Illinois Contractor License Reciprocity Agreements

Illinois contractor license reciprocity agreements define the conditions under which a license issued by another state may be recognized — in whole or in part — by an Illinois licensing authority, eliminating or reducing the need for a full re-examination. Reciprocity is not universal across trades or jurisdictions; each licensed trade in Illinois is governed by a distinct regulatory body with its own reciprocity posture. This reference maps the structure of reciprocity in Illinois, identifies the trades and agencies where it applies, and clarifies the procedural boundaries that determine eligibility.

Definition and scope

Reciprocity in contractor licensing refers to a formal agreement or administrative policy through which one jurisdiction accepts the licensing credentials of another as satisfying some or all of its own licensure requirements. In Illinois, no single statute establishes a blanket reciprocity framework across all contractor trades. Instead, reciprocity is handled trade-by-trade, with the administering agency — typically the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) or a specialized state board — holding the authority to establish and modify reciprocity arrangements.

Scope of this page: This reference covers contractor license reciprocity as it applies to Illinois-regulated trades and Illinois-issued licenses. It addresses inbound reciprocity (out-of-state contractors seeking Illinois recognition) and outbound considerations (Illinois-licensed contractors seeking recognition in other states). Federal contractor registration, municipality-specific licensing, and federal procurement credentials fall outside the scope of this page. Local licensing requirements — which vary significantly across Cook County, the City of Chicago, and downstate municipalities — are addressed separately under Illinois Contractor Regulatory Agencies.

Key trades where reciprocity arrangements have been documented or formally administered include:

  1. Electrical contractors — governed by IDFPR under the Illinois Electrical Licensing Act (225 ILCS 320)
  2. Plumbing contractors — administered by the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) under the Illinois Plumbing License Law (225 ILCS 320 et seq.)
  3. Roofing contractors — registered through IDFPR under the Roofing Industry Licensing Act (225 ILCS 335)
  4. HVAC contractors — subject to examination and licensing where applicable under the Illinois Environmental Protection Act and related IDFPR rules

General contractors in Illinois are not licensed at the state level in most capacities; the absence of a state-level general contractor license means there is no corresponding state-level general contractor reciprocity mechanism. Specialty trades with state-level licensing are the primary candidates for reciprocity consideration.

How it works

Reciprocity in Illinois-administered trades typically operates through one of 2 mechanisms:

Full reciprocity — Illinois accepts a valid license from a reciprocating state as equivalent, allowing the applicant to obtain an Illinois license without re-examination, subject to verification of standing and payment of applicable fees.

Partial reciprocity (endorsement) — Illinois accepts a foreign license as evidence of competency in certain components but still requires a supplemental examination, jurisprudence test, or Illinois-specific code examination before issuing a full license.

For Illinois electrical contractor licensing, IDFPR reviews applications from holders of equivalent licenses issued by other states. The applicant must demonstrate that the originating state's licensing standard is substantially equivalent to Illinois requirements under 225 ILCS 320/10. Substantially equivalent standards typically require comparable examination, experience hours, and continuing education benchmarks.

For Illinois plumbing contractor licensing, the Illinois Department of Public Health administers reciprocity under the Illinois Plumbing License Law. Applicants from reciprocating states must submit documentation of current licensure in good standing, evidence of practical experience, and proof that the originating state's examination covered the same technical scope as the Illinois Master Plumber exam. As of the IDPH's published licensing guidance, plumbing reciprocity is available only with states that have executed a formal reciprocal agreement with Illinois.

For Illinois roofing contractor requirements, reciprocity applicants must hold a current, unencumbered license from a state with equivalent registration standards. IDFPR evaluates applications individually rather than maintaining a standing list of automatically approved states.

Common scenarios

Scenario 1: Wisconsin electrical contractor relocating to Illinois
A Wisconsin-licensed Master Electrician applying for Illinois licensure would submit an IDFPR application for reciprocal licensure, provide a Certificate of License History from Wisconsin's Department of Safety and Professional Services, and demonstrate compliance with Illinois' continuing education requirements under Illinois Contractor Continuing Education Requirements. IDFPR determines whether Wisconsin's examination standards are substantially equivalent.

Scenario 2: Illinois plumber working temporarily in Missouri
An Illinois Master Plumber seeking reciprocal recognition in Missouri contacts the Missouri Division of Professional Registration. Illinois and Missouri have historically maintained a plumbing reciprocity arrangement, though the contractor must independently verify current agreement status with Missouri's licensing authority, as agreement terms can change.

Scenario 3: Indiana roofing contractor bidding an Illinois commercial project
An Indiana-registered roofing contractor seeking to work in Illinois must apply for Illinois registration through IDFPR regardless of Indiana standing, because Illinois does not automatically extend registration status. This is an endorsement model, not automatic mutual recognition. Full registration details are outlined under Illinois Contractor Registration Process.

Decision boundaries

Reciprocity eligibility is not automatic. Illinois licensing agencies apply the following threshold criteria, which function as hard decision gates:

A comparison of 2 applicant types illustrates the divergence in processing:

Factor Full Reciprocity Applicant Endorsement Applicant
Examination required None (equivalence confirmed) Illinois-specific supplement
Processing time Typically shorter Longer — requires exam scheduling
Continuing education Must meet Illinois standards at application Must meet Illinois standards at application
Fee obligation Full application fee Full application fee plus exam fee

For contractors reviewing the full range of licensing obligations across Illinois, the Illinois Contractor License Requirements reference provides the baseline qualification framework against which reciprocity applications are measured. The broader contractor services landscape in Illinois — including trade-specific pathways and regulatory contacts — is indexed at Illinois Contractor Authority.

References

📜 4 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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