Kansas Contractor License Exam Guide (2026)

Kansas jobsites stretch from tornado alley farm towns to Johnson County suburbs with tight energy codes. Local boards demand you can anchor for 140‑mph winds, manage shrink-swell prairie soils, and reference ICC codes without flipping pages.

Last verified: May 2026 via Johnson County Contractor Licensing (JCCL). Official source: Kansas contractor requirements (AG-registered trades like roofing, plus local licensing—verify yours).

  • ICC ExamClass A/B/C
  • 4 HoursPearson VUE session
  • 75% PassingCounty standard

How Kansas licenses contractors

Kansas lacks a statewide GC license; counties and cities (notably Johnson County, Wichita, Topeka) issue Class A/B/C credentials. Johnson County’s program is widely accepted across the region and requires ICC or NASCLA exams plus CE. Pearson VUE (home.pearsonvue.com/icc) administers the ICC National Standard exams.

Kansas contractors brace for EF4 tornadoes, 110°F summers, and expansive clay. Exams poke at wind-borne debris zones, tornado shelter anchorage, slab-on-grade vapor control, and high plains snow drift.

Official source: Kansas contractor requirements (AG-registered trades like roofing, plus local licensing—verify yours)

Also see: Kansas.gov (state services directory)

Kansas licensing at a glance

  • ICC Exam — Class A/B/C
  • 4 Hours — Pearson VUE session
  • Typical cost: JCCL application fee ($225) plus annual renewal ($225)
  • NASCLA Accredited Examination accepted for qualifying Building paths
  • Common license path: Class A – General Contractor

Kansas contractor license types

Class A – General Contractor

Scope: Unlimited commercial/residential structures

Testing: ICC National Standard Building Contractor (A) or NASCLA exam plus Kansas-specific law course

Class B – Building Contractor

Scope: Structures up to 3 stories/50,000 sf

Testing: ICC Building Contractor (B) exam plus law module

Class C – Residential Contractor

Scope: One- and two-family dwellings

Testing: ICC Residential Contractor (C) exam referencing the IRC

JCCL licenses require $500,000 general liability, $500,000 umbrella (Class A/B), $10,000 letter of credit, and 8 hours of CE annually. Other municipalities honor the credentials but may impose extra bonds.

What's on the Kansas contractor exam

Pearson VUE offers ICC exams in Overland Park, Wichita, Topeka, Salina, and nationwide. NASCLA exams are available through PSI centers.

What Kansas exam questions emphasize

  • Wind uplift, shear walls, and tornado safe room requirements
  • Post-tension and slab-on-grade reinforcement for expansive prairie soils
  • Kansas lien law and prompt-pay statutes (K.S.A. 16‑1801 et seq.)
  • Energy code compliance under the Kansas Energy Efficiency Disclosure Act

Exam-day logistics

  • Bring your authorization letter, two IDs, and approved references (ICC codes must be clean and tabbed)
  • ICC exams are open book; NASCLA allows the official reference set
  • Scores post instantly; upload them to the JCCL portal along with CE certificates

Trade-specific exam guides

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

Kansas 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.

  • 2018 International Building Code
  • 2018 International Residential Code
  • 2018 International Mechanical/Plumbing Codes (for specialties)
  • Kansas Statutes Annotated 16-1801 (Lien Law)
  • OSHA 29 CFR 1926
  • ICC Contractor’s Guide to Business, Law and Project Management

Fees & timeline for the Kansas contractor license

  • JCCL application fee ($225) plus annual renewal ($225)
  • ICC exam fees (~$150) or NASCLA exam fee (~$106 + PSI fee)
  • 8 hours CE per year from JCCL-approved providers (cost varies)
  • $500,000 liability insurance + $10,000 LOC proof
  • Reciprocity cities may add their own permits/bonds

Benchmark costs via the All States hub, then confirm fees with Johnson County or the municipality issuing your license.

Kansas Business & Law focus

Johnson County’s law class covers lien law, OSHA safety, bonds, and CE rules. ICC exams add basic business math.

  • Memorize Kansas lien filing (4 months) and enforcement (1 year) deadlines
  • Understand worker classification and unemployment insurance requirements
  • Know CE tracking (8 hours per year) and license renewal each December
  • Practice profit, overhead, and schedule compression calculations

A focused 4-week study plan for the Kansas exam

Because kansas contractors brace for EF4 tornadoes, 110°F summers, and expansive clay, this four-week outline targets what Kansas 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: Wind uplift, shear walls, and tornado safe room requirements.
  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: Post-tension and slab-on-grade reinforcement for expansive prairie soils.
  3. Week 3 — Business & Law. Johnson County’s law class covers lien law, OSHA safety, bonds, and CE rules. ICC exams add basic business math. Layer in scenario-based questions on contracts, lien notice, payroll, and insurance.
  4. Week 4 — Full simulations. Pearson VUE offers ICC exams in Overland Park, Wichita, Topeka, Salina, and nationwide. NASCLA exams are available through PSI centers. Run two full-length timed simulations. Review every miss with a one-sentence rule statement.

FAQs - Kansas contractor exam

Is there a statewide Kansas contractor license?

No. Licenses are issued by counties/cities. Johnson County Contractor Licensing is widely accepted.

What exams are accepted?

ICC Class A/B/C or NASCLA (for Class A/B). Law class completion is mandatory.

Does Kansas accept NASCLA?

Many counties, including Johnson, accept NASCLA for Class A/B contractors.

How often do I renew?

Annually. Submit 8 CE hours and updated insurance/bond documentation.

What climate topics appear?

Tornado safe rooms, high-wind fastening, expansive soil mitigation, and drought-induced slab movement.

What insurance/bonds are required?

$500k liability, $500k umbrella (Class A/B), and a $10k letter of credit.

Where do I test?

Pearson VUE centers statewide for ICC; PSI centers for NASCLA.

Start your Kansas contractor exam prep today

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