Arkansas Contractor License Exam Guide (2026)

Delta humidity warps cabinets in Pine Bluff while Ozark cold snaps crack slabs in Fayetteville, so the Arkansas Contractors Licensing Board expects licensees to design for swampy summers and icy hilltops alike. Our simulator mirrors that mix with drainage math, tornado shelter anchorage, and Arkansas-specific business law prompts.

Last verified: May 2026 via Arkansas Contractors Licensing Board. Official source: Arkansas Contractors Licensing Board.

  • 80 QuestionsPSI trade exam
  • 210 MinutesTypical time limit
  • 70%Passing score

How Arkansas licenses contractors

The ACLB regulates commercial, residential, and specialty contractors, while PSI (test-takers.psiexams.com/arcon) administers both the trade exams and the Arkansas Business & Law test. Submit audited financials and a surety bond with your application before ACLB releases your exam approval letter.

Warm, wet Gulf air collides with dry Plains fronts to create flash flooding, expansive clays, and EF3 tornadoes. Expect PSI to probe French drain sizing, uplift clips for 140-mph winds, and mold remediation sequencing for Delta crawlspaces.

Official source: Arkansas Contractors Licensing Board

Arkansas licensing at a glance

  • 80 Questions — PSI trade exam
  • 210 Minutes — Typical time limit
  • Typical cost: Commercial license fees scale with the monetary limit requested—check the ACLB fee schedule before submitting financials.
  • NASCLA Accredited Examination accepted for qualifying Building paths
  • Common license path: Commercial License (Unlimited or Specialty)

Arkansas contractor license types

Commercial License (Unlimited or Specialty)

Scope: Projects over $50,000 statewide, including building, heavy highway, municipal utility, and specialty divisions.

Testing: PSI trade exam tied to your classification plus the Arkansas Business & Law exam; financial statement must support the requested limit.

Residential Building Contractor

Scope: One- and two-family dwellings up to four stories, including attached garages and decks.

Testing: 80-question PSI residential module referencing the 2021 IRC, Arkansas Energy Code, and moisture-control standards plus Business & Law.

Mechanical/Electrical/Plumbing Specialty

Scope: Single trades defined in Ark. Code §17-25 such as HVACR, electrical, or plumbing.

Testing: PSI trade exam built on IMC/IPC/NEC content along with the Business & Law module.

License limits hinge on your reviewed financial statement and bond. Keep working capital above the threshold or ACLB will downgrade your classification.

What's on the Arkansas contractor exam

PSI operates centers in Little Rock, Fayetteville, Fort Smith, Jonesboro, and Texarkana. Arrive 30 minutes early with two IDs and your ACLB approval letter so you have time for reference inspections.

What Arkansas exam questions emphasize

  • Detouring water across Delta clays—footing drains, sump sizing, and vapor retarder details.
  • Wind and impact protection for Tornado Alley, including ICC 500 shelters and uplift clip schedules.
  • Timber framing in humid zones—proper flashing, termite detailing, and decking fasteners.
  • Arkansas lien, tax, and payroll rules that appear on the Business & Law exam.

Exam-day logistics

  • The business exam is computer-based with instant scoring; failed attempts require a 24-hour wait.
  • Bring only the references listed in the candidate bulletin. Tabs must be factory printed or permanently attached.
  • Plan for heavy test traffic in winter when contractors renew licenses—slots fill two weeks ahead.

Trade-specific exam guides

If you're licensing in a single trade rather than the Arkansas general contractor classification, the dedicated trade hub will get you to the right code book and exam structure faster.

Arkansas code books & approved references (2026)

Always confirm the exact editions and tab rules in your candidate bulletin before exam day. Editions can change between license cycles.

  • 2021 International Building Code and International Residential Code with Arkansas amendments.
  • 2020 National Electrical Code for electrical and residential classifications.
  • Arkansas Contractors Licensing Law & Rules booklet plus the official Business & Law study manual.
  • IMC, IPC, and IFGC references for HVACR and plumbing specialties.
  • OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subparts G, M, and P for safety questions.

Fees & timeline for the Arkansas contractor license

  • Commercial license fees scale with the monetary limit requested—check the ACLB fee schedule before submitting financials.
  • Residential contractors renew annually and must show proof of four hours CE; fees are set by ACLB each fiscal year.
  • Surety bonds start at $10,000 for residential contractors and increase with commercial limits.
  • PSI posts the current exam pricing for each module and collects payment during scheduling.
  • City business licenses (Little Rock, Fayetteville, etc.) still apply even after ACLB approval.

Compare fee structures on the All States hub, then circle back to ACLB for the official payment schedule.

Arkansas Business & Law focus

The Arkansas Business & Law exam covers Ark. Code Title 17, Department of Finance & Administration tax filings, workers' compensation, and bidding statutes. It's only 50 questions, but ACLB expects clean math and citation recall.

  • Know when projects trigger the $50,000 commercial licensing threshold and when municipal permits require proof of ACLB status.
  • Memorize bid bond, performance bond, and retainage rules for public work under Ark. Code §22-9.
  • Track unemployment insurance contributions and quarterly sales tax payments for material resales.
  • Understand continuing education mandates for residential contractors (4 hours per year) so renewals stay on time.

NASCLA acceptance in Arkansas

Arkansas accepts the NASCLA Accredited Commercial General Building Exam for the Building classification. Submit your NASCLA transcript directly to ACLB and you can skip the state trade test, but you still owe the Arkansas Business & Law module and financial review.

A focused 4-week study plan for the Arkansas exam

Because warm, wet Gulf air collides with dry Plains fronts to create flash flooding, expansive clays, and EF3 tornadoes, this four-week outline targets what Arkansas field inspectors and your licensing board exam items actually test—not generic national prep.

  1. Week 1 — Map the exam. Pull your current candidate bulletin, list every reference, and confirm the modules you have to pass. Start a one-page error log. Spend extra time on: Detouring water across Delta clays—footing drains, sump sizing, and vapor retarder details..
  2. Week 2 — Code book navigation. Drill open-book lookups (or memorisation drills if your module is closed-book) until you can find any answer in under 60 seconds. Anchor practice around: Wind and impact protection for Tornado Alley, including ICC 500 shelters and uplift clip schedules..
  3. Week 3 — Business & Law. The Arkansas Business & Law exam covers Ark. Code Title 17, Department of Finance & Administration tax filings, workers' compensation, and bidding statutes. It's only 50 questions, but ACLB expects clean math and citation recall. Layer in scenario-based questions on contracts, lien notice, payroll, and insurance.
  4. Week 4 — Full simulations. PSI operates centers in Little Rock, Fayetteville, Fort Smith, Jonesboro, and Texarkana. Arrive 30 minutes early with two IDs and your ACLB approval letter so you have time for reference inspections. Run two full-length timed simulations. Review every miss with a one-sentence rule statement.

FAQs - Arkansas contractor exam

Who needs an Arkansas contractor license?

Anyone bidding or performing commercial work over $50,000 or residential construction over $2,000 must hold the appropriate ACLB license.

Does Arkansas accept NASCLA?

Yes. NASCLA satisfies the Building trade portion, but you must still pass Arkansas Business & Law and meet bonding and financial requirements.

How many CE hours are required?

Residential contractors need four hours of ACLB-approved training every year before renewing.

Is the exam open book?

Yes, but PSI restricts you to the references listed in the bulletin. Tabs must be permanent and no loose-leaf binders are allowed.

What financial statements are needed?

Commercial applicants submit either a reviewed or audited statement depending on the limit requested; residential applicants can submit a compiled statement.

How long does approval take?

ACLB typically processes completed applications within 7–10 business days, after which PSI emails your scheduling instructions.

Start your Arkansas contractor exam prep today

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