New Mexico Business and Law Contractor Highlighted & Tabbed Book Package

New Mexico Business and Law Contractor Highlighted & Tabbed Book Package

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New Mexico Business and Law Contractor Highlighted & Tabbed Book Package

The New Mexico Business and Law Contractor Highlighted & Tabbed Book Package is designed for candidates preparing for the New Mexico Contractor Business and Law examination who want a more organized way to study and use the approved references. This package includes the NASCLA Contractors Guide to Business, Law and Project Management, 14th, the New Mexico Construction Industries Licensing Act (NMSA Chapter 60, Article 13), 2006, and the New Mexico Contractor's License Requirement (NMAC Title 14, Chapter 6, Part 3), 2006.

Contractor licensing is not only about trade experience. Contractors also need to understand how to operate legally, manage business responsibilities, prepare bids, work with contracts, protect payment rights, comply with licensing rules, manage risk, and maintain proper business records. The Business and Law exam is built around these responsibilities and requires candidates to understand both general contractor business practices and New Mexico-specific licensing requirements.

This highlighted and tabbed book package helps candidates study with a more structured set of references. The tabs make important sections easier to locate, while the highlighting draws attention to key provisions, business concepts, licensing rules, legal responsibilities, and project management topics. For an open-book exam, having the correct books is only the first step. Candidates should also become comfortable moving through the references quickly and accurately.

The NASCLA Contractors Guide provides the broader business, law, and project management foundation. The New Mexico Construction Industries Licensing Act gives candidates access to statutory licensing requirements. The New Mexico Contractor's License Requirement reference provides administrative rule content connected to contractor licensing in New Mexico. Candidates should study all three references because the exam includes both general business topics and state-specific contractor licensing requirements.

Please allow up to 15 business days for tabbed and highlighted book package orders. These packages require preparation time before shipment so the references can be organized and made ready for study use.

Exam Details

The New Mexico Business and Law Contractor exam is administered through PSI for New Mexico contractor licensing. Candidates must be preapproved before scheduling the examination. Once eligibility is granted, candidates are responsible for scheduling through PSI and completing the exam by computer at an approved testing location.

The Business and Law examination includes 50 questions. Candidates are allowed 130 minutes to complete the exam. The required passing score is 75%, which equals 38 points. Since the exam is timed, candidates should prepare to read efficiently, identify the subject being tested, and locate information in the references without losing valuable time.

The exam content outline includes licensing requirements, estimating and bidding, business organization and financial management, tax laws, labor laws, project management and lien law, contracts, risk management, and environmental and safety responsibilities. These topics reflect the practical responsibilities that contractors must understand when operating a construction business in New Mexico.

Licensing requirements are a major part of the exam because contractor candidates must understand the rules that control who may contract, how licenses are issued, how classifications work, and what responsibilities apply to licensed contractors. Candidates should study the New Mexico Construction Industries Licensing Act and the New Mexico Contractor's License Requirement carefully for this area.

Estimating and bidding questions may involve preparing bids, reviewing project scope, identifying costs, understanding bid documents, and recognizing how bidding decisions affect contractor obligations. These topics connect directly to project planning and business management, so candidates should review them in the NASCLA guide and understand how estimating supports a contractor’s financial and legal responsibilities.

Business organization and financial management questions may involve business structures, accounting concepts, cash flow, recordkeeping, payroll responsibilities, financial controls, insurance, and company management. Contractors should understand how proper business organization supports licensing compliance, project performance, and long-term business stability.

Contracts, labor laws, tax laws, risk management, safety, environmental responsibilities, project management, and lien law are also important. These areas reflect the realities of running a contracting business. Contractors must understand written agreements, worker responsibilities, payment rights, jobsite risk, regulatory obligations, and project administration. A strong study plan should include every topic in the exam outline.

Open Book Test

The New Mexico Business and Law Contractor examination is an open book test. Candidates are responsible for bringing their own approved reference materials to the examination center. The approved references for this package are the NASCLA Contractors Guide to Business, Law and Project Management, 14th, the New Mexico Construction Industries Licensing Act (NMSA Chapter 60, Article 13), 2006, and the New Mexico Contractor's License Requirement (NMAC Title 14, Chapter 6, Part 3), 2006.

Open-book testing still requires serious preparation. The exam is timed, and candidates need to know where subjects are located before test day. A question about licensing may point to one of the New Mexico references. A question about business planning, contracts, financial management, estimating, labor, tax, safety, risk, or project management may point to the NASCLA guide. Candidates should practice recognizing which reference is most likely to contain the answer.

Reference materials must be bound and may be highlighted, underlined, and indexed before the examination session. Permanent tabs are allowed. Temporary tabs, including Post-it notes, are not allowed and must be removed before the exam begins. Reference materials containing writing are not allowed into the examination, and candidates are not permitted to write in the references during the testing session.

This highlighted and tabbed package supports the open-book format by making the approved references easier to navigate during study. The tabs help candidates move between major sections, while the highlighting helps bring attention to important material. Candidates should still study consistently, practice reference lookup, and become familiar with the organization of each book before exam day.

Licensing Steps

Candidates pursuing a New Mexico contractor license should begin by identifying the correct license classification and following the approval process required for New Mexico contractor examinations. Candidates must be approved before scheduling through PSI. After approval is granted, the candidate can register for the exam, select an available testing date, and complete the examination process.

Contractor candidates must satisfy the Business and Law requirement and the applicable trade examination requirement unless an approved Business and Law course is used in place of the Business and Law exam. Candidates who choose the examination path should study the approved references and prepare for the Business and Law exam as part of the licensing process.

A practical preparation path includes identifying the correct license classification, completing the required application or qualifying party approval process, receiving examination eligibility, scheduling through PSI, reviewing the reference list, studying consistently, and arriving at the test center with proper identification and approved materials.

After passing the required examinations, candidates should complete any remaining New Mexico contractor licensing requirements. Passing the Business and Law exam is an important step, but candidates remain responsible for meeting all applicable trade, documentation, experience, financial, bonding, registration, and administrative requirements connected to the license.

Candidates should keep application documents, eligibility notices, scheduling confirmations, reference lists, score reports, and licensing correspondence organized. Good recordkeeping helps reduce confusion and allows candidates to move through the licensing process with a clearer plan.

State Requirements

New Mexico contractor licensing is connected to the Construction Industries Division of the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department. Contractor candidates must follow the state’s approval and examination process before testing. The Business and Law exam focuses on the business, legal, and regulatory responsibilities contractors must understand when operating in New Mexico.

The New Mexico Construction Industries Licensing Act (NMSA Chapter 60, Article 13), 2006 is important because it contains statutory material related to contractor licensing. Candidates should use this reference to study licensing requirements, contractor responsibilities, qualifying party concepts, enforcement provisions, and the legal structure behind contractor regulation in New Mexico.

The New Mexico Contractor's License Requirement (NMAC Title 14, Chapter 6, Part 3), 2006 is also important because it provides administrative rule content connected to contractor licensing. Candidates should become familiar with how this reference is organized and how its rules relate to the licensing process.

The NASCLA Contractors Guide to Business, Law and Project Management, 14th supports broader contractor business preparation. It helps candidates review business planning, project management, financial management, bidding, contracts, insurance, labor, taxes, safety, risk, and other operating responsibilities that apply to contractors.

Reference Books

  • NASCLA Contractors Guide to Business, Law and Project Management, 14th
    This highlighted and tabbed reference supports study of contractor business planning, business organization, estimating, bidding, contracts, project management, financial management, tax responsibilities, labor issues, safety, risk management, insurance, and general contractor business practices.
  • New Mexico Construction Industries Licensing Act (NMSA Chapter 60, Article 13), 2006
    This highlighted and tabbed reference contains New Mexico statutory licensing material for contractors. Candidates should use it to study licensing requirements, contractor responsibilities, qualifying party concepts, enforcement provisions, and the legal structure of contractor licensing in New Mexico.
  • New Mexico Contractor's License Requirement (NMAC Title 14, Chapter 6, Part 3), 2006
    This highlighted and tabbed reference contains New Mexico administrative rule material related to contractor licensing requirements. It supports preparation for state-specific licensing questions and helps candidates understand how contractor licensing rules are applied in New Mexico.

Each reference in this package supports a different part of Business and Law exam preparation. The NASCLA guide supports broad business, law, and project management topics. The New Mexico Construction Industries Licensing Act supports statutory licensing requirements. The New Mexico Contractor's License Requirement supports administrative licensing rules. Candidates should study all three references together to prepare for both general and New Mexico-specific exam questions.

The highlighted and tabbed format helps make the books easier to use during study sessions. Candidates can use the tabs to return to major subject areas and use the highlighting to focus attention on important content. A useful approach is to divide study time into licensing requirements, estimating and bidding, business organization, financial management, tax laws, labor laws, contracts, project management, lien law, risk management, safety, and environmental responsibilities.

Test Information and Study Materials

The New Mexico Business and Law Contractor exam is a timed, open-book examination. Candidates have 130 minutes to answer 50 questions. This means pacing matters. Candidates should be able to read the question, identify the topic, choose the likely reference, and locate the answer efficiently.

Licensing requirements should receive serious attention because they are central to New Mexico contractor regulation. Candidates should study license classifications, qualifying party responsibilities, application requirements, compliance expectations, and contractor conduct. The New Mexico-specific references are especially important for this portion of the exam.

Estimating and bidding should be studied as part of the contractor’s business process. Candidates should understand how estimates are prepared, how bids are reviewed, how project scope affects pricing, and how bidding decisions can create contractual and financial obligations. These topics connect directly to job planning and risk management.

Business organization and financial management should include review of business structures, accounting practices, cash flow, payroll, financial records, insurance, budgeting, and management responsibilities. Contractors must understand how to operate a business responsibly, not just how to perform field work.

Tax laws and labor laws should be reviewed carefully. Candidates should understand contractor responsibilities related to workers, payroll, employment laws, taxes, records, and compliance. These questions may require careful reading because the correct answer may depend on the type of obligation being described.

Contracts are a major part of contractor business operations. Candidates should study contract formation, contract terms, scope of work, change orders, payment provisions, dispute issues, default, and documentation. A contractor’s ability to understand written agreements can affect project performance and business risk.

Project management and lien law should also be included in the study plan. Candidates should review scheduling, documentation, jobsite coordination, project controls, payment rights, lien concepts, notices, and the relationship between project administration and legal protection. These topics help contractors manage jobs from start to finish.

Risk management, environmental responsibilities, and safety should not be ignored. Contractors should understand insurance, bonds, jobsite hazards, regulatory compliance, environmental considerations, and safety obligations. These areas help protect the business, workers, clients, and the public.

Candidates should practice identifying which reference applies to each type of question. A state licensing question may point to the New Mexico Construction Industries Licensing Act or the New Mexico Contractor's License Requirement. A business planning, contract, estimating, safety, tax, labor, or project management question may point to the NASCLA Contractors Guide. This recognition skill becomes stronger with repeated study.

How 1 Exam Prep Helps You Reach Your Goal

1 Exam Prep helps candidates prepare with organized, exam-focused support designed around the way contractor exams are actually taken. For an open-book Business and Law exam, preparation is not only about owning the correct references. It is about learning how to use those references, recognize key terms, locate information quickly, and understand how business and legal requirements apply to real contractor responsibilities.

This highlighted and tabbed book package supports that preparation by providing the listed references in a more organized study format. Candidates can use the books to review licensing requirements, estimating, bidding, business organization, financial management, tax laws, labor laws, contracts, project management, lien law, risk management, environmental responsibilities, safety, and New Mexico contractor rules.

1 Exam Prep’s approach is practical and exam-oriented. The goal is to help candidates reduce confusion, organize their preparation, and build confidence through repeated reference navigation and business-focused review. Candidates still need to study consistently and understand the material, but having highlighted and tabbed references can make the study process more manageable.

Many contractor candidates have trade experience but are less familiar with business law, licensing rules, contracts, tax responsibilities, labor requirements, and project management language. 1 Exam Prep helps support that transition by encouraging structured study, reference familiarity, and practice-oriented preparation. With consistent effort, candidates can improve pacing, strengthen subject knowledge, and approach the Business and Law exam with a clearer plan.

FAQ

What books are included in this package?

This package includes the NASCLA Contractors Guide to Business, Law and Project Management, 14th, the New Mexico Construction Industries Licensing Act (NMSA Chapter 60, Article 13), 2006, and the New Mexico Contractor's License Requirement (NMAC Title 14, Chapter 6, Part 3), 2006.

Are the books highlighted and tabbed?

Yes. This package is prepared as a highlighted and tabbed book package to support more organized study and faster reference navigation.

How long does it take to receive the package?

Please allow up to 15 business days for tabbed and highlighted book package orders. Preparation time is required before shipment.

Is the New Mexico Business and Law exam open book?

Yes. The New Mexico Business and Law Contractor exam is an open-book test. Candidates are responsible for bringing their approved references to the examination center.

How many questions are on the exam?

The New Mexico Business and Law Contractor exam has 50 questions.

How much time is allowed for the exam?

Candidates are allowed 130 minutes to complete the Business and Law examination.

What score is required to pass?

The required passing score is 75%, which equals 38 points on this examination.

What topics should I study for this exam?

Candidates should study licensing requirements, estimating and bidding, business organization and financial management, tax laws, labor laws, project management and lien law, contracts, risk management, and environmental and safety responsibilities.

Why are the New Mexico licensing references included?

The New Mexico licensing references support study of state-specific contractor licensing laws, administrative rules, qualifying party responsibilities, licensing requirements, and contractor regulation in New Mexico.

Does this package guarantee a passing score?

No product can guarantee an exam result. This package provides the listed highlighted and tabbed reference books and supports candidates as they prepare through business-focused study and reference navigation practice.