Handyman License Requirements in Deschutes, OR
In Oregon, most paid “handyman” work on residential property requires an Oregon Construction Contractors Board (CCB) license unless it fits a narrow homeowner/employee or maintenance-only situation. Oregon does NOT have a broad “handyman under $500” exemption like some states; the key issue is whether you are doing work that meets Oregon’s definition of contracting and whether it’s residential vs. commercial. Even if a CCB license isn’t required for a specific task, trade licensing (electrical/plumbing/HVAC) and local building permits can still be required in Deschutes County and nearby cities (Bend/Redmond/Sisters).
⚠️ What Requires a Contractor License
The following work requires a state-issued contractor license in OR. Performing this work without a license exposes you to fines, stop-work orders, and civil liability:
- Advertising/contracting to perform residential ‘construction’ services for pay in Oregon generally requires an Oregon CCB contractor license (no broad handyman dollar exemption).
- Electrical work (running circuits, modifying wiring, new/replaced receptacles beyond limited allowances, panel work, most troubleshooting) requires Oregon electrical licensing through BCD and usually permits/inspections.
- Plumbing work beyond limited maintenance (setting fixtures can still require licensing/permits depending on scope; any piping/valves/water heater work commonly triggers permits and licensed work rules).
- HVAC/mechanical system installation, alteration, or refrigerant-related work requires Oregon mechanical/HVAC licensing and often permits; refrigerant handling requires EPA 608 certification.
- Structural work (framing changes, load-bearing modifications, beams, headers, shear walls) requires permits and generally should be performed under appropriate contractor licensing; engineered plans may be required.
- Roofing replacement and major exterior envelope work often requires a licensed contractor and permits depending on scope and jurisdiction.
- Any work that requires a building permit (even if you think it’s ‘minor’) typically must be performed by a licensed contractor when done for compensation on residential property.
State Contractor Licensing Law (OR)
Even when CCB licensing is not required for a particular situation, Oregon specialty trades are separately regulated: electrical work requires an Oregon Building Codes Division (BCD) electrical license; plumbing requires a BCD plumbing license; HVAC/refrigeration work typically requires BCD licensing and often EPA Section 608 for refrigerants. Permits may be required regardless of CCB licensing status.
County Requirements — Deschutes
Business license: Not required at the county level.
Special Jurisdictions & Zones
The following special jurisdictions may have separate licensing requirements:
- Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon (Warm Springs) — Warm Springs is within about 50 miles of parts of Deschutes County depending on where in the county you work (northwest Deschutes). Always confirm boundaries and jurisdiction before starting work.
- Deschutes National Forest — Even if state contractor licensing is not strictly enforced on federal property for certain federal work, Oregon trade licensing and safety rules can still be required by contract/specifications.
- Bend Enterprise Zone / Redmond Enterprise Zone (Deschutes County area) — Most sole-prop handyman businesses won’t benefit unless making qualifying property investments; still worth checking if you expand into a shop/yard.
City Business License — Deschutes
Not required at the city level.
Permit vs. Contractor License — The Legal Difference
A license (CCB/trade license) is your legal authorization to offer and perform contracting or regulated trade work for compensation. A permit is project-specific approval from the local building authority (city/county) to ensure code compliance; permits usually require inspections. You can be licensed and still need permits, and you can sometimes be exempt from a license yet still need permits for the job.
Business Entity Registration (OR)
To operate legally you must register your business. LLC filing fee in OR: $100 (one-time).
Compliance Notes for Deschutes in Deschutes County, Oregon
- CCB licensing in Oregon typically requires both a surety bond and general liability insurance; keep these active to avoid suspension.
- If you do any work on homes built before 1978 that disturbs painted surfaces, federal EPA RRP (Renovation, Repair and Painting) rules may apply (lead-safe work practices).
- Common compliance mistakes: bidding residential jobs without a CCB license, doing electrical/plumbing/HVAC without the proper trade license, and starting permit-required work before permits are issued.
- If you work in multiple cities (Bend, Redmond, Sisters, La Pine), expect separate city business license requirements and separate permit processes by jurisdiction.
Legal Registration Steps for Deschutes
Follow these steps to operate legally as a handyman in Deschutes in Deschutes County, Oregon:
- Step 1: Form/register your business (LLC filing $100 with Oregon Secretary of State) and file the annual report ($100/year).
- Step 2: If you will do residential repair/improvement for pay: apply for an Oregon CCB contractor license (application/license fee typically $250 for 2 years), complete required education, and obtain the required bond and general liability insurance.
- Step 3: If you will touch electrical/plumbing/HVAC: obtain the appropriate Oregon BCD trade license(s) or subcontract those scopes to properly licensed trades.
- Step 4: Determine where you will operate (Bend/Redmond/Sisters/La Pine/unincorporated) and obtain any required city business license(s) and permits before starting work.
Work You Can Do Without a Contractor License
- Work as a W-2 employee for a licensed contractor performing tasks under that contractor’s license and supervision (you personally are not “contracting” to the public).
- Do work on property you own (homeowner work) when you are not offering contracting services to the public (permits may still be required).
- Very minor property maintenance tasks that do not meet the definition of “contracting” (e.g., changing light bulbs, replacing air filters, cleaning gutters) — verify if paid/advertised as a service.
- Painting and cosmetic touch-ups where no regulated trades or permitted construction is involved (still verify lead-safe rules for pre-1978 homes).
- Minor drywall patching (non-structural) and baseboard/trim repairs where no structural framing is altered.
Research generated by AI. Verify all information with local authorities before making business decisions.