How to File a Complaint Against a Contractor

Filing a complaint against a contractor is a formal process that routes consumer grievances through licensing boards, government agencies, or legal channels to compel accountability for substandard work, contract breaches, or fraudulent conduct. This page covers the major complaint channels available to U.S. consumers, how each mechanism operates, which situations each channel is best suited for, and the decision boundaries that determine which path to pursue. Understanding the distinctions between channels directly affects whether a consumer recovers money, stops a bad actor's license, or achieves both.


Definition and scope

A contractor complaint is a formal written grievance submitted to an authority with jurisdiction over the contractor's conduct or license. Complaints fall into three principal categories:

  1. Regulatory complaints — filed with a state contractor licensing board or trades board, targeting license suspension, revocation, or civil penalties against the contractor.
  2. Consumer protection complaints — filed with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), state attorneys general, or local consumer affairs offices, addressing fraud, deceptive practices, or violations of statutes such as the FTC Cooling-Off Rule (16 C.F.R. Part 429).
  3. Civil/legal complaints — small claims court filings or full civil lawsuits seeking monetary damages for breach of contract or negligent workmanship.

The scope of each channel is defined by jurisdictional limits. Regulatory boards govern licensees only; unlicensed contractors fall outside their direct authority but may be reported to a state attorney general under unlicensed contractor statutes. Small claims courts cap recoverable amounts — limits vary by state, with California at $12,500 for individuals (California Courts, Small Claims) and Texas at $20,000 (Texas Courts, Small Claims). Understanding these boundaries before filing prevents wasted effort.

For consumers unfamiliar with their baseline protections, consumer rights when hiring a contractor provides foundational context.


How it works

Step 1 — Document the problem.
Compile all written records before filing anything: the signed contract, written estimates, change orders, payment receipts, photographs of defective work, and all correspondence. Boards and agencies require specific evidence; submissions without documentation are routinely dismissed.

Step 2 — Identify the correct channel.
Match the nature of the grievance to the authority with jurisdiction:

Grievance Type Primary Channel Secondary Channel
License violation / shoddy work State licensing board Attorney general
Fraud / deceptive sales FTC / State AG Consumer affairs office
Payment dispute / breach of contract Small claims or civil court Mediation / arbitration
Bond claim (incomplete work) Surety bond company Licensing board
Unlicensed contractor State attorney general Local building department

Step 3 — File the complaint.
Regulatory boards accept complaints online or by mail. The State Contractor Licensing Boards Directory lists board contact information by state. The FTC accepts complaints at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. State attorneys general maintain their own complaint portals, accessible through NAAG's member directory.

Step 4 — Track the investigation.
Licensing boards typically notify the contractor of the complaint and allow a response period, often 20 to 30 days. Board investigation timelines range from 60 days to over a year depending on caseload and complexity. Consumer protection complaints filed with the FTC feed into the Consumer Sentinel Network database used by over 2,800 law enforcement agencies (FTC Consumer Sentinel Network) but do not produce individual refunds.

Step 5 — Pursue parallel remedies.
Filing a regulatory complaint does not bar a simultaneous civil action. Consumers with monetary losses above the small claims threshold should consult contractor dispute resolution options to evaluate mediation, arbitration, or full litigation.


Common scenarios

Scenario A — Abandoned project.
A contractor accepts a deposit, completes partial work, and stops responding. The appropriate first move is a written demand letter sent via certified mail, followed by a licensing board complaint and a potential claim on the contractor's surety bond. Consumer recourse for abandoned contractor projects details the bond claim process.

Scenario B — Defective or non-code-compliant work.
Work that fails inspection or violates building codes creates both a regulatory complaint basis (license violation) and a civil claim for cost of repair. Licensing boards treat code violations as license violations when the contractor holds a license. For the risks created by substandard installations, unpermitted work risks for homeowners provides relevant detail.

Scenario C — Storm chaser or door-to-door fraud.
Post-disaster contractors who collect deposits and disappear, or who use high-pressure door-to-door sales tactics, may violate the FTC Cooling-Off Rule (which grants a 3-business-day cancellation right for unsolicited home sales of $25 or more (16 C.F.R. Part 429)). Complaints route to the FTC and state AG. See also storm chaser contractors — what consumers should know.


Decision boundaries

The choice of complaint channel turns on three variables: the goal (license action vs. money recovery), the contractor's license status, and the dollar amount in dispute.

Regulatory complaints and civil claims are not mutually exclusive. Consumers with strong documentation often file both simultaneously, allowing the board investigation to proceed while a civil action addresses monetary recovery.


References

📜 1 regulatory citation referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

📜 1 regulatory citation referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log