Prepare for the Arizona General Dual Residential/Commercial Contractor (KB-1) exam with online practice questions designed to support focused, trade-specific exam preparation. This product includes 3 months of access, giving you a flexible way to review general building construction, sitework, concrete, masonry, metals, carpentry, thermal and moisture protection, doors and windows, finishes, building code, residential code, OSHA safety, and contractor exam-style questions.
The Arizona KB-1 General Dual Residential/Commercial Contractor exam is part of the Arizona contractor licensing process for applicants preparing to perform general building work in both residential and commercial settings. Candidates preparing for this classification should understand construction methods, building systems, jobsite coordination, plan reading, estimating, structural materials, excavation, concrete, masonry, steel joists, carpentry, code requirements, and construction safety.
This online practice question product helps turn study time into active review. General contractor exams cover a wide range of trades and construction topics, so practice questions are useful for organizing study time and identifying weak areas. With 3 months of access, you can study in sections, repeat difficult topics, review missed questions, and continue building confidence before your exam date.
The Arizona General Dual Residential/Commercial Contractor (KB-1) Exam - Online Practice Questions product is useful for candidates who want a self-paced way to prepare before sitting for the trade exam. It can be used alongside approved reference books, highlighted and tabbed materials, classroom instruction, field experience, or independent study. The goal is to help you prepare with structure instead of reading through OSHA, residential code, building code, concrete, excavation, steel joist, carpentry, and masonry references without a clear plan.
General building work can involve site preparation, excavation, foundations, concrete placement, masonry, steel systems, wood framing, structural coordination, building envelope work, insulation, moisture protection, doors, windows, interior and exterior finishes, safety planning, subcontractor coordination, and code compliance. Because the KB-1 classification is dual residential/commercial, candidates should prepare for both residential and commercial construction conditions.
The Arizona KB-1 General Dual Residential/Commercial Contractor trade exam is associated with the B-1/B-2/KB-1/KB-2 General/Dual General trade exam. This trade test is used for multiple general building classifications, including the KB-1 Dual Building Contractor classification. Applicants for KB-1 may also have the option to take the NASCLA Accredited Examination for Commercial General Building Contractors in lieu of the Arizona trade exam.
The Arizona general commercial and dual general trade exam includes 100 questions, allows 240 minutes, and requires a minimum passing score of 70%. The exam measures knowledge across major construction areas that a general building contractor is expected to understand, including sitework, concrete, masonry, metals, carpentry, thermal and moisture protection, doors and windows, finishes, safety, and general building code.
The general dual exam content outline includes sitework with 9 items, concrete with 14 items, masonry with 10 items, metals with 13 items, carpentry with 12 items, thermal and moisture protection with 10 items, doors and windows with 5 items, finishes with 6 items, safety with 12 items, and general building code with 9 items. Candidates should prepare broadly because the KB-1 exam is not limited to one trade specialty.
Because the exam has 100 questions and a 240-minute time limit, candidates should prepare for both accuracy and pacing. Some questions may be answered from construction knowledge, while others may require quick reference navigation. Online practice questions can help you build a rhythm for reading each question, identifying the subject, choosing the correct reference when needed, and answering efficiently.
The Arizona General Dual Residential/Commercial Contractor (KB-1) trade exam is an open-book exam. Candidates are responsible for bringing their own approved references to the examination center. The approved exam-room references include Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA), International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018, and International Building Code, 2018.
The study references used for preparation include Design and Control of Concrete Mixtures, 17th Edition; Pipe and Excavation Contracting; Technical Digest No. 9 ā Handling and Erection of Steel Joists and Joist Girders; Carpentry and Building Construction, 2016; and Modern Masonry - Brick, Block, Stone, Clois E. Kicklighter 10th edition. These references support concrete, excavation, steel joists, carpentry, building construction, masonry, and field coordination preparation, but they are not listed here as exam-room-approved materials.
Open-book testing can help prepared candidates, but it does not replace study. The exam time limit does not allow unlimited searching. Candidates should know where to find OSHA safety standards, residential code provisions, and commercial building code provisions before test day. The study references should be used before the exam to build the construction knowledge needed to answer practical general building questions efficiently.
Reference materials may be highlighted, underlined, annotated, and indexed before the examination session. References may not be written in during the exam. Additional loose or attached papers are not permitted with approved references. Permanent tabs are allowed. Temporary removable tabs are not allowed. Candidates may use a silent, nonprinting, non-programmable calculator in the examination center.
Arizona contractor licensing is handled through the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. Applicants should begin by selecting the correct license classification for the work they plan to perform. For general building work in both residential and commercial settings, the relevant classification is KB-1 General Dual Residential/Commercial Contractor.
After selecting the correct classification, candidates should review the examination requirements tied to that license. The KB-1 trade exam is one part of the licensing process. Applicants may also need to complete the Arizona business management or statutes and rules requirement, application requirements, qualifying party requirements, bonding requirements, experience requirements, and other items required by the Arizona Registrar of Contractors.
A practical licensing plan separates exam preparation from application preparation. Exam preparation focuses on sitework, concrete, masonry, metals, carpentry, thermal and moisture protection, doors and windows, finishes, general building code, residential code, commercial code, OSHA safety, and jobsite coordination. Application preparation focuses on state forms, business structure, qualifying party information, bond requirements, fees, and supporting documents.
Using online practice questions during the exam preparation phase gives structure to your study time. Questions help reveal which subjects are already familiar and which ones need more review. This makes it easier to use the 3-month access period productively and keeps preparation focused on the subjects most closely tied to the KB-1 general dual contractor exam.
The Arizona Registrar of Contractors issues contractor licenses by classification. Residential classifications apply to residential work, commercial classifications apply to commercial work, and dual classifications may apply when a contractor qualifies for both residential and commercial work. The KB-1 classification is the dual building contractor classification for general residential and commercial building work within the allowed Arizona license scope.
The KB-1 classification is connected to the scope of work permitted by the B-1 General Commercial Contractor classification and the General Residential Contractor classification. General building work may include construction, alteration, and repair connected to structures used for the support, shelter, or enclosure of persons, animals, or movable property, within the limits of the license classification.
General contractors must understand where the classification begins and ends. Work related to electrical, plumbing, air conditioning systems, boilers, swimming pools, spas, and water wells may require properly licensed specialty contractors. Candidates should prepare for the management and coordination knowledge expected of a general building contractor while respecting the limits of the license classification.
Passing the trade exam is not the same as receiving a license. Applicants are responsible for meeting the full Arizona licensing requirements that apply to the classification, qualifying party, business entity, bond, application, and related state requirements. The trade exam supports the licensing process by testing technical knowledge connected to the KB-1 general dual residential/commercial contractor classification.
The Arizona KB-1 exam requires preparation across a broad range of general building topics. Candidates should study sitework, concrete, masonry, metals, carpentry, thermal and moisture protection, doors and windows, finishes, safety, and general building code. The exam rewards candidates who understand how building systems connect, not just those who know isolated trade facts.
Sitework preparation should include excavation, grading, trenching, soil conditions, backfill, compaction, pipe-related construction conditions, utility coordination, layout, and jobsite access. Pipe and Excavation Contracting supports this part of preparation by helping candidates review field conditions that occur early in construction and affect later phases of the project.
Concrete preparation should include concrete materials, mixture design, forms, reinforcement awareness, placement, consolidation, finishing, curing, weather considerations, joints, quality control, and durability. Design and Control of Concrete Mixtures supports concrete preparation by explaining how materials and mixture properties affect performance.
Masonry preparation should include brick, block, stone, mortar, grout, layout, wall construction, reinforcement awareness, bonding, cleaning, repair, tools, and workmanship. Modern Masonry supports this portion of the study plan by helping candidates review masonry materials and field methods.
Metals preparation should include steel joists, joist girders, erection awareness, bracing, handling, field stability, connections, coordination with other trades, and safety. Technical Digest No. 9 ā Handling and Erection of Steel Joists and Joist Girders supports preparation for metal construction topics tied to the general building exam outline.
Carpentry preparation should include layout, framing, wood materials, fasteners, tools, floor systems, wall systems, roof systems, sheathing, stairs, doors, windows, blocking, bracing, and general building methods. Carpentry and Building Construction supports this part of preparation by tying together practical wood construction methods and field sequencing.
Thermal and moisture protection preparation should include insulation awareness, vapor control, waterproofing, weather barriers, roofing awareness, flashing, sealants, moisture movement, building envelope protection, and coordination between exterior systems. General contractors should understand how moisture protection affects long-term building performance.
Door, window, and finish preparation should include rough openings, installation sequence, alignment, flashing awareness, hardware, interior finishes, exterior finishes, gypsum systems, trim, surfaces, and project closeout concerns. These topics often require practical construction judgment and an understanding of how finish work depends on earlier phases.
Code preparation should include both the International Residential Code and the International Building Code. Candidates should become familiar with how each code is organized, especially sections connected to building planning, construction type, fire-resistance concepts, means of egress, foundations, framing, wall systems, roof systems, and general construction requirements.
OSHA safety preparation should include personal protective equipment, excavation safety, fall protection, ladders, scaffolds, tools, electrical hazard awareness, concrete and masonry construction safety, steel erection awareness, material handling, housekeeping, and general jobsite hazard recognition. Safety is a major portion of the exam and should be reviewed throughout the study period.
Online practice questions help candidates move from passive reading to active recall. When you miss a question, use it as a signal for what to review next. Return to the related code book, OSHA reference, concrete reference, excavation reference, steel joist reference, carpentry text, or masonry book, then practice again until the material becomes more familiar.
For open-book preparation, organize approved references before test day. Highlight important sections, use approved permanent tabs, and practice locating information while answering questions. The goal is not to search every answer from scratch. The goal is to understand general building topics well enough to answer efficiently and use the approved references when they are most helpful.
1 Exam Prep helps Arizona contractor candidates prepare with organized study guidance, trade-focused review, and practice-oriented exam preparation. For the Arizona General Dual Residential/Commercial Contractor (KB-1) exam, that means supporting your study routine with questions connected to sitework, concrete, masonry, metals, carpentry, thermal and moisture protection, doors, windows, finishes, building code, residential code, and OSHA safety.
Many experienced builders understand field work but still need support with the testing format. Contractor exams require careful reading, time management, reference navigation, and the ability to connect each question to the correct trade concept or approved reference. Online practice questions help you become more comfortable with that process before exam day.
1 Exam Prep helps candidates study with structure instead of guessing what to review next. Practice questions can reveal weak areas, guide reference review, and reinforce the subjects most closely connected to the exam outline. This helps you use your 3-month access period effectively and keeps preparation focused.
For open-book exams, 1 Exam Prep also supports better reference navigation. Approved books are valuable, but they are most helpful when you know how to use them quickly. Practice-based study can help you learn when to use OSHA, when to check the International Residential Code, when to review the International Building Code, and when to rely on concrete, excavation, steel joist, carpentry, or masonry study references during preparation.
This product is designed to support confidence through preparation. It does not guarantee a passing score, license approval, or any state outcome. It gives you a practical way to study, review, and strengthen your understanding before taking the Arizona KB-1 General Dual Residential/Commercial Contractor exam.
This product is for candidates preparing for the Arizona General Dual Residential/Commercial Contractor (KB-1) trade exam who want online practice questions and 3 months of access for self-paced study.
This product includes 3 months of access. During that period, you can work through online practice questions, review missed topics, and continue studying at your own pace.
Yes. The Arizona KB-1 General Dual Residential/Commercial Contractor trade exam is open book and allows approved references into the examination center.
The approved exam-room references include Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA), International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018, and International Building Code, 2018.
These references are included as study materials for preparation, but they are not listed here as exam-room-approved materials for the Arizona KB-1 trade exam.
The Arizona general commercial and dual general trade exam includes 100 questions.
The exam allows 240 minutes.
The minimum passing score is 70%.
The exam covers sitework, concrete, masonry, metals, carpentry, thermal and moisture protection, doors and windows, finishes, safety, and general building code.
Dual residential/commercial means the KB-1 classification is connected to general building work in both residential and commercial settings within the allowed Arizona license scope.
Applicants for the KB-1 Dual Building Contractor classification may have the option to take the NASCLA Accredited Examination for Commercial General Building Contractors in lieu of the Arizona trade exam.
This product is for online practice questions and includes 3 months of access. Physical books are not listed as included with this product.
Yes. Practice questions can help improve topic recognition, reference navigation, timing, and comfort with contractor exam wording before test day.