Nevada does not require a statewide handyman license — verification leans on entity registration, court records, OSHA citation history, and BBB complaints. Plus any local municipal licensing in your city. Groundcheck cross-checks all of these.
Nevada has no handyman exemption — any contracting work over $1,000 requires a State Contractors Board license in the appropriate classification. Below $1,000 is unregulated.
Trigger thresholdNSCB contractor license required for any work over $1,000
What we check
Six classes of public record for Nevada handymen.
Local license standing
Where local licensing exists, status from the city or county building department.
Entity registration
Secretary of State filing status: active, dissolved, or administratively revoked.
Court judgments & liens
Public court filings, UCC liens, and judgment records in Nevada.
OSHA safety record
Federal OSHA inspection history, citations, and penalty amounts. Performs minor repair, maintenance, and installation work across multiple trades, typically at sub-contractor-threshold project values-specific.
BBB complaints
Better Business Bureau complaint history and accreditation status.
Phoenix detection
Dissolved entities reopening under a new name at the same address.
Coverage
Verify handymen in any Nevada city.
Groundcheck covers every handyman and contractor entity registered in Nevada, including: