Groundcheck/Virginia/Electrician License/Is licensed
Virginia Electrician · verification

How can I tell if my electrician is licensed in Virginia?

Updated June 2, 2026·Virginia electricians·Sourced from public records

The short answer

Ask the electrician for their Virginia Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation (DPOR) — Board for Contractors license number, then verify it at the board's public lookup. The license must be Active, the class must include ELE — Electrical Specialty (Class A/B/C), and there must be no open disciplinary actions. Groundcheck (earthmove.io/trust) does this in under 90 seconds and cross-checks court, OSHA, and BBB records simultaneously.

Confirming a electrician's license in Virginia is a 3-step process. First, get the license number from the contractor — every legitimate electrician working in Virginia should have one and should give it on request. If they refuse or hedge, walk away. Second, plug it into the Virginia Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation (DPOR) — Board for Contractors public lookup at https://www.dpor.virginia.gov/Boards/Contractors/. Third, verify three fields on the lookup result: license status (must read "Active"), expiration date (must be in the future), and disciplinary history (must be clean).

What classification matters: ELE — Electrical Specialty (Class A/B/C). Virginia electricians working under any other classification are not authorized for the installs, repairs, and maintains electrical wiring, panels, fixtures, and systems in residential and commercial buildings you're hiring them for. The threshold rule: Class A: unlimited; Class B: up to $120,000 per project; Class C: up to $10,000 per project. Below that threshold, the electrician may be operating legally without the state license; above it, the license is mandatory.

Red flags that the license isn't legitimate or the electrician is misrepresenting: the license number doesn't return a result, the lookup returns a different name or business than you were given, the status is "Suspended" or "Inactive," the license is in another contractor's name (the electrician is using someone else's license — illegal in every state), or the disciplinary history shows multiple open complaints.

What if the electrician won't share their license number? In Virginia, every licensed electrician is required to display the license number on all advertising, business cards, contracts, and vehicles. If they can't or won't provide it, they're either unlicensed or hiding something.

The fast path: run a free Groundcheck at earthmove.io/trust. Enter the contractor name and Virginia as the state. Groundcheck queries Virginia Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation (DPOR) — Board for Contractors, the Secretary of State, federal court records, OSHA inspection history, and BBB complaints, then returns a single sourced verdict. The contractor is never notified.

Detailed Virginia electrician licensing rules: earthmove.io/trust/license/electrician/virginia.

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