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Hiring Tips

Consumer Protection

Home Services Guide

How to Find a Reliable Home Service Professional
(Without Getting Burned)

Hiring a stranger to work in your home is stressful. Here’s exactly what to look for — and the red flags that tell you to walk away.

Every year, millions of homeowners lose money to unlicensed contractors, surprise fees, and shoddy workmanship. The good news? Most of it is preventable. Whether you need a plumber, electrician, HVAC tech, or handyman, the same core principles protect you every time. This guide gives you a clear, actionable checklist — so you can hire with confidence and never feel taken advantage of again.

The Real Cost of Hiring the Wrong Pro

These aren’t scare tactics — they’re industry numbers every homeowner should know before picking up the phone.

$850

Average loss reported per contractor fraud incident (FTC)

1 in 3

Homeowners who’ve paid for work they weren’t satisfied with

42%

Of homeowners who skipped vetting steps — and regretted it

$0

What unlicensed work can be worth if it fails an insurance claim

The 6-Step Checklist Before You Hire Anyone

Run every candidate through these steps. A trustworthy professional will pass all of them — and won’t hesitate when you ask.

1

Verify Licensing & Insurance

Every legitimate trade contractor — plumber, electrician, HVAC tech, roofer — is required to hold a state license. Ask for the license number and verify it directly on your state’s contractor licensing board website. Also confirm they carry general liability insurance and workers’ comp. If a worker gets hurt on your property without coverage, you could be held liable.

Pro Tip

Ask for a certificate of insurance and call the insurer directly to confirm it’s active — not expired.

2

Read Reviews — But Read Them Right

Look for patterns across multiple platforms: Google, BBB, Yelp, and Angi. Don’t just count stars — read the 3-star reviews, where honest mixed feedback lives. Pay attention to how the company responds to negative reviews. A professional, calm response signals accountability. Defensive or dismissive replies are a red flag.

Watch For

A burst of 5-star reviews posted in the same week — a common sign of fake review padding.

3

Get At Least 3 Written Estimates

Never accept a verbal quote. A written estimate should include a breakdown of labor, materials, timeline, and payment schedule. Getting multiple quotes protects you from both overcharging and suspiciously low bids. If one estimate is dramatically cheaper than the rest, ask why — it usually means cut corners, unlicensed subcontractors, or hidden fees to come.

4

Ask About Subcontractors

Many contractors hire out portions of the job to subcontractors you’ve never screened. Ask directly: “Will anyone other than your own employees be in my home?” If subcontractors are used, confirm they’re also licensed and insured. Get their names in writing — and make sure the main contractor takes full responsibility for their work.

Important to Know

Unlicensed subcontractors can void many homeowner insurance policies if damage occurs during the job.

5

Understand the Payment Terms

Reputable contractors typically ask for a reasonable deposit (10–30%) with the remainder due on completion. Never pay more than 50% upfront for any job. Be cautious of anyone demanding full payment before work begins, or who only accepts cash. Use a credit card when possible — it gives you recourse if something goes wrong.

6

Get Everything in a Signed Contract

The contract should specify: exact scope of work, materials and brands to be used, start and completion dates, total cost, payment schedule, and warranty terms. Any change to the scope mid-project should be documented as a signed change order before work continues. “We’ll figure it out” is not a contract term.

Best Practice

A photo walkthrough with the contractor before and after the job is your best documentation if a dispute arises.

Green Flags: Signs You’ve Found a Good One

Trustworthy home service professionals share these traits. When you see several of them, you can hire with confidence.

Proactively Shares License & Insurance

They hand over credentials before you even have to ask. Transparency is their default, not a reaction to suspicion.

Provides a Detailed Written Estimate

Every line itemized — labor, materials, timeline. No vague ballparks or pressure to decide on the spot.

Communicates Clearly & Promptly

Returns calls and messages same day. Keeps you updated if something changes. You never have to chase them down.

Has a Verifiable Track Record

Multiple reviews across multiple platforms, consistent over time. Happy to provide references from recent similar jobs.

Respects Your Home & Your Time

Arrives on schedule, protects your floors and surfaces, and cleans up after the job. Treats your property as their own.

Stands Behind Their Work

Offers a written labor warranty — typically one year minimum — and addresses issues after payment without argument.

Red Flags: Walk Away If You See These

These warning signs appear again and again in contractor scam reports. Trust your instincts — if something feels off, it usually is.

No License or “It’s Not Required Here”

Nearly every trade requires licensing in nearly every state. This excuse is almost always false — and means you’re unprotected.

Cash Only or Large Upfront Payment

Demanding full payment — or even 50% or more — before work begins is a classic setup for a disappearing act.

Door-to-Door “We’re in Your Area” Pitch

Unsolicited offers following a storm or from crews “finishing a nearby job” are among the most common setups for overcharging.

High-Pressure “Today Only” Pricing

Legitimate professionals don’t create artificial urgency. If the price disappears in ten minutes, so should you.

No Physical Address or Online Presence

A real business is findable. No website, no reviews, no listed address — these are serious warnings, not minor oversights.

Refuses to Put Anything in Writing

A contractor who avoids contracts isn’t protecting you — they’re protecting themselves. Everything in writing, no exceptions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Every U.S. state maintains a public online database for licensed contractors. Search “[your state] contractor license lookup” — most results link directly to the official licensing board. Enter the contractor’s name or license number and confirm the license is active, not expired or suspended. NorTech network professionals are pre-vetted and license-verified before they’re ever dispatched to your home.

If the contractor carries general liability insurance, their insurer covers property damage caused during the job. Document everything with photos before work begins. If they’re uninsured and refuse to make it right, your homeowner’s insurance may cover it — but you’d be responsible for the deductible, and unlicensed work can complicate claims significantly.

A neighbor’s recommendation is a great starting point — but not a substitute for basic vetting. Your neighbor may not have verified the license, may not have had a complex job, or may not yet know about a problem that surfaces months later. Spend ten minutes confirming licensing, insurance, and reviews. A trustworthy professional will always pass that check.

Every NorTech network professional goes through license verification, insurance confirmation, background screening, and service quality review before being admitted. We monitor ongoing performance through post-job feedback and remove professionals who don’t maintain our standards. When you book through NorTech, the vetting is already done.

NorTech connects homeowners and vehicle owners with vetted professionals across a wide range of home and automotive services nationwide — including HVAC, plumbing, electrical, roofing, flooring, pest control, landscaping, auto detailing, tire and brake services, and more. Visit our services page to see the full catalog available in your area.

Find a Trusted Professional Near You

NorTech connects homeowners nationwide with licensed, insured, background-checked service professionals — so you never have to guess who’s walking through your door.

Coverage

Serving homeowners nationwide across all 50 states

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