Florida accepts the NASCLA Commercial General Building Contractor Exam for the Certified General Contractor, Certified Building Contractor, and Certified Residential Contractor license paths. Passing NASCLA can replace Florida's trade exam requirement, which is why so many contractors choose it, especially anyone who plans to work in more than one state.
Here is the part that trips people up. Passing NASCLA does not hand you a Florida license. You still have to meet Florida's remaining licensing requirements. The DBPR is clear that certified contractor applicants must complete the examination, meet financial responsibility requirements, and provide proof of experience. That means Business & Finance, experience, financial responsibility, fingerprints, insurance, and full application approval all still apply.
This page walks through the whole picture: the prep packages that get you ready, what the NASCLA exam actually looks like, and every Florida requirement that sits between you and an active license. Everything you need to study is in the Florida NASCLA Contractor collection.
Think of NASCLA as one half of a two-part process. The first half is proving you know how to build, which is the trade knowledge NASCLA measures. The second half is proving you can run a compliant construction business in Florida, which is where Business & Finance, insurance, financial responsibility, and the DBPR application come in. A lot of contractors focus so hard on the trade exam that the business side blindsides them months later. The contractors who move fastest plan for both halves from day one, which is exactly how our combo packages are structured.
The other thing worth understanding early is why NASCLA exists at all. Before multi-state acceptance, a contractor who wanted to work in five states often had to sit five separate trade exams, each with its own books, rules, and scheduling. NASCLA replaced that grind with a single rigorous commercial building exam that participating states agreed to recognize. For a Florida contractor with any ambition to grow across state lines, that portability is the whole appeal. You study once, you pass once, and your trade credential travels with you.
Passing NASCLA does not automatically issue a Florida license. You must still complete Florida's application requirements through the DBPR. Application assistance is available here.
Start preparing today. Books, tabs, courses, practice exams, and tutoring in one place. Browse the Florida NASCLA Contractor collection, or call 866-707-2733 to talk through which package fits your timeline.
The difference comes down to how much prep work you want to do yourself versus how fast you want to start studying. Every option below is in the Florida NASCLA Contractor collection.
| Package | Best For | Books | Tabs | Highlighting | Shop |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Highlighted Combo | Fastest setup. Books arrive ready to study. | Yes | Yes, pre-printed | Already highlighted & tabbed | Shop Florida NASCLA → |
| Regular Combo | Full prep. You mark the books using our guides. | Yes | Yes, pre-printed | Student highlights with guides | Shop Florida NASCLA → |
| Course Only | You already own the required books. | No | No | Digital guidance only | Shop Florida NASCLA → |
| Book Set Only | You need the references, not the course. | Yes | No | No course | Shop Florida NASCLA → |
| Tab Set Only | You own the books and just need tabs. | No | Yes, pre-printed | Tabs only | Shop Florida NASCLA → |
The pre-highlighted combo saves weeks because the books arrive already highlighted and tabbed, so you skip straight to learning and practice. Compare bundles in the Florida NASCLA collection.
The NASCLA Commercial General Building Contractor Exam is a standardized contractor trade exam accepted by participating state agencies. NASCLA explains that the exam helps contractors apply for licensure in more than one state without retaking a separate trade exam in every accepting state, subject to each state's own rules.
In plain terms, it is one broad commercial building exam that travels with you. Instead of sitting a different trade exam in every state you want to work in, you pass NASCLA once, keep the record in the National Examination Database, and send your results to states that accept it. Florida is one of those states.
The exam is open book, which sounds easy until you realize the whole test is a race against the clock. Knowing your books, and being able to find the right page in seconds, is what separates the people who pass from the people who run out of time.
Here is what open book really means in practice. You are allowed to bring the approved reference books into the exam room, and you can tab and highlight them ahead of time. What you cannot do is read a whole chapter during the test. With 115 questions and 330 minutes, you have under three minutes per question, and many questions require you to locate a specific table, code section, or definition buried in hundreds of pages. If you have to hunt for it cold, you will burn five or six minutes on a single question and fall hopelessly behind. If your books are tabbed and your highlighting is dialed in, you flip straight to the answer in seconds and bank the time you need for the harder questions.
This is why the prep matters more than raw construction knowledge. Experienced builders fail this exam all the time, not because they do not know the trade, but because they never learned to navigate the books under pressure. That is exactly the skill the Florida NASCLA collection is built to train.
The exam is also standardized, which cuts both ways. On the plus side, it is predictable. The subject weights are published, the reference list is defined, and the question style is consistent, so a focused study plan maps directly onto what you will see. On the other side, it is comprehensive. NASCLA is a commercial general building exam, so it reaches across site work, concrete, masonry, metals, wood, thermal and moisture, finishes, mechanical, plumbing, electrical, and a heavy dose of general requirements and contracting. You cannot skate through on your strongest trade. You need at least working familiarity with every area, backed by books you can search fast.
Yes. Florida accepts NASCLA as the trade exam path for three certified contractor licenses.
| Florida License | Code | NASCLA Use | Exam Prep |
|---|---|---|---|
| Certified General Contractor | CGC | Trade exam path | Florida NASCLA collection → |
| Certified Building Contractor | CBC | Trade exam path | Florida NASCLA collection → |
| Certified Residential Contractor | CRC | Trade exam path | Florida NASCLA collection → |
NASCLA does not automatically give you a Florida contractor license. You still need to apply through the DBPR and satisfy Florida's remaining requirements, including the Business & Finance exam. Get application assistance.
If you only plan to work in Florida, you can take Florida's own trade exams instead of NASCLA. Here is how the two paths compare, and what stays the same no matter which you choose.
| Requirement | What It Means | Required Either Way? |
|---|---|---|
| Florida Trade Exams | Florida-specific trade exams for the license category. Only count in Florida. | Alternative to NASCLA |
| NASCLA Exam | Multi-state commercial contractor exam accepted by participating agencies. Portable. | Alternative to FL trade exams |
| Business & Finance | Florida's business, contracts, lien law, and financial management exam | Yes, always |
| Florida Building Code | Florida-specific code education where applicable | Yes, where applicable |
| DBPR Application | Experience, credit, fingerprints, insurance, and full approval | Yes, always |
The big advantage of NASCLA is portability. If there is any chance you will work outside Florida, one NASCLA record can support licensure in every accepting state, while Florida trade exams only count in Florida. Prep for the NASCLA path in the Florida NASCLA collection.
NASCLA is a fantastic fit for a lot of contractors, but not everyone. The deciding factors are the license you want, whether you plan to work outside Florida, and whether you already meet Florida's experience requirements.
NASCLA covers the trade exam. These are the Florida requirements that still apply on top of it before the DBPR will issue your certified license.
Florida accepts several ways to prove the experience behind a certified license. Most paths total four years, and college credit can stand in for part of it.
| Path | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Four-year construction-related degree | May count as 3 years of experience credit plus 1 year of relevant experience |
| College + foreman experience | A combination of college coursework and foreman experience |
| Worker + foreman + college | A combination of field work, foreman work, and coursework |
| Four years field experience | At least one year must be as a foreman |
Experience documentation is one of the most common places applications stall. Florida wants that experience documented, not just claimed. That usually means W-2s, tax records, or verification forms signed by a licensed contractor, architect, or engineer who supervised your work, plus a list of representative projects, often around five jobs per year.
The college credit paths genuinely shorten the timeline. A four-year construction-related degree can stand in for three of the four years, leaving just one year of relevant hands-on experience to document. Gaps, vague job descriptions, and missing verification are what trigger DBPR deficiency notices and stretch a two-month approval into a six-month ordeal. Having someone review your experience file before you submit is one of the highest-value steps in the whole process, which is what NASCLA application assistance is for.
Know exactly what you are walking into on test day.
A few of these numbers deserve a second look because they shape how you should study. The 330-minute limit sounds generous until you divide it across 115 questions and factor in the lookups. That is under three minutes per question on average, and some questions will legitimately take five or six minutes of searching while others take thirty seconds. The math only works if you move fast on the easy ones.
The 70 percent passing bar, roughly 81 correct, means you can miss around 34 questions and still pass, so you do not need perfection, you need consistency across every subject area. And because it is open book with an approved reference list, the single highest-leverage thing you can do is prepare those books thoroughly. Confirm the current approved editions with NASCLA before you buy or test, since reference lists are updated periodically and using an outdated edition can cost you time and answers.
The exam is weighted heavily toward general requirements and contracting, which is exactly where your study time should go first.
| Subject Area | Questions | Share of Exam |
|---|---|---|
| Procurement and Contracting Requirements | 31 | 27% |
| General Requirements | 25 | 22% |
| Site Construction | 15 | 13% |
| Concrete | 6 | 5% |
| Metals | 6 | 5% |
| Mechanical and Plumbing Systems | 6 | 5% |
| Wood | 5 | 4% |
| Thermal and Moisture Protection | 5 | 4% |
| Finishes | 5 | 4% |
| Masonry | 4 | 3% |
| Doors, Windows, and Glazing | 4 | 3% |
| Electrical Systems | 3 | 3% |
General Requirements and Procurement and Contracting together make up nearly half the exam. Master those two areas and their books first, and you have built a strong base before touching the trade-specific sections. The subject-by-subject quizzes in the Florida NASCLA collection are organized around exactly this weighting.
From choosing your license type to holding an active Florida license, here is the full path.
Decide between Certified General (CGC), Building (CBC), or Residential (CRC) based on the work you plan to do.
Check that your background meets Florida's experience rules through field work, foreman time, college credit, or a combination.
Choose the combo, course, book set, or tabs that match how you want to study. Everything is in the Florida NASCLA Contractor collection.
Submit your NASCLA application to sit for the Commercial General Building Contractor Exam.
Schedule your exam with PSI at an approved location or delivery option.
Prepare each book for fast lookup and build speed with timed practice. This is the step that decides everything.
Score at least 70 percent to clear the trade exam requirement.
Complete the Business & Finance exam that Florida requires for licensure, even after NASCLA.
Satisfy any Florida-specific Building Code requirement that applies to your path.
Complete Livescan fingerprinting through an FDLE-registered provider.
Secure general liability insurance and workers' compensation or a valid exemption.
File your certified contractor application with all documentation. Application assistance is available if you want the paperwork handled.
Provide any additional documents the DBPR requests so review can continue.
Once approved, your Florida certified contractor license is issued and you can contract legally.
Even if you pass NASCLA, Florida still requires the Business & Finance exam. There is no way around it, and it catches a lot of contractors off guard because it has nothing to do with swinging a hammer.
This exam covers the business side of contracting: financial management, contracts, payroll, tax basics, insurance, lien law, project administration, and Florida business rules. It is the state making sure you can actually run a construction business, not just build.
Why does Florida insist on this even after a rigorous trade exam? Because a contractor license is as much a business license as a building credential. The state has seen what happens when skilled builders take deposits, underbid jobs, misunderstand lien law, or fail to carry proper insurance: homeowners get hurt and unfinished projects pile up. The Business & Finance exam confirms that the person holding the license understands cash flow, contracts, payroll and taxes, workers' compensation, and Florida's construction lien law before they start signing agreements with the public.
Like NASCLA, the Business & Finance exam is open book, so the same skill applies. You need to know your references and be able to find answers fast. Lien law in particular trips people up, because the timelines and notice requirements are specific and unforgiving. Prepare for it with the same seriousness you give NASCLA, and treat them as a package rather than an afterthought, and you avoid the classic trap of passing the trade exam only to stall out on the business side weeks later.
The combo packages in the Florida NASCLA collection include full Business & Finance prep alongside the NASCLA material, so you are ready for both exams instead of scrambling to prepare for the second one after the first.
Florida applicants still need Business & Finance even when using NASCLA. Plan for both exams from the start. The combo packages cover both.
Florida contractor applicants using NASCLA may still need to confirm Florida Building Code education. This matters because NASCLA is not Florida-specific, while Florida licensing still requires Florida-specific knowledge.
The NASCLA exam is built around commercial general building across many states, so it does not dig into Florida's own code adoptions, wind-load requirements, or state rules the way Florida's own materials do. Depending on your path, you may need to satisfy a Building Code education requirement to close that gap.
This gap is not a flaw in NASCLA, it is just the nature of a multi-state exam. Florida sits in a hurricane zone and has some of the most demanding wind-load and building code provisions in the country, shaped by decades of storm experience. A national commercial building exam cannot dive into every state's specific adoptions without becoming unusable, so it stays general and leaves the state-specific layer to each state. For Florida, that means confirming your Building Code education and leaning on Florida-specific materials for anything touching high-velocity hurricane zones, product approvals, and the state's own amendments. Getting this right is not just about passing an application step, it is about being genuinely prepared to build safely in Florida conditions once you are licensed.
Check what Building Code education applies to your path with the DBPR, or call 866-707-2733 and we will point you to the right course.
The NASCLA exam is open book, so your references are your most important tool. Here are the core books and how our course helps you use each one under exam pressure. Always confirm the current approved editions with NASCLA before test day. Complete sets, tabbed and highlighted, are in the Florida NASCLA Contractor collection.
A quick word on why the books matter so much. On a closed-book exam, your preparation lives in your memory. On NASCLA, your preparation lives in your books. Two contractors with identical knowledge can get completely different scores based purely on how well their references are organized. The one with clean tabs, smart highlighting, and hours of lookup practice finds answers in seconds. The one with pristine, unmarked books flips helplessly and runs out of time. Treat your books as the exam-day tools they are, and prepare them with the same care a tradesperson gives their most important equipment.
What it covers: business organization, contracts, project management, labor and safety law, tax and financial basics, and how a construction business runs. Why it matters: this book feeds the two heaviest scored areas, General Requirements and Procurement and Contracting, which together are nearly half the exam. How tabs help: tabs get you straight to the chapter on contracts, liens, or safety without flipping. How highlighting helps: key definitions and rules are marked so your eye lands on the answer fast. Common subjects: contract types, project scheduling, OSHA safety, business formation, and payroll basics.
What it covers: structural provisions, occupancy classifications, fire and life safety, means of egress, and general building requirements. Why it matters: it anchors the General Requirements and structural questions across the exam. How tabs help: code chapters are long, and tabs turn a two-minute search into a five-second jump. How highlighting helps: highlighted tables and thresholds keep you from re-reading dense code language. Common subjects: occupancy groups, egress, fire ratings, and height and area limits.
What it covers: site preparation, earthwork, excavation, foundations, formwork, reinforcement, and concrete placement. Why it matters: Site Construction alone is 15 questions, with concrete adding more. How tabs help: quick access to placement and curing tables. How highlighting helps: marked procedures and tolerances speed up lookups. Common subjects: soil handling, foundation types, formwork, and concrete testing.
What it covers: structural and finish carpentry, masonry units and mortar, metal framing and connections, and wood construction. Why it matters: these trade sections add up across the exam and are easy points when your books are tabbed. How tabs help: separate tabs per material keep the trades from blurring together. How highlighting helps: span tables, fastener schedules, and mix ratios are marked for instant reference. Common subjects: framing, fasteners, mortar types, and metal connections.
What it covers: building mechanical systems, plumbing rough-in and fixtures, and electrical system basics as they relate to general building. Why it matters: these systems questions are fewer but still count, and they are quick wins when tabbed. How tabs help: jump to the exact system section instead of scanning. How highlighting helps: marked requirements and clearances save time. Common subjects: system coordination, clearances, and general code requirements.
What it covers: Florida business and financial rules, contracts, lien law, and project administration for the state Business & Finance exam. Why it matters: this is a separate required Florida exam, and these books are your open-book references for it. How tabs help: Florida lien law and rule sections are tabbed for fast access. How highlighting helps: statute references and key figures are marked. Common subjects: lien law, contracts, financial management, and Florida rules.
Everything in the package points at one goal: walking into the exam able to find any answer fast and stay ahead of the clock.
A realistic 10-week plan that moves from understanding the exam to passing it with confidence.
Learn the structure, the books, the timing, and the subject weights so you know where your points come from.
Prepare each book for fast lookup using the highlighting guides and pre-printed tabs. This is the foundation everything else sits on. Pre-highlighted books skip this entirely.
Work through book quizzes and lookup exercises, one subject area at a time, starting with the heaviest: Procurement and Contracting, then General Requirements.
Take full timed exams to build speed, accuracy, and the confidence that you can finish on time.
Focus on missed questions, the heaviest subject areas, and time management so nothing surprises you on test day.
Most failed attempts trace back to the same handful of avoidable errors.
All three certified licenses can use NASCLA. The difference is what each one lets you build, and the exam prep is the same regardless.
| License | Scope | Best For | Exam Prep |
|---|---|---|---|
| Certified General (CGC) | The broadest building license. No height limitation the way the Building license has. | Larger commercial, high-rise, and a wide mix of work | Florida NASCLA → |
| Certified Building (CBC) | Commercial and residential buildings, generally within height and scope restrictions. | Retail buildouts, small commercial, and residential | Florida NASCLA → |
| Certified Residential (CRC) | One-family, two-family, or three-family residences, subject to Florida scope limits. | Homebuilders and remodelers | Florida NASCLA → |
Choosing between them. Pick the license that matches not just the work you do today, but the work you want to be doing in five years. Upgrading later means more paperwork and, in some cases, more testing, so contractors who expect to grow often start with the broadest license their experience supports. All three accept NASCLA as the trade exam, so the exam prep is identical regardless of which license you ultimately pursue.
NASCLA is accepted by participating state agencies, and each state still controls its own application, business exam, experience, insurance, and financial rules. Passing NASCLA opens the door. You still complete each state's process. Shop exam prep for any accepting state below.
It is worth being precise about what reciprocity does and does not mean, because the word gets misused. NASCLA acceptance is not automatic licensure in another state. What travels is your trade exam credential. When you pass NASCLA and store the result in the National Examination Database, an accepting state agrees to recognize that you have met the trade exam portion of its requirements. Everything else, the application, fees, business or law exam, experience verification, insurance, and financial checks, still belongs to that state.
Florida is a clear example: it accepts NASCLA for the trade portion, then layers its own Business & Finance exam, experience rules, fingerprinting, insurance, and DBPR approval on top. So the honest way to describe NASCLA is that it removes one large, repeatable obstacle from multi-state licensing, not that it hands you licenses across the board. For a contractor building a regional business, removing that obstacle once is still a significant advantage over testing state by state.
You will check in at a PSI testing center with a valid, government-issued photo ID that matches your registration. Arrive early. Late arrivals can forfeit their appointment and their fee.
You will store personal items in a locker, then bring only your approved reference books and an approved calculator into the testing room. The books can be tabbed and highlighted, which is exactly why your prep work pays off, but they are subject to inspection. Use permanent tabs and avoid loose papers or unapproved inserts.
Once seated, the exam is delivered on a computer with the clock visible throughout. Move quickly through the questions you can answer from memory or fast lookup, flag the ones that need deeper searching, and circle back. Do not let a single stubborn question eat ten minutes early on. Bank easy points first, then spend your reserve time on the hard lookups.
Momentum wins open-book exams. By the time you sit the real thing, finding a table in the concrete reference or a clause in the contracting book should feel automatic. That is what the book lookup exercises and timed practice exams are built to produce.
There are cheaper ways to buy a stack of books, and there are other courses out there. What sets our NASCLA prep apart is that everything is built around the single skill the exam actually tests, fast and accurate open-book navigation, and everything Florida requires around it is handled in one place.
We have helped more than 100,000 students work toward contractor licenses, and we have spent over 30 years learning exactly where people get stuck. That experience is baked into the highlighting guides, the book lookup exercises, the timed practice exams, and the tutoring. When a student hits a wall on a concrete calculation or a contracting clause, a tutor who has taught this material for years can unstick them in minutes instead of days. That is the difference between a pile of study materials and a system designed to get you to a passing score.
Just as important, we do not stop at the trade exam. Florida licensing is a multi-step process, and a trade exam pass that never turns into an application is worthless. The combo packages carry you through Business & Finance prep, and application assistance covers experience documentation, fingerprinting, insurance, and the DBPR filing so nothing falls through the cracks.
Flexible payment options let you start preparing now and spread the cost over time. Call 866-707-2733 and we will map out a plan that fits your timeline and budget.
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The highlighting guides made the open book exam so much faster. I passed NASCLA on my first try and never felt rushed.
The pre-highlighted books saved me weeks. I skipped straight to practice exams and felt ready way sooner than I expected.
Tutoring support was the difference maker. I passed both NASCLA and Business and Finance and got my application through clean.
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