Alabama Electrical Contractor Licensing: Requirements and Boards

Electrical contractor licensing in Alabama operates under a dual-board structure that separates commercial and industrial electrical work from residential electrical work, each with distinct qualification standards, examination requirements, and renewal obligations. This page covers the licensing classifications, governing boards, application prerequisites, and the regulatory boundaries that define who must hold a license and under what conditions work may be performed. Understanding this structure is essential for contractors operating in Alabama, employers verifying credentials, and property owners evaluating service providers.

Definition and scope

Alabama requires licensure for contractors who perform, supervise, or bid on electrical work above defined thresholds. Two state boards share jurisdiction over this sector:

These two boards have distinct licensing tracks, examination providers, and continuing education requirements. A contractor licensed under the AECB for commercial work is not automatically authorized to perform residential electrical contracting under the HBLB's jurisdiction, and vice versa.

Scope limitations: This page addresses Alabama state-level licensing requirements administered by the AECB and HBLB. It does not cover local municipal electrical permits, National Electrical Code (NEC) adoption schedules by county, or federal procurement requirements. Local jurisdictions including the City of Birmingham and Jefferson County maintain separate permit and inspection requirements that operate alongside — but independently of — state licensing. For permit-level requirements, see Alabama Contractor Permit Requirements.

How it works

Alabama Electrical Contractors Board (AECB) — Commercial and Industrial

The AECB issues licenses in the following primary classifications:

  1. Unlimited Electrical Contractor — Authorizes all classes of electrical work without restriction on project size or voltage.
  2. Limited Electrical Contractor — Covers specific categories such as low-voltage systems, fire alarms, or communications wiring.
  3. Specialty Electrical Contractor — Restricted to defined work types such as signs, swimming pool wiring, or elevator electrical systems.

Examination: Applicants for the Unlimited license must pass the AECB examination, which tests the National Electrical Code (NEC), Alabama statutes, and business and law components. The AECB uses Prometric as its examination provider. A passing score of rates that vary by region is required on each section (Alabama Electrical Contractors Board). Examinations are based on the NEC 2023 Edition (NFPA 70, 2023), effective January 1, 2023.

Experience requirements: The Unlimited license requires documentation of at least 4 years of verified electrical experience under a licensed master electrician or equivalent supervisory role. The AECB's application requires submission of an experience affidavit signed by a former employer or licensed supervisor.

Financial requirements: Applicants must submit a current financial statement prepared by a CPA demonstrating a minimum net worth. The specific net worth threshold varies by license classification and is published in the AECB's current fee and requirements schedule. For more on financial documentation standards, see Alabama Contractor Financial Statement Requirements.

Insurance and bonding: Licensees must maintain a minimum of amounts that vary by jurisdiction in general liability insurance and carry workers' compensation coverage where employees are involved. For bonding specifics, see Alabama Contractor Bond Requirements and Alabama Contractor Insurance Requirements.

Alabama Home Builders Licensure Board — Residential Electrical

Residential electrical contractors operating under the HBLB must obtain a Specialty Contractor license in the Electrical classification. This requires:

  1. Passing the HBLB-designated trade examination covering residential electrical installations.
  2. Demonstrating 2 years of verifiable residential electrical experience.
  3. Maintaining liability insurance at levels set by the HBLB (Alabama Home Builders Licensure Board rules, Administrative Code Chapter 465-X-6).

Renewal and continuing education

Both boards require biennial license renewal. The AECB mandates continuing education hours as a condition of renewal — typically 8 hours per renewal cycle — covering code updates and safety topics. For a structured overview of continuing education obligations, see Alabama Contractor Continuing Education.

Common scenarios

Commercial general contractor subcontracting electrical work: A general contractor licensed through the Alabama Licensing Board for General Contractors must subcontract all electrical work to an AECB-licensed electrical contractor. The general contractor's license does not authorize direct performance of electrical installations. See Alabama Subcontractor Regulations for additional detail.

Out-of-state contractor seeking to work in Alabama: Alabama does not maintain broad reciprocity agreements for electrical contractors. An out-of-state electrical contractor must apply for Alabama licensure and typically must pass the AECB examination regardless of home-state credentials. See Alabama Contractor License Reciprocity for board-specific reciprocity determinations.

Low-voltage and alarm system contractors: Low-voltage work — including structured cabling, fire alarm systems, and security systems — falls under AECB's Limited Electrical Contractor classifications, not under the general contractor license. Contractors performing only low-voltage work must hold the appropriate AECB specialty classification.

Decision boundaries

Work Type Governing Board License Required
Commercial/industrial electrical installation AECB Unlimited or Limited Electrical Contractor
Residential electrical installation HBLB Specialty Contractor – Electrical
Fire alarm systems (commercial) AECB Limited – Fire Alarm
Swimming pool wiring AECB Specialty Electrical
Low-voltage/structured cabling AECB Limited – Low Voltage
Home additions (residential electrical) HBLB Specialty Contractor – Electrical

Contractors performing work outside their licensed classification are subject to enforcement action by the respective board, including fines and license suspension. For penalty structures, see Alabama Unlicensed Contractor Penalties.

For a broader view of how electrical licensing fits within Alabama's full contractor licensing landscape, the Alabama Contractor License Types reference and the site index provide cross-trade licensing comparisons and navigation to adjacent trade categories including Alabama HVAC Contractor Licensing and Alabama Plumbing Contractor Licensing.

References

📜 3 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations updated Feb 23, 2026  ·  View update log

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