Commercial License
Scope: Projects $50,000+ (Commercial Building, Heavy, Highway, etc.)
Testing: NASCLA Accredited Exam or PSI Commercial Building exam plus Louisiana Business & Law
Gulf surge, 150-mph winds, and Delta subsidence define Louisiana construction. The Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC) expects you to engineer for wave loads in Cameron Parish, retrofit lifted cottages in New Orleans, and manage mold remediation in 100% humidity.
Last verified: May 2026 via Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors. Official source: Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors.
The LSLBC licenses Commercial, Residential, and Specialty contractors statewide. PSI (test-takers.psiexams.com/laslbc) administers the Business & Law and trade exams, including the NASCLA exam accepted for Commercial Building.
Louisiana’s bayous bring hydrostatic pressure, uplift, and black mold. Exams drill FEMA P-55 floodproofing, ASCE 7 wind maps, corrosion mitigation, and storm-hardened electrical/standby systems for 105°F heat index days.
Official source: Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors
Scope: Projects $50,000+ (Commercial Building, Heavy, Highway, etc.)
Testing: NASCLA Accredited Exam or PSI Commercial Building exam plus Louisiana Business & Law
Scope: 1- to 4-family dwellings >$75,000 or home improvement $7,500–$75,000
Testing: Residential Building Contractor exam plus Business & Law
Scope: Projects $7,500–$75,000
Testing: Business & Law only (trade exam waived)
Applicants must provide financial statements (minimum net worth $10,000 for Residential, $10,000 for Commercial), proof of general liability and workers' comp, and criminal background disclosures.
PSI offers exams in Baton Rouge, Bossier City, Harahan, Lake Charles, Shreveport, and remote proctoring slots.
If you're licensing in a single trade rather than the Louisiana 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.
Cross-check LSLBC’s fee table before submitting; use the All States hub for interstate planning.
Louisiana’s Business & Law module is 50 questions/2.5 hours and covers licensing statutes, lien law, tax withholding, contract clauses, and OSHA requirements. It’s open book but reference navigation must be fast.
Practice with our national Business & Law exam hub for cross-state baseline rules.
LSLBC accepts the NASCLA Accredited Commercial Building Contractor exam for most commercial classifications, but you must still pass the Louisiana Business & Law module.
If you carry a Louisiana 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 louisiana’s bayous bring hydrostatic pressure, uplift, and black mold, this four-week outline targets what Louisiana field inspectors and your licensing board exam items actually test—not generic national prep.
The Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors.
Yes, for Commercial Building; you still must pass Louisiana Business & Law.
Commercial projects ≥$50k, Residential ≥$75k, and Home Improvement $7.5k–$75k require licensing/registration.
At least four years of construction experience with verifiable references is recommended; LSLBC evaluates case-by-case.
Annually; businesses must maintain net worth, insurance, and CE requirements.
General liability (often $500k) and workers' comp for employees; bonds for some classifications.
Hurricane wind uplift, floodproofing, storm surge, mold remediation, and coastal corrosion.
Use a realistic, Louisiana-focused simulator to build timing, confidence, and repeatable passing habits.