Class A – General Contractor
Scope: Unlimited commercial/residential structures
Testing: ICC National Standard Building Contractor (A) or NASCLA exam plus Kansas-specific law course
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).
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)
Scope: Unlimited commercial/residential structures
Testing: ICC National Standard Building Contractor (A) or NASCLA exam plus Kansas-specific law course
Scope: Structures up to 3 stories/50,000 sf
Testing: ICC Building Contractor (B) exam plus law module
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.
Pearson VUE offers ICC exams in Overland Park, Wichita, Topeka, Salina, and nationwide. NASCLA exams are available through PSI centers.
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.
Always confirm the exact editions and tab rules in your candidate bulletin before exam day. Editions can change between license cycles.
Benchmark costs via the All States hub, then confirm fees with Johnson County or the municipality issuing your license.
Johnson County’s law class covers lien law, OSHA safety, bonds, and CE rules. ICC exams add basic business math.
Practice with our national Business & Law exam hub for cross-state baseline rules.
Johnson County and many Kansas municipalities accept the NASCLA Accredited Exam for Class A/B contractors, provided you also complete the county law class and submit experience proofs.
If you carry a Kansas license and want to work in another NASCLA-accepting jurisdiction, the following state boards will credit your NASCLA Accredited Examination score (you still file a state-specific application and Business & Law module):
More: National NASCLA exam guide and our in-depth NASCLA Accredited Exam study walkthrough.
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.
No. Licenses are issued by counties/cities. Johnson County Contractor Licensing is widely accepted.
ICC Class A/B/C or NASCLA (for Class A/B). Law class completion is mandatory.
Many counties, including Johnson, accept NASCLA for Class A/B contractors.
Annually. Submit 8 CE hours and updated insurance/bond documentation.
Tornado safe rooms, high-wind fastening, expansive soil mitigation, and drought-induced slab movement.
$500k liability, $500k umbrella (Class A/B), and a $10k letter of credit.
Pearson VUE centers statewide for ICC; PSI centers for NASCLA.
Use a realistic, Kansas-focused simulator to build timing, confidence, and repeatable passing habits.