RGC 31,373 active licenses in Oregon

Residential General Contractors in Oregon

31,373
Active licenses
37
Counties
$25K
Min. bond

Oregon's Residential General Contractor (RGC) license is the broadest residential construction license issued by the Oregon Construction Contractors Board (CCB). There are currently 31,373 active RGC licenses in the state - the largest single license category in Oregon construction.

An RGC license authorizes contractors to manage entire residential construction projects, including new home construction, full home renovations, room additions, and multi-trade remodels. Unlike specialty contractors, a Residential General Contractor can hire and coordinate licensed subcontractors - electricians, plumbers, HVAC technicians - under a single contract with the homeowner. This makes the RGC license the standard choice for kitchen remodels, bathroom renovations, home additions, and new construction projects involving multiple trades.

To hold an active RGC license, a contractor must maintain a CCB surety bond (minimum $20,000) and general liability insurance at Oregon-required minimums. The CCB verifies both at licensing and at every renewal. Oregon law requires RGC contractors to carry workers' compensation insurance if they employ workers. Each licensed RGC must also complete continuing education every two years - 8 hours for contractors licensed 6 or more years, 16 hours for those licensed less than 6 years, including 3 mandatory hours of CCB laws and business practices.

When hiring a residential general contractor in Oregon, verify that the license status is Active (not Inactive or Expired), that the bond and insurance expiration dates are current, and that the business name on the license matches the name on your contract exactly. The Oregon CCB recommends also checking complaint history at search.ccb.state.or.us before signing any agreement.

Verify Before Hiring

Check any Oregon CCB license in seconds - bond, insurance, and active status.

CCB License Lookup

All Residential General Contractors

Showing 6101–6125 of 31,373 contractors
Active Since 2024 · 1 yrs

Coastline Painting Llc

Astoria, Clatsop County
CCB License
#251785
Expires: June 12, 2026
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2016 · 10 yrs

Coastline Roofing & Construction Inc

South Bend, WA
CCB License
#210049
Expires: April 11, 2028
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2015 · 10 yrs

Coatney Construction Inc

Brookings, Curry County
CCB License
#206951
Expires: June 25, 2027
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2022 · 3 yrs

Coats Construction And Excavation Llc

Lakeside, Coos County
CCB License
#243314
Expires: November 16, 2026
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Expired Since 2018 · 8 yrs

Cob Construction Llc

Molalla, Clackamas County
CCB License
#220075
Expires: April 03, 2026
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2023 · 2 yrs

Cobco Cabinets Llc

Salem, Marion County
CCB License
#248496
Expires: November 01, 2027
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2021 · 4 yrs

Coberlys Roofing And Construction Llc

Lebanon, Linn County
CCB License
#235808
Expires: May 07, 2027
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2026 · 0 yrs

Cobex Construction Group Inc

Sacramento, CA
CCB License
#259776
Expires: January 15, 2028
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2010 · 15 yrs

Cobo Enterprises Llc

Portland, Washington County
CCB License
#192590
Expires: December 22, 2026
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2025 · 0 yrs

Cobre Electric Llc

Portland, Multnomah County
CCB License
#259395
Expires: December 12, 2027
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2020 · 6 yrs

Coby Lynn Rieken & Robert Earl Eugene Anderson

Newberg, Yamhill County
CCB License
#230213
Expires: February 27, 2028
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 1995 · 30 yrs

Cochenour Builders Inc

The Dalles, Wasco County
CCB License
#99656
Expires: April 18, 2027
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2019 · 7 yrs

Cochran Construction Llc

Neotsu, Lincoln County
CCB License
#225234
Expires: March 21, 2027
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 1991 · 34 yrs

Cochran Inc

Seattle, WA
CCB License
#72942
Expires: May 14, 2027
Bond $25K
Insurance $2M
Active Since 2015 · 11 yrs

Coda Construction Llc

Portland, Multnomah County
CCB License
#205084
Expires: January 09, 2027
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2019 · 6 yrs

Code 3 Construction Llc

Newport, Lincoln County
CCB License
#226336
Expires: May 20, 2027
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2019 · 6 yrs

Code 4 Construction Llc

Portland, Multnomah County
CCB License
#226803
Expires: June 20, 2027
Bond $25K
Insurance $500K
Active Since 2026 · 0 yrs

Cody Allen Mcbride

Vancouver, WA
CCB License
#259695
Expires: January 26, 2028
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2018 · 7 yrs

Cody Austin Simpson

Redmond, Deschutes County
CCB License
#220585
Expires: April 26, 2026
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M

Frequently Asked Questions - Residential General Contractors

An RGC license authorizes contractors to manage entire residential projects and coordinate multiple licensed subcontractors - electricians, plumbers, HVAC technicians - under a single contract with the homeowner. A Residential Specialty Contractor (RSC) is limited to a single defined trade and cannot manage multi-trade projects. For kitchen remodels, home additions, or new construction involving more than one trade, you need an RGC.

Oregon RGC licenses must be renewed every two years. Renewal requires completing continuing education - 8 hours for contractors licensed 6 or more years, or 16 hours for those licensed less than 6 years. All residential contractors must complete 3 mandatory hours of CCB laws, regulations, and business practices as part of their CE requirement. Failure to complete CE by the renewal date results in license lapse.

Oregon Residential General Contractors must maintain a CCB surety bond of at least $25,000. This bond provides limited financial protection to homeowners if a contractor is ordered to pay damages for poor workmanship or contract violations. For large projects, the CCB recommends homeowners consider requiring a performance bond in addition to the standard CCB surety bond, as the $25,000 minimum may not cover damages on high-value projects.

Building permits are required for new construction, structural modifications, room additions, and most electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work. When you hire an RGC, the contractor typically obtains the necessary structural permits. Specialty subcontractors - electricians, plumbers, HVAC installers - obtain their own trade permits. Your contract should specify which permits are required and who is responsible for obtaining each one. Only licensed contractors can pull building permits in Oregon.
Verify a License

Check any Oregon Residential General Contractors license in seconds - status, bond, and insurance.

CCB License Lookup