Guide: How to find and know you're hiring a licensed plumber in Palm Coast.
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- Written by: Palm Coast Local
- Parent Category: ALICE
- Category: HowโTo Guides
Hiring a Licensed Plumber and How To Verify in Palm Coast, Florida
(with state licensing + local permitting, step-by-step)
1) Verify the right Florida license (not just a business card)
Florida plumbing contractors are regulated by the Department of Business & Professional Regulation (DBPR) under the Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB). Look for a Certified Plumbing Contractor license (prefix CFC). โCertifiedโ means they can work anywhere in Florida and have passed state exams and eligibility checks.
Hiring a Licensed Plumber and How To Verify in Palm Coast, Florida
(with state licensing + local permitting, step-by-step)
1) Verify the right Florida license (not just a business card)
Florida plumbing contractors are regulated by the Department of Business & Professional Regulation (DBPR) under the Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB). Look for a Certified Plumbing Contractor license (prefix CFC). โCertifiedโ means they can work anywhere in Florida and have passed state exams and eligibility checks.
How to check: Use DBPRโs public lookup to confirm the license is active, matches the individual/company name, and has no disciplinary red flags. (The Flagler HBA also links directly to the DBPR verifier if you need a quick shortcut.) My Florida License,
| Tip: Older โRegisteredโ (RF) licenses are limited to specific local jurisdictions; for simplicity and mobility, prefer CFC.
2) Confirm insurance & workersโ comp (Florida construction rules are strict)
In Floridaโs construction industry, any employer with one or more employees must carry workersโ compensation coverage. Ask for a current certificate of insurance and (if they use subs) proof that subs are covered or exempt. (FLDFS, FLDFS, Florida Legislature)
Verify general liability coverage (ask for limits and the insurerโs contact). While specific liability minimums can vary by carrier/contract, you should see active GL plus workersโ comp (or a valid exemption, where allowed). (FLDFS)
3) Make sure they can pull the permit in Palm Coast
For most plumbing alterations (water heater swaps, repipes, sewer work, gas lines, etc.), the City of Palm Coast requires a permit and inspections. Your plumberโnot youโshould pull the permit through the cityโs ePlanReview portal and schedule inspections. You can also search contractors and permit history yourself. (palmcoast.gov, palmcoastgov.com)
Hint: Palm Coastโs checklist notes that licensed plumbing contractors must submit permit applications and that a Notice of Commencement is required for jobs โฅ $2,500 before the first inspection. Your plumber will handle this, but you can ask about it to spot pros. (docs.palmcoastgov.com)
4) Ask these Palm-Coast-smart questions
โWhatโs your CFC license number, and whose name is it under?โ (Match it in DBPR.) (My Florida License)
โWill you be using subcontractors?โ If yes, require proof of their workersโ comp/exemption per Florida law. (Florida Legislature)
โWho pulls the Palm Coast permit and schedules inspections?โ Correct answer: the licensed contractor via the city portal. (palmcoastgov.com)
โWhat inspections are required for this scope?โ (e.g., water heater, gas pressure test, sewer, repipe.) City inspections should appear in the permit record. (palmcoast.gov)
โWhatโs your warranty on parts and labor?โ Get it in writing, tied to a permitted job and final inspection.
5) Scope, pricing, and proposal essentials
Ask for a written proposal that includes:
Exact scope (fixtures/lines affected, materials/specs, code compliance details).
Permit & inspection responsibility (should be the plumber). (palmcoast.gov)
Total price (labor, materials, permit fees, potential contingencies).
Timeline (start/finish, inspection milestones).
Warranty terms (labor + manufacturer warranties).
Avoid โverbal onlyโ quotes for anything beyond minor service calls.
6) Red flags in Flagler/Palm Coast
Wonโt provide a CFC number or the DBPR lookup doesnโt match. (My Florida License)
Asks you to pull an owner-builder permit to bypass licensing.
Says โno permit neededโ for clear code-triggering work (heater change-outs, gas, repipes, sewer). (palmcoast.gov, docs.palmcoastgov.com)
No workersโ comp for crews (or vague about exemptions). (FLDFS)
7) Where to self-check quickly (bookmark these)
DBPR License Lookup: confirm active CFC status + discipline. (My Florida License)
Palm Coast ePlanReview: see permits/inspections and how they file. (palmcoastgov.com)
Palm Coast Contractor Search: confirm theyโre registered with the City. (palmcoastgov.com)
Copy-and-use checklist
DBPR license verified (Active CFC: name matches proposal). (My Florida License, MyFloridaLicense)
Current GL + workersโ comp certificates provided (subs covered). (FLDFS, Florida Legislature)
Contractor will pull Palm Coast permit and schedule inspections. (palmcoastgov.com)
Written scope, price, schedule, and warranty.
References or recent Palm Coast permit numbers for similar work. (palmcoast.gov)
Payment schedule tied to milestones (never 100% up front).
Final inspection passed + lien releases (for larger jobs).
To find verified plumbers in Palm Coast Go to our Listed Plumbers where we've already done the research for you,
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