Maryland requires a license for home improvement work over $200. Here is what the license means, how to verify it, and what to ask before anyone starts work in your home.
Most homeowners in Maryland have heard the phrase "licensed and insured" so many times that it stopped registering. It sounds like marketing language. It is not. The MHIC license is a state requirement, and hiring without it leaves you without legal recourse when something goes wrong.
This page explains what the license actually covers, how to verify it in two minutes, and what questions to ask any contractor before they start work in your home.
MHIC stands for Maryland Home Improvement Contractor. The Maryland Home Improvement Commission issues this license and requires it for any contractor performing home improvement work with a contract value over $200. That includes handymen, remodelers, painters, and trades doing work inside or outside a residential property.
To hold an MHIC license, a contractor must pass a licensing exam, maintain active registration with the state, and carry the required insurance. The license number is public record. You can look it up and verify it yourself before you hire anyone.
Property Renovators Handyman Services holds MHIC #112963. That number is on every page of this website because it is not optional and it matters.
The MHIC license does three things for you as a homeowner:
If you hire an unlicensed contractor and the work is defective or the contractor takes your deposit and vanishes, none of those protections apply. You are pursuing a civil claim at your own expense with no guarantee of recovery. The guaranty fund only covers work done by licensed contractors.
Go to the Maryland Department of Labor website and search the MHIC license database. You can search by contractor name or by license number. The result shows the license status, expiration date, and any complaints or disciplinary actions on record.
A valid license shows as active. An expired license means the contractor has not maintained their registration. A license with pending complaints is worth looking at more closely before hiring. All of this takes under two minutes and costs nothing.
For Property Renovators Handyman Services, the license number is MHIC #112963. Search it and verify it yourself. That is what the number is there for.
Licensing and insurance are two separate things. A contractor can hold a valid MHIC license and carry no insurance. They can also claim to be insured without being able to produce a current certificate.
General liability insurance covers property damage caused by the contractor during the job. If a handyman breaks a fixture, cracks a tile, or causes water damage, general liability is how that gets paid for. Workers compensation covers injuries to the crew on your property. If someone on the job is hurt, workers comp keeps that liability off your homeowners insurance.
Ask for a certificate of insurance before work starts. A legitimate contractor can produce one in minutes. If there is any hesitation, that is the answer you need.
Some patterns signal a problem before work even starts. These are worth taking seriously:
A legitimate contractor does not pressure you. They give you a written quote, let you verify their license, and schedule the work when it makes sense for your timeline.
Jacob Mora founded Property Renovators Handyman Services in Gaithersburg in 2016. The business has completed over 5,700 jobs across Montgomery County. MHIC #112963. Fully insured and bonded. Jacob leads every job with his own trained crew. No subcontractors.
If you have a job and want to know what it will cost, call (301) 395-3831. Jacob gives you a clear number before any work starts. No pressure, no surprises.
Jacob gives you a clear quote before any work starts. MHIC #112963. Licensed and insured in Maryland.
Call (301) 395-3831Mon-Fri 8am-7pm · Sun 8am-7pm