Local General Contractor contractors

General construction and contracting.

A general contractor manages your entire building project — from permit application through final inspection — coordinating subcontractors, materials, schedules, and code compliance so you do not have to. In most states, general contractors performing work above certain dollar thresholds must register with their state's contractor licensing authority. Verify any GC's registration and confirm they carry general liability insurance (minimum $1 million) and workers' compensation coverage. For major projects like home additions, new builds, or full gut renovations, your GC should handle all permit applications, schedule and attend required inspections, and provide you with a detailed contract covering scope, schedule, payment milestones, and a defined change order process. A GC's value is primarily in coordination and risk management. They vet and schedule subcontractors — electricians, plumbers, HVAC mechanics, tile setters, framers — ensure their work passes inspection, and sequence tasks so the project moves forward without costly delays. When problems arise — a sub fails to show up, a structural surprise opens in a wall, weather delays a concrete pour — the GC absorbs and manages that disruption. For projects involving multiple trades over several months, the cost of a competent GC's oversight (typically 10–20% of total project cost) is well worth the coordination time and risk it removes from the homeowner.

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What to look for when hiring a general contractor contractor

  • -Verify their contractor registration with your state's contractor licensing authority.
  • -Confirm general liability insurance (min. $1M) and workers' compensation before signing.
  • -Get a written contract with full scope, schedule, payment schedule, and change order terms.
  • -Ask who handles permit applications and inspections — your GC should manage this.
  • -Ask for a list of subcontractors and confirm all licensed trades use licensed subs.
  • -Request references from at least two projects of similar size completed in the past two years.

Before you hire a general contractor contractor

Hiring a general contractor for a significant project is one of the larger financial decisions a homeowner makes. Start by confirming the contractor's registration with your state's contractor licensing authority — most states have online lookup tools. Verify that the registration is current and covers the type of work you are planning. Ask for a certificate of insurance that names your project address, and call the insurance carrier to confirm the policy is active. Coverage minimums: $1 million general liability per occurrence, plus workers' compensation. The written contract is your primary protection. A thorough GC contract includes the full scope of work in enough detail that there is no ambiguity about what is included; a construction schedule with key milestones; a payment schedule tied to those milestones; a change order clause specifying that no additional work begins without your written approval; and warranty terms for both materials and workmanship. Review it carefully before signing, and be skeptical of contractors who resist adding specifics. Request a list of the key subcontractors the GC plans to use for licensed trade work (electrical, plumbing, HVAC). Confirm those subs hold the appropriate state specialty licenses. Ask for references from projects of similar scope completed in the past two years. Ask references specifically whether the GC communicated clearly when problems arose, whether the change order process felt fair, and whether the project came in close to the original contract price.
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General Contractor contractors(20 listed)

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How much does general contractor cost?

$15,000 - $150,000per project

GC costs are project-dependent and vary more than any other trade category. GC fees typically represent 10–20% of total project cost on top of subcontractor and material costs. Home additions: $100–250 per finished square foot all-in; a 400 sq ft bedroom addition typically $60,000–100,000; a full second-story addition $150,000–350,000+. Kitchen remodels with a GC: $25,000–90,000. Finished basements: $25,000–60,000. Detached two-car garage: $35,000–80,000. New residential construction: $150–350 per square foot. Permit fees for major projects: $500–2,500. Budget a 10–20% contingency for any project involving existing structure. Retain 10–15% of total payment until final inspection and punch-list completion. Get at least three fully scoped, itemized bids before awarding any project over $20,000.

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FAQs about General Contractor

  • What is the difference between a general contractor and a subcontractor?

    A general contractor (GC) manages the full scope of a construction or renovation project: hiring and coordinating subcontractors, pulling permits, ordering materials, managing the schedule, and ensuring the work meets code. The homeowner contracts with the GC, who takes overall responsibility for project completion. Subcontractors are specialty tradespeople hired by the GC to perform specific work: electricians, plumbers, HVAC technicians, tile setters, and framers are all typically subcontractors. Subcontractors report to the GC, not directly to the homeowner—though the GC should keep you informed of who is working on your project and when. For major projects (additions, new builds, gut renovations), hiring a GC is usually the right approach because managing multiple specialty subs simultaneously is a full-time job. For a single-trade project—replacing a furnace, installing a new bathroom, or re-roofing—you can often hire the specialty contractor directly without a GC, which can reduce total cost.

  • How much does a home addition cost?

    A home addition typically costs $100–$200 per square foot for the finished space, all-in including foundation, framing, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, insulation, drywall, and finish work. A 400 sq ft bedroom addition runs $40,000–$80,000; a 600 sq ft family room addition $60,000–$120,000; a full second-story addition on a ranch home can cost $150,000–$300,000+. Basement finishing costs less—$30–$75 per square foot depending on finish level and whether a bathroom is included. Garage additions run $50–$100 per square foot. Costs vary by location (metro areas are typically higher than rural areas), current material prices, and the complexity of connecting the addition to existing systems. Always get the general contractor to include permit fees, temporary weatherproofing, and site cleanup in their estimate. Budget 10–20% contingency for unexpected conditions uncovered during construction.

  • How long does a home addition or major renovation take?

    A single-room addition typically takes 2–4 months from permit approval through final inspection. A full second-story addition takes 4–8 months. A gut renovation of a kitchen or multiple rooms takes 2–5 months depending on scope. Timeline starts after permit approval, which takes 1–4 weeks in most municipalities. Key phases: demo and site prep (1–2 weeks), foundation or framing (2–4 weeks), rough mechanicals—electrical, plumbing, HVAC (2–3 weeks), insulation and drywall (1–2 weeks), finish work—trim, cabinets, flooring, paint (3–6 weeks), final fixtures and punch list (1–2 weeks). Weather delays, material lead times, and inspection scheduling can extend these timelines. A good general contractor will give you a phased schedule at the start of the project and update you when milestones shift. Ask specifically about what happens if subcontractors are unavailable or materials are backordered.

  • How do I find a general contractor near me?

    Search EdgeLocal for "general contractor" or "construction" along with your zip code to find local GCs who manage residential and commercial building projects. General contractors oversee the full scope of construction work: coordinating subcontractors, pulling permits, managing schedules, and ensuring work meets local building codes and inspection requirements. In most states, contractors performing work above a certain value threshold must register with their state's contractor licensing authority. For major projects—additions, new builds, or gut renovations—your GC should handle all permit applications and required inspections. When comparing bids, evaluate communication style and responsiveness alongside price, and confirm the contract clearly defines scope, schedule, and payment milestones. A professional GC provides a detailed written contract, keeps you informed of progress, and has a documented process for handling change orders. Use EdgeLocal ratings and reviews to identify high-performing local general contractors in your area.

  • How do change orders work and how do I protect myself from scope creep?

    A change order is a written amendment to your original contract that documents a change in scope, the additional cost, and any impact on the project timeline. Both you and the contractor sign off before the additional work begins. This process protects both parties — the contractor gets approved compensation for extra work, and you maintain control over what is added to the project and at what price. The change order clause in your contract should specify that no additional work begins without your written approval. Verbal agreements to add work are the most common source of contractor disputes. Scope creep — the gradual expansion of the project through small additions — is best controlled by reviewing your contract scope at each progress meeting and requiring written change orders for everything, even small additions.

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