Plumbing License Types and Requirements Across the US

Plumbing licensure in the United States operates through a fragmented, state-by-state system in which no single federal credential governs who may legally perform plumbing work. This page maps the major license categories — apprentice, journeyman, master, and contractor — explains the mechanical structure of each tier's requirements, and identifies how code adoption, reciprocity gaps, and exam standards create practical complexity for workers and employers alike. Understanding these distinctions matters because unlicensed plumbing work can trigger permit rejections, failed inspections, insurance voidance, and liability exposure under state contractor statutes.


Definition and scope

A plumbing license is a government-issued credential, granted by a state, county, or municipal licensing board, that legally authorizes the holder to perform defined categories of plumbing work within a specified jurisdiction. The credential is distinct from a business registration, a bonding requirement, and an insurance certificate — though most jurisdictions require all four before a plumber may pull a permit or execute a contract.

Scope varies sharply across jurisdictions. In some states, such as Pennsylvania, plumbing licensure is administered at the local level rather than the state level, meaning a license issued in Philadelphia carries no automatic authority in Pittsburgh. In other states — Texas, for example — the Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners (TSBPE) issues a single statewide credential that supersedes local requirements. The full regulatory context for plumbing in any given state determines which licensing tier applies to which tasks.

The practical scope of each license type is defined partly by statute and partly by the plumbing code adopted in that jurisdiction. States that have adopted the Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC), published by the International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials (IAPMO), may define journeyman scope differently than states that enforce the International Plumbing Code (IPC), published by the International Code Council (ICC).


Core mechanics or structure

The dominant structural model across US jurisdictions uses a three-tier ladder: apprentice → journeyman → master, with a separate contractor license that may require master status as a prerequisite.

Apprentice (or apprentice plumber): An apprentice works under direct supervision of a licensed journeyman or master plumber. Most state boards do not require an exam for apprentice registration, but do require enrollment in an approved apprenticeship program. The Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook notes that registered apprenticeship programs typically span 4 to 5 years and combine on-the-job training with technical instruction. Joint Apprenticeship Training Committees (JATCs) affiliated with United Association (UA) locals administer a significant portion of formal programs nationally.

Journeyman plumber: This is the first fully independent license tier in most states. Qualification typically requires completion of an apprenticeship (or equivalent documented hours — often in the range of 8,000 hours of supervised field work), passage of a written examination covering plumbing codes, hydraulics, and safety, and proof of identity and lawful work authorization. The journeyman may perform installations without direct supervision but typically cannot pull permits or enter into plumbing contracts independently.

Master plumber: The master credential represents demonstrated competency at the design, layout, and supervisory level. Most states require a minimum of 2 to 5 years of journeyman experience before eligibility for the master exam. The master plumber exam is substantially more demanding than the journeyman exam — it typically covers system design, load calculations, code interpretation, and in some states, business law. In many jurisdictions, at least one licensed master must be associated with every plumbing contracting business.

Contractor license: A plumbing contractor license authorizes a business entity to enter plumbing contracts, employ licensed plumbers, and pull permits. It is legally distinct from a personal plumbing license. Most states require the contractor applicant or a designated qualifier to hold an active master plumber license, plus evidence of general liability insurance and a surety bond.


Causal relationships or drivers

The decentralized structure of US plumbing licensure traces directly to the constitutional reservation of police powers to states under the Tenth Amendment. Because plumbing directly affects public health — through potable water safety, sanitary drainage, and cross-connection control — states have historically treated licensure as a health and safety regulation rather than an occupational preference.

Code adoption patterns amplify this fragmentation. As of the ICC's 2024 adoption map, the IPC has been adopted (in full or modified form) in roughly 35 states, while the UPC governs in approximately 14 states, and a handful of states maintain independent state-written codes (ICC Code Adoption Map). Because license scopes are written around the adopted code, two adjacent states may define "journeyman" work differently.

The emergence of plumbing continuing education requirements as a license-renewal condition reflects a secondary driver: code cycle updates. The ICC and IAPMO each publish new code editions on 3-year cycles. States that tie renewal to demonstrated familiarity with current code versions use continuing education as the mechanism.


Classification boundaries

The boundaries between license tiers generate the most frequent compliance questions. Key distinctions include:

For an expanded treatment of how these distinctions operate in practice, see Apprentice, Journeyman, and Master Plumber Distinctions.


Tradeoffs and tensions

Reciprocity gaps: No national reciprocity treaty exists for plumbing licenses. A Texas master plumber seeking to work in California must satisfy California's licensing board requirements independently. The National Inspection Testing Certification (NITC) and similar bodies offer portability of exam scores in some states, but board-to-board reciprocity agreements cover fewer than 20 state pairs as of the most recent PHCC surveys.

Experience-hour inflation vs. workforce supply: States that set journeyman thresholds at 10,000 or more supervised hours effectively extend the time-to-licensure beyond 5 years. Trade associations including the Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Contractors Association (PHCC) have documented persistent technician shortages tied in part to these extended timelines. Reducing hour requirements risks lowering baseline competency; maintaining them constrains supply.

Local vs. state authority: In states with local licensure, a plumber holding 4 different municipal licenses to work in a metro area faces administrative overhead that discourages geographic mobility. State preemption efforts — attempts to consolidate local licensing into a single state credential — have been enacted in Texas and Florida but remain contested in states like New York, where municipal licensing boards retain independent statutory authority.

Exam standardization: The absence of a universal national exam means that exam rigor varies. Some states use ICC or IAPMO-administered standardized exams; others contract with private testing vendors under state specifications; a smaller number administer their own exams with no external benchmarking.


Common misconceptions

Misconception: A business license is the same as a plumbing license.
A business or contractor's license issued by a Secretary of State office is a general commercial registration. A plumbing license is a trade-specific credential issued by a licensing board. Holding one does not satisfy the requirement for the other.

Misconception: A master plumber license automatically permits the holder to run a plumbing business.
In most states, operating a plumbing contracting business requires a separate contractor license in the business entity's name, with the master plumber designated as the responsible party. The personal master license does not transfer to the entity.

Misconception: An out-of-state license is valid during temporary work.
Most states require a license or a temporary permit before any plumbing work begins, regardless of duration. Performing work under an out-of-state license without prior authorization from the host state's board typically constitutes unlicensed contracting, which carries civil and in some states criminal penalties.

Misconception: Homeowners can perform all plumbing work on their own property without a license.
Homeowner exemptions exist in a majority of states but are narrower than commonly assumed. Exemptions typically apply only to single-family owner-occupied residences, exclude rental or investment properties, and require the homeowner to obtain permits and pass inspections in the same manner as a licensed contractor.

Misconception: Journeyman and master licenses never expire.
All states that issue active licenses require periodic renewal. Renewal cycles of 1 to 3 years are standard, and most states now attach continuing education hours as a condition of renewal.


Checklist or steps

The following sequence represents the structural phases common to most state journeyman and master licensing processes. Specific requirements vary by jurisdiction.

Phase 1 — Eligibility documentation
- Confirm the applicable state licensing board and its statutory authority
- Verify the adopted plumbing code and whether the jurisdiction uses IPC, UPC, or a state-specific code
- Obtain and review the board's current candidate handbook or administrative rules

Phase 2 — Experience hour accumulation
- Record supervised field hours in a format acceptable to the board (employer affidavit, apprenticeship program transcript, or equivalent)
- Confirm the ratio of acceptable trade categories (e.g., new construction vs. service/repair) if the board specifies a breakdown
- Obtain verification from a licensed supervising plumber or JATCprogram coordinator

Phase 3 — Application submission
- Complete the board application form with all required attachments (hour verification, identity documents, applicable fees)
- Disclose prior license actions, criminal history, or professional discipline as required
- Submit application within any open testing window the board specifies

Phase 4 — Examination
- Schedule the written examination through the board's designated testing vendor
- Review the exam content outline (typically based on the adopted code edition and trade math)
- Confirm acceptable identification requirements at the testing center

Phase 5 — Credential issuance and compliance
- Upon passing, apply for the physical license document or verify issuance in the state's public license lookup
- Record the renewal date and applicable continuing education requirements
- Obtain required bonds and insurance if applying for a contractor license in the same cycle


Reference table or matrix

License Tier Typical Experience Requirement Exam Required Permit Authority Supervision Role
Apprentice Enrolled in approved program No (most states) None Works under journeyman or master
Journeyman 4–5 years / ~8,000 hours Yes None (permit holder is contractor) May work independently; limited apprentice supervision
Master 2–5 years post-journeyman Yes (advanced) Named on permit in some states May supervise journeymen and apprentices
Residential Plumber (limited) 2–3 years (varies) Yes (limited scope exam) Residential only Varies by state
Contractor Master credential (typical) Business/law exam (some states) Yes — primary permit holder Employs and directs licensed field staff

Requirements above reflect structural patterns across states and are not specific to any single jurisdiction. Authoritative requirements are published by each state's licensing board.

The National Plumbing Authority home resource provides state-level reference links for locating the applicable licensing board in each jurisdiction. For the statutory and code framework that defines what licensed plumbers are authorized to install or modify, the regulatory context for plumbing page details the interplay between model codes and state adoption.


References