How to Submit a Business Listing to Authority Industries
Submitting a business listing to Authority Industries places a licensed, bonded, or credentialed operation within a verified directory used by consumers and procurement professionals to identify qualified service providers across the United States. This page explains the submission process, the eligibility criteria a business must satisfy, the distinct paths available for different license types, and the conditions under which a submission may be declined or deferred. Understanding these parameters before initiating a submission reduces processing friction and improves the likelihood of approval on first review.
Definition and scope
A business listing on Authority Industries is a structured directory record that associates a licensed business entity with its verified credentials, service geography, and applicable trade or professional category. Unlike a general business profile on a consumer review platform, a listing here is anchored to documented licensure — state-issued contractor licenses, professional board certifications, bonding instruments, or equivalent regulatory credentials depending on the vertical.
The scope of accepted listings spans the full range of Authority Industries coverage verticals, from licensed contractors in the trades to regulated professional services such as financial advising, healthcare, and real estate. The authority-industries-directory-purpose-and-scope resource describes the full taxonomy of accepted categories. Businesses operating under federal licensing frameworks are evaluated separately from those operating under state-issued credentials — a distinction covered in detail at national licensing vs. state licensing.
A listing is not an endorsement or a rating. It is a factual record subject to the Authority Industries data accuracy policy, which governs how information is sourced, updated, and corrected.
How it works
The submission process follows a defined sequence:
- Eligibility screening — The submitting business identifies its primary trade or professional category and confirms that at least 1 active license, certificate, or bonding document exists and can be verified through a named public source (state licensing board, federal registry, or equivalent body).
- Data entry — The business provides its legal business name, principal business address, service area (by state or county), license number(s), issuing authority, and expiration date(s).
- Credential verification — Authority Industries cross-references submitted license numbers against primary source databases. For contractor trades, this typically means the relevant state licensing board. For professions such as law or medicine, verification runs against state bar rolls or medical board registries. The how Authority Industries vets businesses page details the verification logic by vertical.
- Compliance check — The submission is reviewed against the Authority Industries listing criteria, which include active license status, no unresolved disciplinary actions of a disqualifying type, and geographic service area consistency.
- Publication or deferral — Listings that pass all checks are published. Those with discrepancies receive a deferral notice specifying the data point requiring correction or documentation.
Businesses holding licenses in more than 1 state may submit a single consolidated record or separate state-level records, depending on whether the credentials are issued independently. This is relevant for contractors who hold licenses in states that do not participate in reciprocal licensing agreements — a framework explained at reciprocal licensing across states.
Common scenarios
Scenario A — Single-state licensed contractor. A plumbing company licensed in Ohio submits its Ohio State Contractors Board license number, proof of bond meeting the state minimum, and a service area limited to 12 counties. Verification runs against the Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board public registry. If the license is active and the bond is current, the listing publishes within the standard review window.
Scenario B — Multi-state professional services firm. A civil engineering firm licensed in 4 states submits credentials issued by each state's engineering board. Each license is verified independently. The published listing reflects all 4 state credentials with individual expiration dates, allowing consumers to confirm coverage for their jurisdiction before engagement.
Scenario C — License held in one state, services provided in another. This is the most common source of submission friction. A general contractor licensed in Nevada performing work in Arizona must hold an Arizona license independently unless Arizona recognizes Nevada credentials under a reciprocal arrangement. Submission of only the Nevada license for an Arizona service area will result in deferral pending documentation of the Arizona credential or a valid reciprocity instrument.
Scenario D — Recently expired license. A listing submitted with a license that expired within the prior 90 days enters a conditional hold rather than an outright rejection, provided the submitting business supplies documentation of a pending renewal. The hold is lifted upon verification of reinstatement through the issuing board. Renewal timelines by trade are covered at license expiration and renewal by trade.
Decision boundaries
Authority Industries applies a defined set of approval, deferral, and rejection conditions. Understanding the contrast between a deferral and a rejection is operationally important:
- Deferral means the submission is incomplete or contains a verifiable discrepancy that the submitting business can resolve — an expired license in active renewal, a mismatched address, or a missing bonding document.
- Rejection means the submission fails a criterion that cannot be corrected by updating data — an unresolved disciplinary suspension, a license that was revoked rather than expired, or a business operating in a category that falls outside the accepted verticals.
Businesses subject to active disciplinary proceedings by a state licensing board do not qualify for listing until the proceeding is resolved. This standard aligns with the licensed authority verification standards applied across the directory network. Businesses uncertain about their eligibility should review the Authority Industries FAQ before submitting.
Bonding and insurance requirements vary by trade and are not uniform across states. The bonded and insured requirements by industry resource provides state-by-state minimums for the primary contractor trades and selected professional service categories.
References
- Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board — Ohio Department of Commerce
- National Association of State Contractors Licensing Agencies (NASCLA)
- U.S. Small Business Administration — State Licensing and Permits
- National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying (NCEES) — License Verification
- Federation of State Medical Boards — Physician Data Center