Arizona Limited Remodeling and Repair Residential / Commercial Contractor (CR-61) Highlighted & Tabbed Books Allowed into Exam Package

Arizona Limited Remodeling and Repair Residential / Commercial Contractor (CR-61) Highlighted & Tabbed Books Allowed into Exam Package

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Arizona Limited Remodeling and Repair Residential / Commercial Contractor (CR-61) Highlighted & Tabbed Books Allowed into Exam Package

The Arizona Limited Remodeling and Repair Residential / Commercial Contractor (CR-61) Highlighted & Tabbed Books Allowed into Exam Package is designed for candidates preparing for the Arizona CR-61 limited remodeling and repair residential/commercial contractor exam who want the approved exam-room reference books organized before test day. This package focuses on the books allowed into the exam room for this classification: Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA) and International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018.

Limited remodeling and repair work requires practical knowledge across many construction areas. Candidates should be ready to review jobsite safety, residential code provisions, repair conditions, demolition awareness, framing, exterior construction, openings, doors, windows, stairs, guards, insulation, drywall, finishes, concrete awareness, excavation awareness, and coordination with other trades. Because the CR-61 classification is residential/commercial, candidates should be comfortable with repair and remodeling conditions that may appear in both residential and light commercial project environments.

This highlighted and tabbed books package supports open-book exam preparation by organizing the listed exam-room references before the exam. Permanent tabs and highlighting can help candidates move more efficiently through OSHA construction safety standards and International Residential Code provisions. For a limited remodeling and repair exam, organized references can help candidates connect field experience with the correct safety rule, residential code topic, construction requirement, repair condition, or jobsite hazard concern.

Please allow up to 15 business days for tabbed and highlighted books allowed into exam package orders. This processing window supports preparation of the books before shipment or fulfillment. Candidates should plan ahead so they have time to receive the books, study with them, and become familiar with the tabs, highlighted sections, chapter structure, indexes, tables, definitions, and major subject areas before test day.

The Arizona CR-61 exam is open book, but open-book testing still requires preparation. Candidates should know how to use each reference, understand remodeling and repair concepts, and practice locating information quickly. Highlighted and tabbed books can support study and exam-day reference navigation, but they work best when candidates use them consistently before the test.

What You Get

  • Highlighted and Tabbed Book: Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA).
  • Highlighted and Tabbed Book: International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018.
  • Exam-Room Reference Focus: This package includes the listed books allowed into the Arizona CR-61 exam room.
  • Permanent Tabs and Highlighting: Books are prepared to support faster navigation during study and open-book exam preparation.
  • Order Processing Note: Please allow up to 15 business days for tabbed and highlighted books allowed into exam package orders.

Exam Details

The Arizona Limited Remodeling and Repair Residential / Commercial Contractor (CR-61) trade exam measures knowledge related to remodeling, repair work, construction safety, residential code use, limited construction activities, and coordination with existing building conditions. Candidates should prepare for demolition awareness, repair sequencing, framing awareness, wall systems, roof and exterior awareness, openings, doors, windows, stairs, guards, insulation, drywall, concrete awareness, excavation awareness, finishes, protection of existing work, and jobsite safety.

The references included in this package support the approved exam-room portion of preparation. OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926 helps candidates review construction safety topics that may apply to remodeling and repair work. The International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018 helps candidates review residential construction requirements, including one- and two-family dwelling provisions, building components, exterior walls, roof assemblies, openings, stairs, guards, insulation, and other residential construction code topics.

CR-61 preparation should include both field-based understanding and reference navigation. A candidate may need to recognize a safety concern during demolition, locate a residential stair or guard requirement, review a roof or wall provision, identify safe ladder practices, understand jobsite hazard control, or apply residential code concepts to a repair condition. Highlighted and tabbed books can help candidates practice locating these topics in a more organized way.

Limited remodeling and repair work often involves existing buildings. Unlike new construction, remodeling and repair projects may include older materials, hidden conditions, previous repairs, damaged components, partially occupied spaces, temporary protection, and coordination with ongoing use of the property. Candidates should understand how field conditions, code awareness, safety practices, and trade knowledge work together when planning and completing repair work.

A strong preparation plan should include regular study with both references. OSHA supports jobsite safety questions, and the IRC supports residential code questions. Candidates should also study common remodeling and repair field practices so they can connect reference information to real jobsite situations and exam-style questions.

Open Book Test

The Arizona Limited Remodeling and Repair Residential / Commercial Contractor (CR-61) trade exam is an open-book test. This package is focused on the books allowed into the exam room for this classification: Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA) and International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018.

Open-book testing rewards candidates who prepare with the references ahead of time. The highlighted and tabbed format can make study sessions more organized, but candidates should still practice using the books. Study should include locating definitions, reviewing major safety provisions, reviewing residential construction requirements, checking wall and roof provisions, reviewing openings and stair topics, and becoming comfortable with indexes, tables, terminology, and chapter organization.

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.

For the CR-61 exam, candidates should know when to use each reference. OSHA is used for construction safety and jobsite hazard questions. The International Residential Code is used for residential construction code topics related to one- and two-family dwellings, including building components, roof systems, wall systems, doors, windows, stairs, guards, insulation, exterior construction, openings, and residential construction provisions.

Licensing Steps

Arizona contractor licensing is handled through the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. Candidates should begin by selecting the correct license classification for the work they plan to perform. The CR-61 classification applies to limited remodeling and repair residential/commercial contractor work within the allowed Arizona license scope.

After selecting the correct classification, candidates should review the examination requirements connected to the license. The CR-61 trade exam is one part of the licensing process. Contractor 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.

Exam preparation and application preparation should be treated as separate tasks. Exam preparation focuses on limited remodeling and repair trade knowledge, open-book reference navigation, OSHA safety, residential code, demolition awareness, repair planning, wall systems, roof systems, openings, doors, windows, stairs, guards, insulation, drywall, concrete awareness, excavation awareness, finishes, and jobsite safety. Application preparation focuses on state forms, business information, qualifying party documentation, bond requirements, fees, and licensing submission requirements.

This highlighted and tabbed books package supports the exam preparation side of the process. It gives candidates the listed exam-room references in an organized format so they can study directly from the books they plan to use. Candidates should use the books consistently before exam day so the tabs, highlighting, chapter layout, and code organization become familiar.

State Requirements

The Arizona Registrar of Contractors issues 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 CR-61 classification is the limited remodeling and repair residential/commercial contractor classification.

The CR-61 classification is intended for limited remodeling and repair work within the allowed Arizona license scope. Candidates preparing for the CR-61 exam should understand the safety, code, and trade knowledge involved in remodeling conditions, repair work, demolition awareness, wall and roof work, doors, windows, stairs, guards, insulation, drywall, finishes, concrete awareness, excavation awareness, and coordination with other trades.

Residential and commercial remodeling work can differ in scale, access, occupancy conditions, materials, scheduling, code application, and safety concerns. Residential work may involve homes, apartments, occupied spaces, exterior repairs, interior finishes, and limited alterations. Commercial work may involve tenant spaces, larger work areas, public access concerns, coordination with property managers, and active business environments.

Limited remodeling and repair work may involve coordination with properly licensed specialty contractors. Electrical, plumbing, mechanical, roofing, structural, pool, solar, and other specialty work may require a separate license when outside the allowed scope. Candidates should understand the limits of the classification and perform work only within the scope issued by the state.

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. This package supports preparation by providing the listed highlighted and tabbed books allowed into the CR-61 exam room.

Reference Books

  • Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA)
    A highlighted and tabbed exam-room reference used to review federal construction safety standards, including personal protective equipment, ladders, scaffolds, fall hazards, demolition awareness, excavation awareness, hand and power tools, material handling, housekeeping, electrical hazard awareness, dust awareness, and jobsite hazard recognition.
  • International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018
    A highlighted and tabbed exam-room reference used to review residential construction requirements, including one- and two-family dwelling provisions, foundations, walls, roofs, openings, doors, windows, stairs, guards, insulation, drywall-related construction coordination, exterior work, and residential building code topics.

Exam Room Approved Books

  • Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA)
    Allowed into the exam room for construction safety, personal protective equipment, ladders, scaffolds, fall protection, demolition awareness, excavation awareness, hand and power tools, material handling, housekeeping, electrical hazard awareness, dust awareness, and jobsite safety questions.
  • International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018
    Allowed into the exam room for residential construction code questions involving one- and two-family dwellings, residential building components, roof systems, wall systems, doors, windows, stairs, guards, insulation, exterior construction, openings, and residential code requirements.

Test Information and Study Materials

The Arizona CR-61 exam requires preparation across limited remodeling, repair work, code application, safety, and construction practices. Candidates should use the highlighted and tabbed books as part of a broader study plan that includes trade review and reference practice.

OSHA preparation should include personal protective equipment, fall protection, ladders, scaffolds, hand and power tools, demolition awareness, excavation awareness, material handling, housekeeping, electrical hazard awareness, dust awareness, struck-by hazards, caught-between hazards, and general construction safety. Remodeling and repair work can involve older materials, occupied spaces, tight access, temporary hazards, exposed framing, sharp debris, cutting tools, ladders, and changing jobsite conditions.

International Residential Code preparation should include residential foundations, wall systems, roof systems, stairs, guards, handrails, exterior walls, doors, windows, weather protection, insulation, ventilation awareness, roofing provisions, openings, fire-resistance awareness, and general one- and two-family dwelling requirements. Candidates should become comfortable locating residential construction topics using the IRC table of contents, chapter structure, and index.

Remodeling preparation should include existing-condition review, demolition planning, protection of finished areas, dust control, temporary supports, removal of damaged materials, repair sequencing, layout, material matching, substrate preparation, and coordination with specialty trades. A remodeling and repair contractor often needs to adapt plans to the conditions found after work begins.

Repair preparation should include identifying damaged components, evaluating whether replacement is needed, understanding surface preparation, selecting compatible materials, protecting adjacent areas, correcting moisture-related damage, and recognizing when a condition may require another properly licensed trade. Repair work often requires careful judgment because the contractor may not be starting from a clean new-construction condition.

Framing awareness should include wall framing, floor framing awareness, roof framing awareness, headers, openings, load path awareness, bracing awareness, fasteners, sheathing, and repair coordination. Candidates should understand how framing changes can affect surrounding systems and why structural work must be handled carefully within the license scope.

Roof system awareness should include roof coverings, underlayment awareness, flashing awareness, roof slope, penetrations, ventilation awareness, drainage, repair conditions, and ladder or fall safety. Limited remodeling and repair work may include roof-adjacent work, exterior repairs, or coordination with roof components.

Wall system preparation should include exterior walls, interior walls, sheathing, weather barriers, moisture awareness, insulation, drywall, openings, trim, and finish coordination. Wall repair work may involve hidden damage, moisture, framing concerns, insulation replacement, drywall repair, and finishing requirements.

Door and window preparation should include rough openings, flashing awareness, weather protection, safety glazing awareness, egress awareness, frames, hardware, operation, trim, and installation coordination. Replacement doors and windows are common remodeling items and require attention to water management and proper fit.

Stair, guard, and handrail preparation should include measurements, openings, landings, guard locations, handrail placement, safety concerns, and residential code requirements. These topics are important in remodeling because existing stairs and guards may need repair, replacement, or code-related review.

Insulation preparation should include thermal protection awareness, air sealing awareness, vapor retarder awareness, roof and wall insulation, floor insulation, access, installation quality, and moisture control. Remodeling work may expose old insulation, missing insulation, damaged insulation, or conditions that require correction.

Drywall and finish preparation should include material handling, fastening, joints, finishing, texture matching, moisture awareness, fire-resistance awareness, surface preparation, repairs, paint readiness, and protection of completed work. Finish work often determines the customer’s final impression of a remodeling or repair project.

Concrete and excavation awareness should include surface preparation, minor repair awareness, forms, slabs, footings, drainage, trenching, backfill, compaction, and jobsite safety. Even limited remodeling and repair work can involve site conditions that require safe excavation practices or careful concrete coordination.

Commercial repair preparation should include working around occupied spaces, public access, temporary protection, dust control, scheduling, coordination with property managers, and safety planning. Residential repair preparation should include protection of existing finishes, customer communication, occupied-home conditions, and careful cleanup.

Using highlighted and tabbed books effectively requires practice. Candidates should spend time opening each reference, locating the highlighted areas, reviewing the tabs, reading surrounding code language, and understanding why each section matters. Tabs and highlighting are tools for navigation, not a substitute for learning the material.

During study, candidates should practice identifying the best reference for each topic. A safety question may point to OSHA. A residential construction code question may point to the International Residential Code. A remodeling field-practice question may require trade knowledge supported by careful study of common repair and remodeling conditions. Knowing which book to open first can save valuable exam time.

How 1 Exam Prep Helps You Reach Your Goal

1 Exam Prep helps Arizona contractor candidates prepare with organized study support, trade-focused review, reference navigation tools, and practical exam preparation resources. For the Arizona Limited Remodeling and Repair Residential / Commercial Contractor (CR-61) exam, this highlighted and tabbed package supports candidates by providing the listed books allowed into the exam room in an organized format.

Many experienced remodelers and repair professionals understand field work but still need support with the open-book testing format. Contractor exams require careful reading, time management, and the ability to connect each question to the correct safety standard, code reference, or trade concept. Highlighted and tabbed references can help candidates build a more efficient study routine and become more comfortable navigating the books.

1 Exam Prep prepares books with the exam experience in mind. The goal is to make it easier for candidates to study from the same references they will rely on during the exam. Candidates can use the tabs and highlighting to review major subjects, practice locating information, and build confidence with the organization of OSHA and the International Residential Code.

This package is promotional but practical. It does not guarantee a passing score, license approval, state approval, or any exam outcome. It gives candidates organized exam-room reference books that can support study, review, and open-book preparation for the Arizona CR-61 limited remodeling and repair residential/commercial contractor exam.

FAQ Section

Who is this package for?

This package is for candidates preparing for the Arizona Limited Remodeling and Repair Residential / Commercial Contractor (CR-61) exam who need the listed highlighted and tabbed books allowed into the exam room.

What books are included in this package?

This package includes Code of Federal Regulations - 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA) and International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018.

Are these books highlighted and tabbed?

Yes. This package is for highlighted and tabbed books allowed into the exam room for the Arizona CR-61 limited remodeling and repair residential/commercial contractor exam.

How long should I allow for order processing?

Please allow up to 15 business days for tabbed and highlighted books allowed into exam package orders.

Is the Arizona CR-61 exam open book?

Yes. The Arizona CR-61 limited remodeling and repair residential/commercial contractor exam is open book and allows approved references into the examination center.

Which books are allowed into the CR-61 exam room?

The allowed exam-room books for this package are OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926 and International Residential Code for One- and Two-Family Dwellings, 2018.

What subjects should I study for the CR-61 exam?

Candidates should study limited remodeling, repair work, demolition awareness, framing awareness, roof systems, wall systems, doors, windows, stairs, guards, insulation, drywall, finishes, concrete awareness, excavation awareness, residential code, and OSHA safety.

Why is OSHA included?

OSHA is included because remodeling and repair work can involve construction safety topics such as personal protective equipment, demolition awareness, excavation awareness, ladders, scaffolds, fall hazards, hand and power tools, material handling, housekeeping, dust awareness, and jobsite safety.

Why is the International Residential Code included?

The International Residential Code is included because the CR-61 exam includes residential construction topics connected to one- and two-family dwellings, building components, roof systems, walls, openings, stairs, guards, insulation, and related residential code requirements.

Does this package cover licensing application paperwork?

No. This product is focused on highlighted and tabbed exam-room books. Licensing application requirements are handled separately through the Arizona contractor licensing process.

Do highlighted and tabbed books replace studying?

No. Highlighted and tabbed books support reference navigation, but candidates should still study the trade topics, practice using the references, and review exam-style questions before test day.

Can these books be written in during the exam?

No. References may be highlighted, underlined, annotated, and indexed before the exam, but they may not be written in during the examination session.

Does this package guarantee that I will pass?

No. This package supports preparation and reference navigation. It does not guarantee a passing score, license approval, state approval, or any exam outcome.