Oregon renewal guide
Residential Limited Contractor
If this license is up for renewal, this page gives you the fee, the timeline, and the items that usually hold the filing up.
Start here
What matters before you file.
Check the fee, the renewal window, and the documents or insurance records that can slow approval down.
Issuing authority
Renewal period
Every 24 months
Renewal fee
$400.00
Bond requirement
Yes — $15,000.00
Insurance requirement
Yes — General Liability, Workers' Compensation
Continuing education
8 total hours if licensed 6 or more years; 16 total hours if licensed less than 6 years, including 3 hours of CCB laws, regulations, and business practices.
Before you renew
Get the filing straight.
- 1
Finish the CE first
Meet the current CE rule before you start the filing: 8 total hours if licensed 6 or more years; 16 total hours if licensed less than 6 years, including 3 hours of CCB laws, regulations, and business practices.
- 2
Make sure the bond still clears
The $15,000.00 bond requirement needs to stay active through the renewal.
- 3
Check the insurance certificates
Make sure the required policies are current and match what the board or agency expects before you file.
- 4
File with the board
File through Oregon Construction Contractors Board (CCB) and pay the $400.00 renewal fee once the supporting proof is ready.
Renew online
Detailed notes
The fine print is here.
Oregon Residential Limited Contractor License
The Oregon Construction Contractors Board (CCB) issues the Residential Limited Contractor license for part-time or lower-volume contractors who stay within the limits of the endorsement.
What This License Authorizes
The CCB endorsement chart says residential limited contractors may supervise, arrange, and/or perform any unlimited number of unrelated building trades involving a residential or small commercial structure or project if they certify all of the following:
- expect gross sales of less than $40,000 from the construction business in the next year
- do not contract to perform work that exceeds $5,000
- do not perform work that exceeds $5,000 per job site per year
- agree to notify the CCB and change endorsement if the business outgrows the classification
Bond and Insurance Requirements
- Surety bond: $15,000 residential bond
- General liability insurance: $100,000 per occurrence
- Workers' compensation: Required if you have employees
Licensing and Renewal
- Pre-license training and exam: The current CCB licensing page says the Responsible Managing Individual must complete at least 16 hours of pre-license training from an approved provider and pass the Oregon contractor exam, unless a listed alternative qualification path applies
- Initial application fee: $400 beginning July 1, 2025
- Renewal period: Every 2 years
- Renewal fee: $400
Continuing Education
Unless exempt, residential contractors must complete Oregon CCB continuing education every two-year license period.
- 3 hours of CCB laws, regulations, and business practices classes
- 5 additional hours of approved courses if licensed 6 or more years
- 13 additional hours of approved courses if licensed less than 6 years
Compliance Risk
The Oregon CCB says residential contractors cannot renew until the agency has proof that the continuing education requirement was met. Contractors who outgrow the residential limited thresholds are expected to change endorsement rather than keep operating under the smaller classification.
*Disclaimer: This information is provided for general reference only and does not constitute legal advice. Always verify current requirements directly with the Oregon CCB.*
Official links
Check the board or agency directly.
Required documents
- Proof of Insurance
- Bond Certificate
Source notes
Oregon CCB License page, CCB Continuing Education page, and current endorsement materials . Verified April 2026.
Rules move. Check Oregon Construction Contractors Board (CCB) again before you pay, renew, or schedule work around this requirement.
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Next steps
Turn it into a handoff.
Once the rule is clear, these tools help you hand it off cleanly or turn it into a cost plan.
Printable checklist
Oregon checklist
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Keep Residential Limited Contractor dates, proof, and official links with the rest of your license work.