mexico cities.

Date City Type Status Value
2024-02-23 Albuquerque Residential $197,019
2023-11-16 Albuquerque Residential $14,000
2023-11-14 Albuquerque Residential
2023-11-13 Albuquerque Residential $2,000
2023-11-08 Albuquerque Residential $700
2023-11-07 Albuquerque Residential $60,000
2023-11-01 Albuquerque Residential $4,800
2023-10-30 Albuquerque Residential $40,000
2023-10-27 Albuquerque Residential $62,982
2023-10-26 Albuquerque Residential $60,591
2023-10-26 Albuquerque Residential $100,000
2023-10-20 Albuquerque Residential $3,136
2023-10-18 Albuquerque Residential $9,377
2023-10-16 Albuquerque Residential $12,000
2023-10-16 Albuquerque Residential $30,000
2023-10-13 Albuquerque Residential $49,306
2023-10-12 Albuquerque Residential $3,000
2023-10-12 Albuquerque Residential $3,000
2023-10-02 Albuquerque Residential
2023-10-02 Albuquerque Residential $30,000

How to vet this contractor further

  • Check their state license with your state's licensing board. This page shows permit behavior, not license status.
  • Ask for 3 recent references from the cities above. Match them against the permit addresses here.
  • Look for gaps. Are there years with many permits, then nothing? Contractors sometimes let licenses lapse or change business names.
  • Verify active bonding and workers' comp insurance. Ask for certificates directly from the insurer, not a copy from the contractor.

Planning a project in New Mexico?

Check whether your project needs a permit before you get contractor bids, so you can compare apples to apples.

Check permit requirements →
Data source: Public permit records from the cities above, pulled via their official open-data APIs. We report what the city shows; we do not verify license status, insurance, or workmanship. This is not an endorsement. Always do your own due diligence.