Authority Network America Listings

The Authority Network America directory compiles licensed, credentialed, and regulated service providers across the United States into a structured, sector-organized reference. Entries span multiple industry verticals — from contractors and insurance producers to healthcare practitioners and financial services professionals — with each record tied to publicly verifiable licensing data. The listings function as a professional reference layer, not a consumer review platform, and are governed by the same eligibility and data standards described in the Authority Network America Listing Eligibility documentation.


How to read an entry

Each listing record in the Authority Network America directory follows a standardized field schema. The structure is consistent across all verticals, though not every field will be populated for every provider — gaps reflect data availability, not editorial judgment.

A standard entry contains the following ordered fields:

  1. Provider name — The legal business or individual name as recorded with the relevant state licensing authority.
  2. License type — The credential category recognized under the network's classification framework, drawn from the taxonomy documented in Authority Network America License Types Recognized.
  3. License number — The state-issued identifier, enabling independent cross-reference against the issuing agency's public lookup portal.
  4. Issuing authority — The named state board, department, or agency that granted the credential (e.g., Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, California Contractors State License Board).
  5. Jurisdiction — The state or states where the credential is active. Multi-state producers, for instance, hold resident licenses in one state and non-resident licenses in others; both are logged when available.
  6. License status — Active, expired, suspended, or revoked, as sourced from the issuing authority's public records at the time of the last data pull.
  7. Expiration or renewal date — Pulled from official state records where accessible; not independently verified by the network.
  8. Vertical category — The industry sector as classified under the Authority Network America Participating Verticals taxonomy.
  9. Data source — A reference to the originating public record or dataset, traceable to the methodology described in Authority Network America Data Sources and Methodology.

Entries for sole practitioners and for business entities differ at field 1 and field 5. A business entity record names the entity and its qualifying individual (where state law requires one); a sole practitioner record names the individual directly. In states such as Florida, where Florida Statutes Chapter 489 requires a designated qualifier for contractor licenses, both names appear in the same entry when the public record contains both.


What listings include and exclude

Included:

Excluded:

The distinction between a license and a certification is material across all verticals. A license is a government-issued legal authorization to practice; a certification is typically a private or nonprofit credential indicating a competency standard. The directory indexes the former, not the latter.


Verification status

All listings carry one of 3 verification states:

The verification framework and its audit cycle are detailed under Authority Network America Member Verification. Verification does not constitute an endorsement, and a Verified status reflects only that the license record matched available public data — it does not confirm current business activity, financial standing, or disciplinary history beyond license status.


Coverage gaps

The directory does not achieve uniform national coverage across all 50 states and the District of Columbia for every vertical. Identified structural gaps include:

Researchers relying on this directory for compliance verification or due diligence should treat any absence of a record as inconclusive rather than definitive. A provider not found in the listings may hold a valid credential that has not yet been indexed, falls within a covered gap, or operates under a vertical not yet integrated into the network's scope.

References