National Repair Authority: Your Comprehensive Resource

The Professional Services Authority provider network hosted on National Repair Authority serves as a structured reference index for repair sector businesses operating across the United States. This page explains the provider network's organizational logic, the criteria that govern which businesses appear, and how readers should interpret the information presented in each provider. Understanding the provider network's scope and decision boundaries helps both consumers seeking repair services and contractors evaluating whether their operations qualify for inclusion.


How to interpret providers

Each provider in the Professional Services Authority provider network represents a repair-sector business that has been evaluated against a defined set of inclusion criteria. Providers are not endorsements, rankings, or quality ratings — they are structured data records that present verifiable operational information such as trade category, geographic service area, licensing status, and credential documentation.

Providers display information in a standardized format so that different businesses within the same repair specialty can be compared on equivalent terms. A roofing contractor provider and an appliance repair provider, for example, will share the same structural fields but will carry trade-specific credential indicators that reflect the licensing requirements of their respective categories. For guidance on the underlying terminology used in these records, the national repair industry terminology glossary explains the precise meaning of each field label.

Two provider states exist within the network:

  1. Active provider — The business has met current inclusion criteria, documentation is verified on file, and the record is displayed in full.
  2. Pending or suspended provider — The business has initiated the provider process or has a compliance hold. The record may be suppressed or displayed with a status indicator.

Readers should not interpret the absence of a business as a negative finding. Absence indicates either that the business has not applied, that an application is under review, or that the business operates in a specialty not yet covered by the provider network's current repair specialty verticals.


Purpose of this provider network

The provider network exists to solve a structural information problem in the US repair market: the absence of a nationally consistent, trade-neutral index of credentialed repair providers. Licensing requirements for repair contractors vary by state and trade — electricians, HVAC technicians, plumbers, and general contractors each face distinct regulatory frameworks across all 50 states — which makes it difficult for consumers and procurement teams to evaluate providers on comparable terms.

National Repair Authority addresses this by applying a uniform data schema to providers regardless of trade, geography, or business size. The provider network's purpose is reference, not commerce. No transaction is facilitated through the provider network itself. The consumer repair referral standards page describes how the provider network connects to downstream referral processes if a reader chooses to act on a provider.

The provider network also serves the repair industry itself by creating a documented, publicly accessible record of businesses that have completed a credential verification process. This provides contractors with a verifiable presence in a structured index, separate from review platforms or marketplace providers where unverified businesses appear alongside verified ones without distinction.


What is included

The provider network covers repair contractors, specialty service providers, and repair-adjacent businesses across the following major segments:

  1. Residential repair trades — Roofing, plumbing, electrical, HVAC, structural, foundation, and general contracting.
  2. Appliance and equipment repair — Household appliance repair, commercial equipment service, and electronics repair.
  3. Specialty surface and materials repair — Flooring, masonry, glass, and finishing trades.
  4. Vehicle and mobility repair — Auto body, mechanical, and fleet service providers.
  5. Industrial and commercial maintenance — Facility maintenance contractors and light industrial repair services.

The national repair service categories page provides a complete breakdown of sub-categories within each segment. Businesses that span more than one segment — a contractor licensed for both electrical and HVAC work, for instance — receive a multi-category record rather than duplicate providers. The multi-vertical repair provider network structure explains how cross-trade businesses are recorded and displayed.

The provider network does not include general construction firms whose primary activity is new-build rather than repair, product manufacturers, or service aggregators that subcontract all work without holding trade licenses directly.


How entries are determined

Entry into the provider network is governed by documented criteria rather than discretionary judgment. The repair contractor provider criteria page defines the full eligibility framework. At the point of evaluation, each applicant is assessed against four requirement categories:

  1. Trade licensing — The business must hold a current license in each trade category claimed, issued by the relevant state licensing board. License status is cross-referenced against state board databases at the time of application.
  2. Insurance and bonding — General liability coverage at a minimum threshold appropriate to the trade is required. The repair contractor insurance and bonding reference specifies thresholds by trade category.
  3. Geographic service documentation — The business must document the specific states or metropolitan areas it actively serves, not merely the state of incorporation.
  4. Business identity verification — Entity name, principal address, and tax identification must be consistent across submitted documentation.

Applications that satisfy all four categories proceed to a data formatting review before the provider goes live. Applications that satisfy three of four categories are placed in a conditional hold status while the outstanding item is resolved. Applications that fail on trade licensing — the most fundamental criterion — are declined without hold status.

The how Professional Services Authority vets repair businesses page describes the operational process behind these evaluations, including the document types accepted for each requirement category and the timeline from submission to provider activation. The repair authority dispute and removal policy governs how existing providers are reviewed when credential status changes or a compliance concern is raised after activation.

This site is part of the Trade Services Authority network.