Issued by California's CSLB
Required for Work Over $500 (Labor + Materials)
Requires Exam, Experience & Insurance
Publicly Verifiable in Real Time
Unlicensed Work Creates Owner Liability

C-36 Is California's Plumbing Contractor Classification

The California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) issues specialty contractor licenses by trade classification. C-36 is the designation for plumbing contractors — it authorizes the holder to install, maintain, repair, and alter plumbing systems in residential and commercial structures throughout California.

California Coast Plumbers service truck at a commercial property
California Coast Plumbers — C-36 Licensed (Lic. #736992) since 1997

Scope of Work

What a C-36 License Covers

Piping systems for water supply, drainage, and gas; fixtures and appliances connected to those systems; water heaters; backflow prevention devices; grease interceptors; and all associated testing and inspection. It covers both new installation and repair work.

Threshold

When a License Is Required

Any plumbing project valued at $500 or more in combined labor and materials requires a licensed contractor. Below that threshold, a homeowner may perform their own work — but no one may legally perform work-for-hire without a license, regardless of project size.

Enforcement

What Happens Without One

Unlicensed plumbing work voids permits, creates liability for the property owner, and can result in forced removal of installed work. Insurance carriers routinely deny claims arising from work performed by unlicensed contractors. The risk sits with the owner, not the contractor.

What the CSLB Requires to Issue a C-36

Holding a C-36 is not automatic. The CSLB requires applicants to demonstrate a combination of field experience and pass a written examination before a license is issued. Ongoing compliance — including active insurance — is required to maintain it.

  • Minimum four years of journey-level plumbing experience within the past ten years
  • Passage of the CSLB trade exam covering plumbing codes, installation methods, and safety
  • Passage of the CSLB law and business exam covering contractor regulations and California law
  • Active general liability insurance and workers' compensation coverage (where required)
  • $15,000 contractor's bond filed with the CSLB
  • License renewal every two years with continuing compliance verification

For Commercial Accounts, Licensing Is Non-Negotiable

Residential projects can sometimes work around licensing technicalities. Commercial properties cannot. Permit authority, insurance requirements, and tenant lease obligations all tie directly to contractor licensing status.

Permits

Permit Authority

Most commercial plumbing work requires a permit. Permits are issued to licensed contractors, not to property owners or tenants. An unlicensed contractor cannot pull permits — which means work either goes unpermitted (illegal) or doesn't happen.

Insurance

Liability Coverage

Commercial property insurance policies typically contain exclusions for work performed by unlicensed contractors. If a plumbing failure causes property damage or business interruption and the contractor wasn't licensed, you may be bearing that loss without coverage.

Compliance

Vendor Qualification

Property management firms and commercial tenants frequently require licensed, bonded, and insured contractors as a condition of vendor approval. A C-36 license is typically the first line item on any vendor qualification form.

Check Before You Hire. It Takes 60 Seconds.

The CSLB maintains a public license lookup database that shows current status, bond information, insurance, and any disciplinary history. Any contractor unwilling to provide their license number is a red flag.

Step 01

Get the License Number

Ask the contractor for their CSLB license number before any agreement. A legitimate C-36 holder will provide it immediately. California Coast Plumbers holds Lic. #736992.

Step 02

Look It Up on the CSLB Site

Visit cslb.ca.gov and enter the license number. The database shows current status, classification, bond and insurance details, and any complaints or disciplinary actions.

Step 03

Confirm Active Status

The license should show "Active" status, the correct C-36 classification, and current insurance. An expired or suspended license — regardless of past work history — is not valid for new projects.

We're C-36 Licensed, Insured, and Verifiable. Check Us First.

C-36 Licensed — Lic. #736992. In business since 1997. 62,000+ commercial service calls across Southern California. If you're evaluating commercial plumbing contractors for an ongoing relationship or a specific project, we're happy to provide our license documentation, certificate of insurance, and references.

Request a Site Walk (714) 632-0170
C-36 Lic. #736992

Active plumbing contractor license issued by the California Contractors State License Board. Publicly verifiable.

$2M General Liability

Commercial general liability coverage meeting or exceeding the requirements of major property management firms.

Workers' Comp Current

Full workers' compensation coverage for every technician on every job site. Certificate available on request.

29 Years in SoCal

In business since 1997. Serving Orange County, Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino, and San Diego Counties.

On-Site in 2 Hours. That Is Our Standard.

Commercial emergencies do not wait for business hours. Our Priority 1 (P1) SLA targets a 2-hour response during business hours and a 2-hour dispatch for after-hours crises — across Orange County, LA, Riverside, San Bernardino, and San Diego. One call. We handle the rest.

2-Hour Response — (714) 632-0170