Flooring Listings
The flooring contractor listings published through the National Flooring Authority index licensed and qualified flooring professionals operating across the United States, organized by service type, geography, and trade specialization. Each entry represents a distinct business or sole proprietorship active in the flooring installation, repair, or finishing sector. The listings function as a structured reference layer for property owners, general contractors, facility managers, and procurement professionals navigating the flooring services market. For context on the scope and purpose of the directory itself, see the Flooring Directory Purpose and Scope page.
What each listing covers
Each listing in the directory captures a defined set of operational and credentialing attributes for a flooring contractor or business. Entries are built around verifiable professional data — not self-reported marketing claims — and are structured to reflect the classification standards used across the construction trades sector.
A standard listing captures the following attributes:
- Business name and legal operating structure — sole proprietorship, LLC, corporation, or partnership as registered with the relevant state agency
- Primary service category — installation, repair, refinishing, subfloor preparation, or combination service
- Flooring material specializations — hardwood, engineered wood, laminate, luxury vinyl plank (LVP), ceramic tile, natural stone, carpet, cork, or epoxy/resin systems
- Licensed jurisdiction(s) — state licensing status where contractor licensing is required by statute, such as California (CSLB), Florida (DBPR), and Texas (TDLR)
- Insurance and bonding status — general liability and workers' compensation coverage verification where applicable
- Service geography — metro area, county radius, or statewide coverage zone
- Inspection and permitting compliance history — whether the business operates in jurisdictions requiring flooring-related permits under local building codes, including fire-rated assembly compliance under IBC Section 804 and ASTM E648 radiant panel test classifications
Entries distinguishing residential contractors from commercial contractors reflect a meaningful operational divide: commercial flooring work frequently requires compliance with ADA accessibility standards (28 CFR Part 36) governing slip resistance and transition heights, obligations that do not apply uniformly to residential installations.
Geographic distribution
Listings span all 50 states, with density concentrated in metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) where construction volume and property transaction rates are highest. The directory does not apply geographic weighting — a contractor in Billings, Montana receives the same structural listing format as one in Los Angeles, California.
State licensing requirements for flooring contractors vary significantly. Florida requires flooring contractors to hold a specialty license under the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. California requires a C-15 (Flooring and Floor Covering) classification issued by the Contractors State License Board. In contrast, states such as Colorado and Vermont impose no statewide flooring-specific contractor license, leaving qualification enforcement to local jurisdictions or industry certifications such as those issued by the National Wood Flooring Association (NWFA) or the Flooring Contractors Association (FCICA).
This regulatory patchwork is reflected in how listings are tagged: entries in states with mandatory licensing carry a license number field; entries in unlicensed states carry a certification or trade membership field instead. Readers comparing contractors across state lines should account for this structural difference when evaluating credential fields.
For guidance on navigating the directory's filtering and search functions, the How to Use This Flooring Resource page describes the query logic in detail.
How to read an entry
Listing entries follow a fixed display schema. The header block presents the business name, primary service category, and jurisdiction. Below the header, a credential block displays license numbers, insurance confirmation, and any relevant certifications. A service detail block identifies material specializations and project scope (residential, commercial, or industrial).
Two entry types appear in the directory:
- Standard entries — contain the full credential and service detail schema described above
- Basic entries — contain business name, geography, and primary service category only, without verified credential data
The distinction matters for procurement decisions. A standard entry has undergone credential field verification against the issuing agency's public license database. A basic entry reflects self-reported data that has not been cross-referenced. The entry type is labeled in the top-right corner of each listing card.
Flooring work touching fire-rated floor-ceiling assemblies, accessible routes, or historic preservation designations introduces regulatory layers beyond trade licensing. These include compliance with NFPA 101 Life Safety Code occupancy requirements and, in federally assisted housing, HUD flooring material standards under 24 CFR Part 35 for lead-containing surface treatments.
What listings include and exclude
Included:
- Licensed flooring contractors and specialty subcontractors
- Businesses offering flooring material supply combined with installation services
- Refinishing and restoration specialists for hardwood and terrazzo systems
- Commercial flooring contractors holding FCICA or CFI (Certified Flooring Installer) credentials
- Contractors with documented compliance in jurisdictions requiring slip-resistance testing per ANSI A137.1 for ceramic tile and DCOF (Dynamic Coefficient of Friction) thresholds
Excluded:
- General contractors who list flooring as an incidental service within a broader scope — flooring must constitute a primary advertised trade
- Manufacturers, distributors, or retail showrooms without installation operations
- Contractors whose state license has lapsed, been suspended, or been revoked as reflected in the relevant agency's public records at the time of listing review
- Businesses operating exclusively outside the United States
The directory does not publish project cost estimates, labor rate benchmarks, or material pricing data. Those data points shift with regional labor markets and supply chain conditions and fall outside the reference scope of a contractor listing registry. For additional context on what the broader directory encompasses, the Flooring Listings index provides a structured entry point into the full contractor database by service type and state.
References
- 28 CFR Part 35 — Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability in State and Local Government Services
- Advisory Council on Historic Preservation — Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act
- 24 CFR Part 3280 — Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards
- ADA Standards for Accessible Design — U.S. Department of Justice
- 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design — U.S. Department of Justice
- 29 CFR Part 1926 — Safety and Health Regulations for Construction
- California Contractors State License Board — License Classifications
- 21 CFR Part 110 — Current Good Manufacturing Practice in Manufacturing, Packing, or Holding Human Fo