The Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) Ultimate Exam Prep Rental Package is designed for contractors preparing for the Arizona B general residential contractor exam with rental reference books, structured course access, and Application Service included. This package brings together the listed OSHA safety, residential building code, pipe and excavation, carpentry, gypsum, and concrete construction references into one organized preparation option for students who want a focused study path for residential building construction.
The Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) classification is connected to residential construction, repair, remodeling, and building work. Contractors preparing for this license path should be ready to study construction safety, residential building code requirements, carpentry, framing, drywall and gypsum systems, concrete construction, excavation awareness, pipe-related site work, job planning, materials, tools, project coordination, and open-book reference navigation. Residential construction requires contractors to understand the relationship between code, structure, materials, workmanship, safety, and practical field conditions.
This Ultimate rental package is built for students who want more than books alone. The included rental books support open-book exam preparation, while the course gives students a structured way to study the material. Application Service is included with this package, giving students added support as they move through the licensing process. The package price is $1,365 with a refundable deposit of $350, for a total of $1,715.
The Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) exam is tied to residential building construction knowledge and the reference books used for exam preparation. Students should prepare for subjects related to construction safety, residential building code, carpentry, framing, building materials, drywall and gypsum systems, concrete construction, excavation awareness, pipe-related site work, layout, measuring, tools, equipment, job sequencing, project coordination, and practical field methods.
General residential contractors may work with residential construction projects involving foundations, floors, walls, roofs, framing, openings, interior systems, exterior systems, drywall, gypsum systems, concrete-related work, site conditions, repairs, remodeling, additions, and related residential building components within the limits of the classification. Because this is a residential classification, students should prepare for jobsite conditions that may involve homes, one- and two-family dwellings, remodels, additions, repairs, homeowner-facing finishes, existing structures, and coordination with other trades.
The listed references support several important preparation areas. Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 supports construction safety topics, including hazard awareness, personal protective equipment, ladders, scaffolds, excavation safety, fall protection, tools, equipment, material handling, and general jobsite safety practices. The International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018 supports residential construction preparation, including foundations, floors, walls, roofs, stairs, framing, exterior coverings, interior finishes, materials, and one- and two-family dwelling construction standards.
Pipe and Excavation Contracting supports excavation, trenching, pipe installation concepts, underground construction, equipment awareness, backfilling, compaction, site conditions, and field coordination. Carpentry and Building Construction, 2016 supports general carpentry and building construction knowledge, including tools, materials, layout, framing, doors, windows, stairs, interior work, exterior work, construction methods, and practical carpentry fundamentals.
Gypsum Construction Handbook, 7th Edition supports drywall and gypsum system preparation, including gypsum board products, installation methods, framing coordination, joint treatment, finishing, partitions, ceilings, fire-resistance awareness, and practical gypsum construction methods. The Contractor's Guide to Quality Concrete Construction - 4th Edition supports concrete construction knowledge, including planning, materials, placement, finishing, curing, quality control awareness, and practical concrete workmanship.
Students should prepare for both practical trade questions and reference-based questions. Residential contractor exams can require students to understand how safety requirements apply, how residential code provisions are organized, how framing and carpentry systems are built, how gypsum systems are installed, how concrete work is planned and finished, how excavation-related work may affect residential construction, and how to locate information in approved references. A steady study routine should include reference navigation, trade review, and regular practice using the included books.
The Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) exam is an open-book test. Approved references may be used during the exam, which makes book familiarity an important part of preparation. Students should study with the books before exam day so they can locate information quickly and understand how each reference is organized.
Open-book testing still requires serious preparation. A safety question may require OSHA. A residential code question may require the International Residential Code. An excavation, trenching, pipe, backfill, or underground construction question may require Pipe and Excavation Contracting. A carpentry, framing, door, window, stair, roof, or general building question may require Carpentry and Building Construction. A drywall or gypsum systems question may require Gypsum Construction Handbook. A concrete materials, placement, finishing, curing, or quality question may require The Contractor's Guide to Quality Concrete Construction.
Good open-book preparation includes reviewing tables of contents, indexes, definitions, diagrams, illustrations, charts, chapter headings, code tables, construction details, and key trade terms. Students should practice locating information, comparing related topics, and identifying which reference is most likely to contain the answer. The goal is not to memorize every page. The goal is to understand the structure of the references and become comfortable finding information under exam conditions.
This Ultimate rental package supports that process by combining the included rental books, 1 year of course access, and Application Service in one preparation package. The books provide the reference foundation, while the course helps organize study time and encourages consistent review of residential code, general building construction, carpentry, drywall, concrete, excavation awareness, project coordination, and jobsite safety topics.
Arizona contractor licensing is handled through the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. Contractors pursuing the Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) classification should follow the state licensing process for the proper classification, business structure, and qualifying party. Because this is a residential building classification, applicants should make sure this license path matches the residential construction, remodeling, repair, and improvement services they plan to perform.
A practical licensing path begins with choosing the correct classification. The applicant then identifies the qualifying party, who is the person connected to the trade knowledge and experience for the license. From there, the applicant follows the Arizona ROC application process, gathers required business information, completes required forms, and satisfies the requirements connected to the license.
Exam preparation should begin early because the Arizona B exam involves several areas of residential construction knowledge. Students need time to review OSHA safety, residential building code, carpentry, framing, gypsum systems, concrete construction, excavation awareness, pipe-related construction, materials, project coordination, and general building concepts. Students who study consistently have more time to become comfortable with the books, review important trade concepts, and build a repeatable test-taking approach. This Ultimate package supports that process with 1 year of course access, included rental books, and Application Service.
Passing the exam and receiving license approval are separate parts of the licensing process. This product supports preparation for the Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) exam and includes Application Service to help students stay organized while working through the licensing path.
The Arizona Registrar of Contractors regulates contractor licensing in Arizona. The Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) classification is associated with residential building construction. Contractors pursuing this classification should be prepared to follow Arizona ROC licensing rules, complete the proper application materials, and comply with the requirements that apply to licensed contractors in the state.
Residential construction can involve coordinating multiple construction tasks in homes and one- and two-family dwelling settings. Work may include site preparation, foundations, concrete, framing, floors, walls, roofs, openings, interior systems, exterior systems, drywall, gypsum systems, repairs, remodeling, additions, and related residential construction activities within the limits of the classification. Contractors in this field should understand safe jobsite practices, construction sequencing, material selection, workmanship, code awareness, and the relationship between structural systems and finished work.
Because residential building projects can involve new construction, additions, repairs, and remodels, students should study both code-based requirements and practical field methods. A residential contractor may need to evaluate site conditions, coordinate excavation, plan concrete work, frame structural components, install or coordinate gypsum systems, review code requirements, protect finished materials, and coordinate work so that the finished project is safe, durable, and clean. The references in this package support those study areas by covering safety, residential code, carpentry, gypsum, concrete, and excavation-related topics.
Applicants should use the Arizona ROC licensing process for the final application path. State requirements may include examination requirements, qualifying party information, business entity information, background-related items, bonding or financial responsibility requirements, and other documents required for the license application. This Ultimate package supports exam preparation and includes Application Service as part of the package.
The following books are included with this Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) Ultimate Exam Prep Rental Package:
This Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) package is built around the following exam-room-approved books:
Students should use these books throughout the study period, not only on exam day. The references are most useful when students understand which book applies to each topic. Safety questions may point to OSHA. Residential code questions may point to the International Residential Code. Excavation and pipe-related questions may point to Pipe and Excavation Contracting. Carpentry and general building questions may point to Carpentry and Building Construction. Drywall and gypsum questions may point to Gypsum Construction Handbook. Concrete questions may point to The Contractor's Guide to Quality Concrete Construction.
Preparation for the Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) exam should include broad residential construction review and reference-navigation practice. Students should begin by becoming familiar with the reference list and understanding the purpose of each book. This helps reduce confusion during study and makes it easier to choose the correct reference when answering questions.
OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926 should be reviewed for construction safety topics. Residential construction can involve ladders, scaffolds, excavation, tools, power equipment, material handling, fall hazards, concrete work, drywall work, carpentry work, framing, roofing awareness, dust, sharp materials, and general jobsite coordination. Students should understand safety awareness and safe work practices as part of their preparation.
The International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018 should be reviewed for residential construction requirements. Students should become familiar with code organization, foundations, floors, walls, roofs, stairs, framing, exterior coverings, interior finishes, materials, and one- and two-family dwelling construction concepts. This reference helps students prepare for the code-based portions of residential building work.
Pipe and Excavation Contracting should be studied for excavation, trenching, pipe installation concepts, underground construction, backfilling, compaction, equipment, and site work awareness. Carpentry and Building Construction, 2016 should be studied for layout, tools, materials, framing, doors, windows, stairs, interior work, exterior work, and practical building methods. These references help students prepare for the field knowledge commonly connected to residential construction and remodeling work.
Gypsum Construction Handbook, 7th Edition should be reviewed for drywall and gypsum board products, installation methods, framing coordination, joint treatment, finishing, partitions, ceilings, and practical gypsum construction methods. The Contractor's Guide to Quality Concrete Construction - 4th Edition should be studied for concrete planning, materials, placement, finishing, curing, quality control awareness, and concrete workmanship.
Students should also practice matching questions to the correct reference. A safety question may belong in OSHA. A residential code question may belong in the IRC. An excavation or pipe-related question may belong in Pipe and Excavation Contracting. A framing, door, window, stair, or general carpentry question may belong in Carpentry and Building Construction. A drywall or gypsum question may belong in Gypsum Construction Handbook. A concrete question may belong in The Contractor's Guide to Quality Concrete Construction.
1 Exam Prep helps students prepare for the Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) exam with organized study guidance, trade-focused review, practice-oriented preparation, and reference navigation support. This Ultimate package is designed to give students a stronger preparation structure by combining included rental books, 1 year of course access, and Application Service.
The course access supports preparation by organizing study around the topics that matter for residential building contractors. Students can focus on OSHA safety, residential building code, carpentry, framing, gypsum systems, drywall, concrete construction, excavation awareness, pipe-related construction, materials, project coordination, building methods, and practical reference navigation. The included rental books allow students to study with the references throughout the preparation period.
Reference navigation is one of the most important skills for open-book contractor exams. 1 Exam Prep helps students build familiarity with tables of contents, indexes, headings, diagrams, illustrations, definitions, code tables, construction details, charts, and key sections. For Arizona B preparation, that skill matters because questions may involve safety rules, residential code, carpentry, drywall, concrete, excavation, building materials, framing, or practical residential construction methods.
Application Service is included with this Ultimate package to help students stay organized while moving through the licensing process. This added support is useful for students who want exam preparation and licensing-process assistance in one package. While no course can guarantee a passing score or license approval, a structured study plan and organized application support can help students approach the process with more confidence.
This package includes the listed rental books, 1 year of course access, and Application Service. The included references are OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926, International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018, Pipe and Excavation Contracting, Carpentry and Building Construction, Gypsum Construction Handbook, and The Contractor's Guide to Quality Concrete Construction.
The package price is $1,365 with a refundable deposit of $350, for a total of $1,715.
Yes. Application Service is included with this Ultimate package.
This Ultimate package includes 1 year of course access.
Yes. The Arizona General Residential Contractor exam is an open-book test. Students should prepare by learning how to navigate the approved references quickly and accurately.
Students should study OSHA safety, residential building code, carpentry, framing, drywall and gypsum systems, concrete construction, excavation awareness, pipe-related work, project coordination, job planning, materials, and reference navigation.
The International Residential Code supports preparation for one- and two-family dwelling construction requirements, including foundations, floors, walls, roofs, stairs, framing, exterior coverings, interior finishes, materials, and residential building standards.
Residential construction can involve drywall, gypsum systems, partitions, ceilings, concrete placement, concrete repair awareness, finishing, and curing. These books support preparation for those trade areas.
Open-book exams require fast reference navigation. Studying with the books before the exam helps students learn where information is located, which reference applies to each topic, and how to move through the materials more efficiently.
No. This package provides rental books, course access, Application Service, study organization, and preparation support, but results depend on each student’s study time, trade knowledge, reference-navigation skills, and test-day performance.
This package is designed for contractors, qualifying parties, residential builders, home improvement professionals, remodelers, carpentry professionals, drywall professionals, concrete professionals, and students preparing for the Arizona General Residential Contractor (B) exam.