North Carolina Contractor CE Courses (2026)

To renew your Contractor license in North Carolina you need to satisfy the North Carolina Licensing Board for General Contractors (NCLBGC)'s continuing education (CE) requirement — about 8 hours per 1-year cycle. Below is what the board requires and a comparison of course providers that offer qualifying CE. This is an unofficial guide — confirm any course is board-approved before you buy.

What North Carolina requires for Contractor renewal

CE hours required8 hours per cycle
Renewal cycle12 months
Governing bodyNorth Carolina Licensing Board for General Contractors (NCLBGC)

North Carolina added a continuing education requirement: 8 hours per year for at least one qualifier on licenses in the Building, Residential, and Unclassified classifications. The 8 hours consist of a 2-hour mandatory course produced by the Board (covering law/rule changes) plus 6 elective hours from Board-approved providers. The CE year runs January 1 through November 30, and CE must be satisfied before the license can be renewed. A qualifier holding multiple licenses completes 8 hours total (not per license). Limited Building classification and inactive licenses are not subject to the same requirement; CE providers (not the Board) set course fees.

Full Contractor renewal guide for North Carolina (deadlines, fees & CE) →

North Carolina Contractor CE course providers

Heads-up: These are independent, third-party CE providers — we are not affiliated with them and don't guarantee approval. Always confirm a course is accepted by the North Carolina Licensing Board for General Contractors (NCLBGC) before purchasing.

North Carolina Contractor CE courses: frequently asked questions

How many CE hours do I need to renew my Contractor license in North Carolina?

North Carolina requires about 8 continuing-education hours per renewal cycle. North Carolina added a continuing education requirement: 8 hours per year for at least one qualifier on licenses in the Building, Residential, and Unclassified classifications. The 8 hours consist of a 2-hour mandatory course produced by the Board (covering law/rule changes) plus 6 elective hours from Board-approved providers. The CE year runs January 1 through November 30, and CE must be satisfied before the license can be renewed. A qualifier holding multiple licenses completes 8 hours total (not per license). Limited Building classification and inactive licenses are not subject to the same requirement; CE providers (not the Board) set course fees.

Do online Contractor CE courses count in North Carolina?

Online courses generally count when the provider is approved by or recognized by the North Carolina Licensing Board for General Contractors (NCLBGC). Always confirm a course is accepted before you buy it.

Where do I report my North Carolina Contractor CE?

North Carolina generally has you attest to CE at renewal and keep your own documentation in case of an audit. Confirm the current process with the North Carolina Licensing Board for General Contractors (NCLBGC).

Requirement last verified 2026-06-01 from the North Carolina Licensing Board for General Contractors (NCLBGC). Always confirm current rules with the board before relying on this.

Official North Carolina Licensing Board for General Contractors (NCLBGC) site →