Dwelling Contractor
Scope: 1- and 2-family dwellings statewide
Testing: No exam; requires $25k bond, insurance, and qualifier
Wisconsin contractors pour frost-protected slabs near Lake Superior, retrofit breweries in Milwaukee, and track DNR stormwater permits. The Department of Safety and Professional Services (DSPS) issues Dwelling Contractor and Dwelling Contractor Qualifier licenses plus HVAC, plumbing, and electrical certifications.
Last verified: June 2026 via Wisconsin DSPS. Official source: Wisconsin Department of Safety and Professional Services.
DSPS licenses Dwelling Contractors (company) and Dwelling Contractor Qualifiers (individual). Plumbing, electrical, and HVAC-refrigeration trades require separate DSPS credentials. City permits (Milwaukee, Madison) may require additional bonding.
Expect minus-thirty wind chill, 70-psf snow, and expansive silty clay. Exams highlight frost heave protection, radon cold-climate details, and stormwater plan submittals.
Official source: Wisconsin Department of Safety and Professional Services
Scope: 1- and 2-family dwellings statewide
Testing: No exam; requires $25k bond, insurance, and qualifier
Scope: Individual responsible for code compliance
Testing: 12-hour course plus exam
Scope: Statewide trades
Testing: DSPS or ICC exams with continuing education
Qualifiers complete 12 hours of continuing education each two-year cycle. Plumbing and electrical contractors must maintain $250k liability insurance and file financial statements for high-value permits.
Qualifier exams are offered online through DSPS-approved providers; plumbing/electrical exams run through DSPS and ICC centers.
| Licensing authority | Wisconsin Department of Safety & Professional Services (DSPS) |
|---|---|
| Credentials | Dwelling Contractor certification (the business) plus a Dwelling Contractor Qualifier (the individual) — both are needed to pull a 1–2 family dwelling permit (Wis. Admin. Code SPS 305.31) |
| Pre-credential education | 12-hour approved initial Dwelling Contractor Qualifier course, completed within one year before applying |
| Continuing education | 12 hours every 2 years; since Nov 1, 2022, 4 of those hours must cover construction laws/codes, contracts, liability, and risk management (Wis. Stat. § 101.654) |
| Renewal | Every 2 years on the anniversary of issuance, via the DSPS LicensE portal |
| Trade licenses | Electrical, plumbing, and HVAC are licensed separately by DSPS |
Wisconsin's residential path is built on education, not a hard exam: you need the 12-hour initial Qualifier course, and you must hold both the Dwelling Contractor (business) and Dwelling Contractor Qualifier (individual) credentials before you can get a permit. The most-missed detail is the post-2022 rule that 4 of your 12 renewal CE hours must be the laws/contracts/risk module specifically.
Verified sources: DSPS — Dwelling Contractor Qualifier · Wis. Stat. § 101.654 (continuing education).
Dwelling Contractor and Dwelling Contractor Qualifier credentials are easy to confuse. Trades remain separate DSPS paths.
| Dwelling Contractor / Qualifier | Covers: One- and two-family dwelling contracting under DSPS rules Authority: Wisconsin DSPS — qualifier exams and contractor credentials |
|---|---|
| Plumbing / electrical / HVAC | Covers: Regulated trade work Authority: DSPS trade credentials — separate from dwelling contractor paths |
| Credential mix-ups | Covers: Advertising as a dwelling contractor without the required qualifier Authority: Not allowed — confirm both company and qualifier requirements |
Uniform Dwelling Code SPS chapters and Wisconsin lien notices separate DSPS exams from generic national prep.
If you're licensing in a single trade rather than the Wisconsin 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 DSPS and municipal fees before filing.
Qualifier exams cover UDC administration, lien law, contracts, and OSHA basics.
Practice with our Wisconsin UDC & trade prep and the national Business & Law exam hub for cross-state baseline rules.
Wisconsin relies on its own Dwelling Contractor Qualifier and trade exams through DSPS/ICC paths. NASCLA does not replace Wisconsin credentialing—confirm the exact qualifier or trade bulletin before you schedule. Confirm the current candidate bulletin for your classification, then use timed state-specific practice instead of assuming an out-of-state NASCLA letter will transfer. Use timed practice to rehearse the modules and paperwork that still apply after any out-of-state credential review.
More: National NASCLA exam guide and our in-depth NASCLA Accredited Exam study walkthrough.
Because Expect minus-thirty wind chill, 70-psf snow, and expansive silty clay, this four-week outline targets what Wisconsin field inspectors and your licensing board exam items actually test—not generic national prep.
Yes if you pull permits on one- and two-family dwellings.
An individual who passes the exam, completes CE, and oversees code compliance for the company.
Qualifier exams allow the UDC codebook.
No. Wisconsin uses Dwelling Contractor Qualifier and trade exams through DSPS/ICC processes. NASCLA does not replace those credentials.
Many Wisconsin contractor paths expect about $500k liability plus workers’ compensation—confirm DSPS and local municipality minimums for the work you bid.
Every two years with 12 hours of CE for qualifiers.
Testing is commonly available via online proctoring and DSPS/ICC-authorized centers. Your authorization email lists the exact delivery options for your credential.
Use a realistic, Wisconsin-focused simulator to build timing, confidence, and repeatable passing habits.