The Arizona General Dual Residential / Commercial Contractor (KB-1) - Books & Courses Rental Package is designed for contractors preparing for the Arizona KB-1 general dual residential and commercial contractor exam. This rental package gives students access to the listed reference books along with online course support, creating a practical preparation option for contractors who need to study residential and commercial construction, OSHA safety, building code requirements, concrete, excavation, steel joists, carpentry, masonry, and open-book exam navigation.
The KB-1 classification is a dual residential and commercial Arizona contractor classification connected to general building construction. Dual general contractor preparation requires a broad understanding of both residential and commercial project conditions, including foundations, framing, masonry, concrete, excavation, building code coordination, residential code requirements, steel joists, jobsite safety, materials, layout, construction sequencing, and project supervision. Contractors preparing for this exam should focus on both construction knowledge and the ability to quickly locate information in the approved references.
This Books & Courses Rental Package is helpful for students who need the exam references without purchasing every book outright. The included rental books support major areas of the KB-1 exam, including OSHA construction safety, the International Residential Code, the International Building Code, concrete materials, pipe and excavation concepts, steel joist handling and erection, carpentry and building construction, and masonry construction. The course portion includes 6 months of course access, giving students a structured study period to review lessons, practice exam-style questions, and build open-book reference-navigation skills.
The package price is $1,290. A refundable deposit of $600 is collected with the rental package, bringing the total collected at checkout to $1,890. The refundable deposit is tied to the rental book return process.
The KB-1 exam preparation process should focus on how residential and commercial construction projects are planned, coordinated, built, protected, and inspected. Students should be prepared to review construction safety, residential code requirements, commercial building code requirements, excavation, foundations, concrete materials, framing, masonry, steel joists, wall systems, roof systems, floors, openings, sitework, pipe-related construction, material handling, and general jobsite procedures.
Open-book contractor exams require more than hands-on experience. A contractor may understand construction from years in the field but still need practice using technical references under timed exam conditions. The exam may ask about OSHA safety, IRC provisions, IBC provisions, concrete mixtures, excavation procedures, steel joists, masonry walls, framing, construction layout, materials, sequencing, or field practices. Strong preparation means knowing which reference applies to each question and how to locate the correct information efficiently.
Arizona contractor trade examinations are administered through PSI for the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. The KB-1 General Dual Residential / Commercial Contractor classification is tied to general building construction across residential and commercial project types. Students preparing for the KB-1 exam should focus on code requirements, safety, sitework, excavation, concrete, carpentry, framing, masonry, steel joists, general construction methods, and practical jobsite coordination.
The exam is based on trade knowledge and approved reference materials. Students should be prepared for questions involving construction safety, ladders, scaffolds, fall protection, excavation, personal protective equipment, hazard communication, concrete materials, cement, aggregates, admixtures, curing, steel joist handling, joist girders, masonry materials, brick, block, stone, mortar, foundations, framing, roof systems, wall systems, openings, structural coordination, sitework, pipe installation concepts, and general building construction methods.
PSI contractor exams are computer-based. Candidates answer questions on screen and use approved reference materials during the exam. This format requires both trade understanding and reference-navigation skill. Students should prepare by reviewing the course, studying the references, practicing exam-style questions, and learning how each book is organized before test day.
Arizona contractor licensing may also require the Arizona Statutes and Rules Exam, depending on the applicant and qualifying party requirements. The trade exam is one part of the licensing process. Passing an exam does not automatically issue a contractor license. Applicants must still complete the Arizona Registrar of Contractors application process and satisfy the requirements that apply to the KB-1 classification.
The Arizona KB-1 General Dual Residential / Commercial Contractor trade exam is an open-book style exam using approved references. Open-book testing gives candidates access to reference materials during the exam, but it still requires preparation, organization, and speed. Students need to understand construction concepts, recognize which book applies to a question, and locate information efficiently while working under exam conditions.
Each reference in this package supports a different part of the study plan. OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926 supports construction safety topics, including fall protection, scaffolds, ladders, excavation, personal protective equipment, hazard communication, tools, material handling, and jobsite safety. The International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018 supports residential code requirements, including foundations, walls, floors, roofs, stairs, openings, fire and life-safety concepts, and dwelling-related construction provisions. The International Building Code, 2018 supports commercial building code topics, including occupancy, construction types, fire-resistance concepts, means of egress coordination, structural requirements, building safety, and code terminology.
Design and Control of Concrete Mixtures, 17th Edition supports concrete materials, mix design concepts, cement, aggregates, admixtures, water-cement ratio, placement, curing, durability, and quality control. Pipe and Excavation Contracting supports excavation, trenching, underground piping, pipe bedding, backfill, compaction, soil awareness, equipment use, and sitework safety. Technical Digest No. 9 supports handling and erection of steel joists and joist girders. Carpentry and Building Construction, 2016 supports framing, layout, materials, foundations, floors, walls, roofs, stairs, openings, and general construction methods. Modern Masonry supports brick, block, stone, mortar, tools, layout, walls, reinforcement, flashing, and practical masonry construction.
Students should practice recognizing the correct reference before searching for an answer. A safety question may belong in OSHA. A residential construction question may point to the International Residential Code. A commercial building code question may require the International Building Code. A concrete question may belong in Design and Control of Concrete Mixtures. A sitework, pipe, or excavation question may belong in Pipe and Excavation Contracting. A steel joist question may require Technical Digest No. 9. A framing or building method question may belong in Carpentry and Building Construction. A brick, block, stone, or mortar question may point to Modern Masonry.
Book organization matters. Students should become familiar with each book’s table of contents, index, chapter layout, definitions, tables, figures, diagrams, and common subject headings. General building questions can use trade language, code language, safety language, or material-specific terminology. Students should practice locating topics by more than one keyword. When permitted by testing rules, permanent tabs can help speed up navigation. A useful tabbing system should be clean and focused on major exam topics instead of overloaded with labels that slow down the search process.
The Arizona KB-1 licensing path begins with selecting the correct contractor classification. KB-1 is connected to general dual residential and commercial contracting. Contractors preparing to perform general building work in both residential and commercial settings should make sure this classification matches the services they plan to offer before beginning the exam and application process.
After identifying the correct classification, the qualifying party prepares for the required examination path. This may include the KB-1 trade examination and the Arizona Statutes and Rules Exam. Candidates should study from the approved references connected to the classification and follow the current scheduling process through the approved testing provider.
Once examination requirements are completed, the applicant moves forward with the Arizona Registrar of Contractors license application. The application process may include business information, qualifying party information, financial responsibility requirements, bonding, background-related requirements, fees, and other supporting documentation required by the state. The exact application requirements depend on the applicant, business entity, qualifying party status, and license classification.
Starting preparation early helps students build a stronger study routine. With 6 months of course access, candidates can review lessons, study the books, work through practice questions, revisit difficult areas, and improve reference-navigation speed before exam day. This approach is especially helpful for experienced construction professionals who understand field work but need to prepare for the timing and structure of a licensing exam.
The Arizona Registrar of Contractors issues commercial, residential, and dual contractor licenses. The KB-1 General Dual Residential / Commercial Contractor classification is connected to general building construction within the allowed license scope. Students should confirm that the classification matches the work they plan to perform and prepare using the references tied to the exam.
Dual general construction may involve multiple building systems and construction categories, including residential construction, commercial construction, sitework, excavation, foundations, concrete, framing, steel joists, masonry, building code coordination, safety planning, material handling, and construction sequencing. Students preparing for the KB-1 exam should study the related safety, code, concrete, excavation, steel joist, carpentry, masonry, and general construction topics reflected in the exam reference list.
Because this is a dual residential and commercial classification, students should prepare for both residential and commercial project conditions. Residential projects may involve homes, additions, remodels, repairs, dwelling code requirements, and coordination with existing structures. Commercial projects may involve larger work areas, more coordination between trades, commercial code requirements, structural details, material staging, jobsite safety procedures, inspections, and project sequencing.
Arizona licensing approval is separate from exam preparation. The state determines whether an applicant qualifies for the license, whether the qualifying party requirements have been met, and whether the application is complete. This package supports exam preparation, but applicants must still follow the Arizona Registrar of Contractors licensing process and satisfy the requirements that apply to the KB-1 classification.
Effective KB-1 exam preparation should combine safety review, residential code study, commercial building code study, concrete review, excavation and piping review, steel joist review, carpentry study, masonry study, and open-book navigation practice. Students should begin by learning what each book is used for. OSHA supports safety questions. The International Residential Code supports residential construction questions. The International Building Code supports commercial building code questions. Design and Control of Concrete Mixtures supports concrete material questions. Pipe and Excavation Contracting supports sitework questions. Technical Digest No. 9 supports steel joist questions. Carpentry and Building Construction supports general building construction questions. Modern Masonry supports masonry questions.
For safety topics, spend time with OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926. General residential and commercial construction can involve excavation, ladders, scaffolds, fall protection, tools, equipment, concrete work, steel erection coordination, material handling, personal protective equipment, hazard communication, and general construction site hazards. Safety questions can be direct, so students should know how to locate OSHA rules quickly.
For code topics, review the International Residential Code and the International Building Code. Students should become comfortable with definitions, chapter layout, tables, construction requirements, structural coordination, fire and life-safety concepts, building assemblies, openings, and code terminology. Code questions can be difficult if a student does not know how the books are organized.
For concrete topics, review cement, aggregates, admixtures, water-cement ratio, concrete properties, placement, curing, durability, quality control, and construction conditions. Concrete is common across residential and commercial projects, especially in foundations, slabs, walks, curbs, structural components, and repair work.
For excavation and pipe-related topics, review trenching, bedding, backfill, compaction, underground pipe installation concepts, equipment awareness, soil conditions, safety, and jobsite planning. Sitework affects access, drainage, utilities, foundations, and project sequencing.
For steel joist topics, review handling, storage, lifting, erection, bridging, joist girder coordination, stability, and safety practices. Students should be familiar with the terminology and procedures used in steel joist installation because commercial construction may include structural steel framing components.
For carpentry and masonry topics, review framing, layout, wall systems, roof systems, floors, stairs, doors, windows, materials, brick, block, stone, mortar, masonry walls, flashing, reinforcement, and construction methods. These references support the broad construction knowledge expected of a dual residential and commercial general contractor.
Practice should include timed book-navigation drills. When answering a practice question, decide which reference applies before opening the book. Then use the table of contents, index, headings, tabs, tables, figures, diagrams, definitions, and familiar sections to find the answer. This process builds the speed needed for an open-book contractor exam.
A steady study schedule is usually more effective than last-minute cramming. With 6 months of course access, students can build a routine that includes lesson review, reference reading, practice questions, OSHA review, residential code study, commercial code study, concrete review, excavation review, steel joist review, carpentry review, masonry review, and repeated exam-style practice. Consistency helps make the reference set less overwhelming and gives students more time to strengthen weak areas before test day.
1 Exam Prep helps students prepare for the Arizona General Dual Residential / Commercial Contractor (KB-1) exam through organized study guidance, trade-focused review, open-book reference practice, and structured course support. This rental package brings together the listed references and 6 months of course access so students can prepare with a clear plan instead of trying to manage the books alone.
The course helps students connect exam topics to the correct references. Rather than searching through OSHA safety standards, residential code content, commercial building code material, concrete guidance, excavation information, steel joist procedures, carpentry instruction, and masonry trade material without direction, students can follow a study path that supports both understanding and exam navigation.
1 Exam Prep also supports practical confidence-building. Students can review general building construction concepts, practice questions, return to difficult topics, strengthen reference-navigation skills, and become more comfortable with the open-book exam format. This is especially helpful for contractors who already understand construction work but need to prepare for the way licensing exam questions are written and organized.
This package is designed to support preparation, not guarantee a passing score, licensing approval, or a specific business result. Your progress depends on consistent study, careful review, practice, and completion of the Arizona licensing requirements that apply to your situation. With the included rental books and course access, students can build a stronger foundation before exam day.
This package includes rental access to the listed reference books and 6 months of course access. The rental books include Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA), International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018, International Building Code, 2018, Design and Control of Concrete Mixtures, 17th Edition, Pipe and Excavation Contracting, Technical Digest No. 9 – Handling and Erection of Steel Joists and Joist Girders, Carpentry and Building Construction, 2016, and Modern Masonry - Brick, Block, Stone by Clois E. Kicklighter, 10th edition.
The package price is $1,290. A refundable deposit of $600 is collected with the rental package, bringing the total collected at checkout to $1,890.
Yes. The $600 deposit is refundable and is tied to the rental book return process. Rental books should be returned according to the rental terms provided with the order.
This Books & Courses Rental Package includes 6 months of course access. Students can use that access period to review residential and commercial construction topics, practice exam-style questions, and build open-book reference navigation habits.
Yes. The Arizona KB-1 contractor trade exam is an open-book style exam using approved references. Students should prepare by studying the construction content and practicing how to locate information quickly in the books.
The KB-1 General Dual Residential / Commercial Contractor classification is connected to general building construction performed within the residential and commercial license scope. Students should review the classification requirements and make sure the license matches the work they plan to perform.
Yes. The package includes the International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018 and the International Building Code, 2018. These references support residential and commercial code review for general building exam preparation.
Yes. The package includes Design and Control of Concrete Mixtures, 17th Edition and Pipe and Excavation Contracting. These references support concrete materials, placement, curing, excavation, trenching, piping, bedding, backfill, and sitework topics.
Yes. The package includes Carpentry and Building Construction, 2016, Modern Masonry - Brick, Block, Stone, 10th edition, and Technical Digest No. 9 – Handling and Erection of Steel Joists and Joist Girders. These references support framing, layout, building assemblies, masonry construction, and steel joist installation topics.
No. Passing the required exam is part of the licensing process, but the applicant must still complete the Arizona Registrar of Contractors application process and satisfy the state requirements for the license classification.
This rental package is a good fit for contractors preparing for the Arizona KB-1 General Dual Residential / Commercial Contractor exam who want rental access to the major references, 6 months of course access, and a structured study plan for dual residential and commercial general contractor exam preparation.