Professional License Verification Guide
A license number on a business card proves nothing until you check it against the board that issued it. Anyone can print a “licensed and insured” claim, copy a real contractor’s number, or keep working under a credential that was suspended last year. This guide shows you how to confirm a professional license is genuine, currently active, and free of disciplinary action — for contractors, medical and legal professionals, financial advisers, and the skilled trades — using official state licensing boards and lawful public records, and what to do when the license, the name, and the person in front of you do not line up.
The Short Version
To verify a professional license, take the name and number you were given and look it up directly on the licensing board that regulates that occupation in that state — the contractors’ board, medical board, bar association, or trade board — never on the worker’s own website or a third-party “verified” badge. The board record tells you four things at once: whether the license exists, whether it is currently active, whether it carries any disciplinary action or restrictions, and the legal name it was issued to. The most common fraud is not a fake number but a real one belonging to someone else, so the step that catches the most problems is matching the licensed name and address to the actual person standing in front of you. When the name does not match, or the license is expired, suspended, or unfindable, that is your answer — and confirming who the person really is becomes a public-records job.
Watch: How to Check a License
The four questions every board record should answer.
Watch Overview
Why a Number Is Not Proof
A license claim is a starting point, not a verification.
The licensing system exists because some occupations carry enough risk to the public that the state requires training, testing, insurance, and ongoing oversight before someone can practice. A contractor who pulls permits, a nurse who administers medication, an attorney who handles your settlement, a financial adviser who moves your money — each is regulated by a board that can grant, restrict, suspend, or revoke the right to work. That board, not the worker, is the authority on whether the credential is good today.
So the document, the truck wrap, and the “licensed & insured” line on the estimate are claims, not proof. Three failures hide behind a confident number. The license may never have existed and the number is invented. It may have existed but lapsed, expired, or been suspended for unpaid fees or a disciplinary finding. Or the number may be entirely real — and belong to a different, legitimate professional whose identity is being borrowed. Only one source closes all three gaps at once: the issuing board’s own record, read carefully and matched to the person.
The Four Checks That Matter
Every board lookup should answer these, in order.
Does It Exist?
Search the issuing board’s public license lookup for the exact number and name. A “no record found” on the right board, for the right state and trade, is a hard stop — the credential is not real.
Is It Active?
A real license can still be expired, inactive, lapsed, or non-renewed. Read the status field and the expiration date, not just the issue date. “Active” today is the only status that lets them lawfully work.
Is It Clean?
Boards publish disciplinary actions, citations, restrictions, probation, and complaints. A license can be active yet carry conditions or a recent sanction that tells you exactly why to be cautious.
Check 04 — Is it actually theirs? This is the one most people skip, and it catches the most fraud. The board record lists a legal name, a business name, and often an address of record. Match all three against the person and company you are dealing with. A real license attached to a stolen or “borrowed” identity is the classic move: the number checks out, the name does not. When that match fails, confirming the true identity behind the work is no longer a board question — it is a public-records one.
Where Each License Is Verified
Different professions, different official boards.
| Profession | Who Regulates It | What the Record Shows |
|---|---|---|
| Contractor & Trades | State contractors’ license board or department of labor; local building department. | License class, bond and insurance status, permits, complaints, and any revocation. |
| Medical & Nursing | State medical board or board of nursing. | Active status, specialty, disciplinary actions, malpractice flags, and limits on practice. |
| Legal | The state bar association. | Admission date, standing (active or suspended), public reprimands, and disbarment history. |
| Financial & Real Estate | State securities or real estate division; FINRA BrokerCheck for brokers. | Registrations, customer complaints, regulatory events, and bankruptcies. |
| Skilled Trades | State board for electricians, plumbers, HVAC, cosmetology, and similar. | License level, expiration, apprenticeship status, and disciplinary record. |
The pattern holds across all of them: every regulated occupation has a public-facing board lookup, and that board is the only authority that can confirm the license is current. If the trade you are checking is not on this list, search the state’s department of consumer affairs or licensing for the specific occupation — the index exists, and a profession with no governing board may simply not require a license at all, which is itself worth knowing before you hire.
Signs a License Will Not Hold Up
What sends a verification from routine to a real problem.
No Record on the Board
The number returns nothing on the correct board for the state and trade. Invented or misremembered numbers fail here first.
Expired or Inactive
The record exists but the status reads expired, lapsed, or inactive, meaning they cannot lawfully take the job today.
Name Does Not Match
The license is valid but issued to a different legal name or company than the person quoting you. A classic borrowed-credential tell.
Disciplinary History
Active but carrying citations, probation, restrictions, or a recent sanction that explains exactly why to slow down.
Wrong Class or Scope
A real license for a narrower scope than the work involves, such as a handyman registration used to sell major structural jobs.
Refuses to Provide a Number
Stalling, vague answers, or a screenshot instead of a number to look up yourself is its own answer worth taking seriously.
From Claim to Confirmed
How a license check becomes a settled fact.
Get the Details
Collect the license number, the legal name on it, the business name, and the state. Ask directly; a real professional gives it without hesitation.
Go to the Source
Open the correct board’s official license lookup for that trade and state. Skip the worker’s site and any third-party badge entirely.
Read All Four Fields
Confirm existence, active status, a clean disciplinary record, and a name that matches the person and company in front of you.
Resolve the Mismatch
When the name, address, or identity does not line up, public-records research confirms who the person actually is before you commit.
When the License Is Real but the Person Is Not
A clean board record can still hide a borrowed identity.
The hardest case is also the most common one boards cannot solve for you: the number is genuine, the status is active, the disciplinary record is clean — and the person showing it to you is not the licensee. A licensed contractor’s number gets shared among unlicensed crews. An adviser uses a colleague’s registration. Someone quotes a real license they found online and counts on you never matching the name to a face. The board record looks perfect because the license itself is perfect; the fraud is in the identity, not the credential.
That is where this stops being a lookup and becomes investigative work. Confirming the licensed name, business entity, and address of record actually belong to the person you are dealing with is exactly the kind of question we answer through skip tracing and lawful public records. It overlaps with identity verification to confirm the human matches the name, and with employment and credential verification when the claimed work history props up the license claim. For trade hires specifically, it pairs with our guide on verifying a contractor before hiring and broader vendor and contractor due diligence. We do the latter — public-records research under a permissible purpose — not the regulatory lookup itself, which you can and should do for free.
Verification vs. a Consumer Report
Where the line falls, and what we do.
Looking up a public license record is open to anyone — boards publish it precisely so the public can check. That is different from running a formal background check to make a hiring or credentialing decision, which is a consumer report governed by the Fair Credit Reporting Act and must come from a consumer reporting agency with disclosure and consent. We are a skip-tracing and public-records research firm operating under FCRA, GLBA, and DPPA and permissible-purpose rules; we are not a consumer reporting agency, and we are not licensed private investigators.
What that means in practice: we do not screen employees or pull FCRA consumer reports, and we do not impersonate anyone or pretext to obtain protected data. What we do is lawful public-records research to confirm identity, link a person to a business entity, and surface litigation, liens, and prior business names that sit behind a license claim — the verification a board lookup cannot give you. Combined with the free board check you run yourself, that closes the loop on whether a professional is who, and what, they say they are. For broader counterparty checks, our due diligence investigation guide covers entities, ownership, and litigation in depth.
Who Uses License Verification
Anyone trusting a credential before money changes hands.
Homeowners
Vet a contractor before a deposit
Small Businesses
Confirm a vendor is credentialed
Investors
Check an adviser’s standing
Patients & Clients
Verify a provider’s license
Property Managers
Screen service providers
Buyers & Sellers
Confirm an agent or broker
Whoever you are, the move is the same two-step: run the free board lookup for the four checks, then resolve any name or identity mismatch with public-records research. When a license check passes on paper but the person feels wrong, that gap is the whole point of verifying who you are dealing with before doing business — and for a legitimate purpose, a verified identity link typically comes back within 24 hours.
Our Commitment
We confirm the person behind a license is who they claim — linking a name to the right entity, address, and record through lawful public-records research, so a board lookup that passes on paper holds up in person. Court-ready research for homeowners, businesses, and investors since 2004.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I verify a professional license for free?
Go to the official board that regulates that occupation in that state — the contractors’ board, medical board, bar, or trade board — and use its public license lookup. Searching the name and number there is free and tells you whether the license exists, is active, and is clean.
What four things should a license check confirm?
That the license exists on the issuing board, that its status is currently active and not expired or suspended, that it carries no disciplinary action or restrictions, and that the legal name and business on the record match the person you are actually dealing with.
Can a real license number belong to someone else?
Yes, and it is the most common fraud. A genuine, active license gets borrowed by unlicensed crews or quoted by someone who found it online. The board record looks perfect because the license is real; the problem is the identity, which is why matching the name matters most.
Where do I check a contractor’s license?
Use your state contractors’ license board or labor department lookup, plus the local building department for permit and complaint history. Read the license class and bond status, since a narrow registration cannot lawfully cover major structural work.
How do I verify a medical or legal professional?
Check the state medical board or board of nursing for clinicians, and the state bar association for attorneys. Both publish active status and any public disciplinary action, reprimand, suspension, or disbarment on the record.
What if the board shows no record at all?
A “no record found” on the correct board, for the right state and trade, is a hard stop — treat the credential as unverified and do not proceed on it. Double-check the spelling and state first, then confirm who the person actually is before committing.
Is verifying a license the same as a background check?
No. A license lookup is public information anyone can read. A background check used for a hiring or credentialing decision is an FCRA consumer report that must come from a consumer reporting agency with consent. We do lawful public-records research, not FCRA consumer reports.
What can you do that a board lookup cannot?
We confirm the person behind the license is the actual licensee — linking the name to the right entity, address, litigation, and prior business names through lawful public records. For a legitimate purpose, a verified identity link typically comes back within 24 hours.
License Checks Out but Something Feels Off?
Run the free board lookup yourself, then let us confirm the person behind the license is really the licensee — name, entity, address, and record matched through lawful public records, typically within 24 hours. Contact us to get started.
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