Commercial Building Contractor
Scope: Structures exceeding 3 stories or 7,500 sq ft
Testing: NASCLA or PSI Building exam plus Business & Law
Oklahoma contractors chase tornado shelter anchors, expansive red clay slabs, and refinery shutdowns. The Construction Industries Board licenses commercial building, residential, and dozens of trade categories with PSI exams—NASCLA is accepted for certain commercial classifications.
Last verified: May 2026 via Oklahoma Construction Industries Board. Official source: Oklahoma Construction Industries Board.
The Construction Industries Board (CIB) licenses commercial and residential contractors plus electrical, mechanical, plumbing, and roofing trades. Applicants submit experience affidavits, bonding, liability insurance, and pass PSI trade exams along with the Business & Law module. NASCLA satisfies the Commercial Building exam for many classifications.
Licensing questions cover EF5 tornado wind loads, 120-degree heat safety, gypsum sinkholes, and oilfield electrical classifications. Expect FEMA safe-room standards, ER heat protocols, and corrosion control.
Official source: Oklahoma Construction Industries Board
Scope: Structures exceeding 3 stories or 7,500 sq ft
Testing: NASCLA or PSI Building exam plus Business & Law
Scope: One- and two-family dwellings
Testing: PSI Residential exam plus Business & Law
Scope: Statewide trade work
Testing: PSI trade exam for each discipline plus Business & Law
Commercial endorsements require a $5,000 or $10,000 surety bond and proof of general liability. Roofing contractors must carry $1 million liability and register annually even if they hold other classifications.
PSI centers operate in Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Lawton, Woodward, McAlester, and via remote proctoring.
| Licensing authority | Oklahoma Construction Industries Board (CIB) |
|---|---|
| What is licensed | Commercial and residential contractors plus electrical, mechanical, plumbing, and other trades |
| Exams | PSI trade exams; NASCLA Accredited Commercial General Building Exam accepted for qualifying Building paths |
| NASCLA | Accepted for commercial Building — confirm current CIB bulletin |
| Money | $75 application per classification; ~$100 license + $25 endorsement fees (confirm schedule) |
| Key gotcha | Each endorsement can add fees—map your full scope before applying |
CIB commercial Building candidates can use NASCLA, but residential and trade endorsements have separate fees and exams. Endorsement stacking is easy to under-budget.
Verified sources: Oklahoma Construction Industries Board · Oklahoma official licensing page.
CIB commercial Building candidates may use NASCLA, but residential and trade endorsements are separate fee/exam stacks.
| Commercial Building | Covers: Commercial building contracting Authority: Oklahoma CIB — NASCLA for qualifying Building paths + remaining CIB filing |
|---|---|
| Residential Building | Covers: Residential building contracting Authority: CIB residential path — do not assume commercial NASCLA covers it |
| Trade endorsements | Covers: Electrical, mechanical, plumbing, roofing, and similar trades Authority: CIB trade exams/endorsements — each can add fees |
Safe-room construction and Oklahoma lien timing create misses beyond generic IBC drills.
If you're licensing in a single trade rather than the Oklahoma 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.
Use the All States hub for budgeting; confirm fees with CIB before filing.
The Oklahoma Business & Law exam covers licensing statutes, lien law, tax registration, insurance, and safety.
Practice with our Oklahoma CIB law prep and the national Business & Law exam hub for cross-state baseline rules.
Oklahoma accepts the NASCLA Accredited Commercial General Building Exam for the Commercial Building classification. Residential and trade endorsements still use CIB/PSI paths, and each endorsement can add separate fees and exams. Confirm the current board bulletin before you schedule, then drill timed practice so Business & Law and remaining state filing steps do not surprise you after a NASCLA pass.
If you carry a Oklahoma 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 Licensing questions cover EF5 tornado wind loads, 120-degree heat safety, gypsum sinkholes, and oilfield electrical classifications, this four-week outline targets what Oklahoma field inspectors and your licensing board exam items actually test—not generic national prep.
Generally four years of trade experience with at least two years in a supervisory role.
Yes for the Commercial Building classification.
General liability ($50k-$1M depending on license) and workers-comp for employees.
Annually with proof of insurance and continuing education for certain trades.
Yes, using the references listed in the PSI bulletin.
PSI centers statewide and remote proctoring.
Yes, roofing contractors must register and provide additional bonding.
Use a realistic, Oklahoma-focused simulator to build timing, confidence, and repeatable passing habits.