Bulletproof Handyman

What Can a Handyman Do Without a License in Denver, Colorado?

Colorado does not have a single statewide “general contractor license” for handymen; contractor licensing is largely handled at the city/county level (including Denver). However, Colorado DOES require state licensing for certain trades (notably electrical and plumbing), and Denver requires contractor licensing/registration for building work plus permits for many projects. There is not a universal statewide handyman dollar-threshold exemption; instead, limits come from (1) trade licensing laws (state) and (2) local contractor licensing + permit rules (Denver).

The magic number in CO: $None. Jobs under $None (labor + materials combined) don't require a contractor license — you can take those as a handyman. Jobs at or above $None require a contractor license. Know your number, know your limit.

✅ What You Can Do Without a License

Common Jobs Handymen Take in Denver

Based on the CO threshold, handymen in Denver commonly take on:

⚠️ What Requires a License

What to Tell Clients About Your Scope of Work

In CO, you can take jobs under $None (labor + materials) without a contractor license. When a client asks, be straightforward: for jobs under this threshold, you're operating legally as a handyman. For larger projects, refer them to a licensed contractor or get licensed before bidding that work.

Business License — Denver

Required. Denver General Business License (via Denver Department of Excise and Licenses) + Contractor Licensing for construction trades

Setting Up Your Business in CO

To get paid professionally and protect yourself, register your business. LLC filing fee in CO: $50 (one-time). You'll also need a free EIN from the IRS and a business checking account.

Your Next Steps to Operating Legally in Denver

  1. Step 1: Form your entity (Colorado LLC filing fee $50) and file the periodic report annually.
  2. Step 2: Set up tax accounts as needed (Colorado DOR and Denver local tax accounts if applicable).
  3. Step 3: Apply for Denver business licensing through Denver Department of Excise and Licenses and determine whether your activity requires Denver contractor licensing/registration to pull permits.
  4. Step 4: If you will do any electrical or plumbing work, pursue the required Colorado state trade license (or only perform work that clearly does not require licensure) and pull permits when required.
  5. Step 5: Obtain general liability insurance (and workers’ comp if you have employees) and keep certificates ready for customers, property managers, and permit applications.

Research generated by AI. Verify all requirements with your local licensing authority before making business decisions.