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RSC 7,949 active licenses in Oregon

Residential Specialty Contractors in Oregon

7,949
Active licenses
35
Counties
$20K
Min. bond

The Residential Specialty Contractor (RSC) license covers contractors who perform a specific trade on residential properties without managing the overall project. There are 7,949 active RSC licenses in Oregon - making it the second most common residential license category issued by the Oregon CCB.

RSC-licensed contractors are authorized to perform a defined scope of work within a single trade: roofing, painting, flooring, concrete, HVAC, landscaping, fencing, insulation, tile, and dozens of other specialties. An RSC cannot manage multi-trade projects or act as a general contractor - if a project requires an electrician, plumber, and roofer working under one contract, that contract must be held by a Residential General Contractor (RGC), not an RSC.

For homeowners, the RSC license is the correct credential to look for when hiring a single-trade specialist - a roofer to replace shingles, a painter for interior or exterior work, or a flooring contractor for hardwood or tile installation. Each RSC must maintain a CCB surety bond and liability insurance, and is subject to the same continuing education requirements as general contractors.

Oregon has more than 30 recognized RSC specialty categories. When verifying an RSC license at CCB Lookup, check that the contractor's specific endorsement matches the work they will perform. A contractor licensed as an RSC for painting cannot legally perform structural roofing work - the endorsement must match the job.

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All Residential Specialty Contractors

Showing 5576–5600 of 7,949 contractors
Expired Since 2012 · 14 yrs

Paul James Noland

Salem, Polk County
CCB License
#196733
Expires: April 26, 2026
Bond $20K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 1982 · 44 yrs

Paul Louis Wiederhold

Portland, Multnomah County
CCB License
#39197
Expires: October 29, 2026
Bond $20K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2026 · 0 yrs

Paul Michael Kennedy

Grants Pass, Josephine County
CCB License
#260070
Expires: February 11, 2028
Bond $25K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 1979 · 47 yrs

Paul Rady

Silverton, Marion County
CCB License
#27986
Expires: July 17, 2027
Bond $20K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 1990 · 35 yrs

Paul Spencer Manning

Vancouver, WA
CCB License
#68218
Expires: August 18, 2026
Bond $20K
Insurance $1M
Expired Since 1998 · 28 yrs

Pavel Petrovich (paul) Voloshin

Portland, Multnomah County
CCB License
#127717
Expires: February 26, 2026
Bond $20K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2009 · 17 yrs

Payette Floor Covering Inc

Boise, ID
CCB License
#186149
Expires: March 31, 2027
Bond $20K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2021 · 5 yrs

Pbs Services Llc

Vancouver, WA
CCB License
#234257
Expires: January 26, 2027
Bond $20K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2018 · 8 yrs

Pc Plumbing Llc

Goldendale, WA
CCB License
#218639
Expires: January 12, 2028
Bond $20K
Insurance $1M
Active Since 2016 · 9 yrs

Pdx Construction Llc

Vancouver, WA
CCB License
#211909
Expires: September 02, 2026
Bond $20K
Insurance $1M

Frequently Asked Questions - Residential Specialty Contractors

A Residential Specialty Contractor (RSC) is licensed for a specific trade - roofing, painting, flooring, HVAC, concrete - and cannot manage multi-trade projects. A Residential General Contractor (RGC) can oversee entire projects and hire subcontractors across multiple trades. For single-trade work like replacing a roof or painting a house, an RSC is appropriate. For projects involving more than one trade, you need an RGC.

Each RSC license includes a specific endorsement that defines the authorized trade. The endorsement appears on the contractor's CCB record. When verifying an RSC at CCB Lookup, check that the endorsement matches the work they will perform. An RSC licensed for painting cannot legally perform roofing work - the endorsement must match the job scope.

An RSC can hire workers as employees but cannot subcontract work to other licensed contractors while acting as the primary contractor on a project. If a project requires coordination of multiple specialty trades under one contract, a Residential General Contractor (RGC) is required. An RSC performing work outside their authorized trade endorsement is in violation of CCB rules.

Oregon RSC contractors must maintain a CCB surety bond (minimum $25,000) and general liability insurance at Oregon-required minimums. The specific insurance minimums can vary by license endorsement. Always verify that both the bond and insurance are current - they have separate expiration dates from the license itself - before signing any contract.
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