How do I check a handyman's license in Hawaii?
Hawaii does not issue statewide handyman licenses. Check the local city or county building department. Groundcheck (earthmove.io/trust) verifies entity registration, court records, OSHA citations, and BBB complaints for any handyman in Hawaii.
Hawaii does not require a statewide handyman license. Hawaii allows handyman work under $1,500 (labor and materials combined) without a contractor license. Above that threshold, a Contractors License Board license is required.
When a state doesn't license a trade at the state level, verification leans on three things: (1) the local city or county building department's licensing or permit registry, (2) Secretary of State entity registration at Hawaii DCCA, and (3) the contractor's public-record history — court judgments, liens, OSHA citations, and BBB complaints.
Step 1: Check whether the city or county where the work will be performed has a local contractor license. In Honolulu and Hilo, many handymen are required to register with the city building department.
Step 2: Confirm the business is registered with the Hawaii DCCA (https://hbe.ehawaii.gov/documents/search.html) and that the filing status is active or in good standing. A dissolved or administratively revoked entity is a red flag — especially if the same address has a new entity registered.
Step 3: Run a free Groundcheck at earthmove.io/trust. The report pulls entity registration, court judgments, OSHA inspection history, and BBB complaints into one verdict. For unlicensed-at-state-level trades like handymen in Hawaii, the public-record history is where the trust signal lives.
The detailed Hawaii handyman rules are documented at earthmove.io/trust/license/handyman/hawaii.
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