Loading exam details…
Loading exam details…
HiraEdu helps Division I candidates connect DBPR authorization, Contract Administration, Project Management, Business and Finance, approved references, residential code, plan reading, safety, and CBT pacing.
Florida Residential Contractor candidates need a study plan for more than one exam part. Preparation should split Contract Administration from Project Management, keep Business and Finance in view, and turn approved references into a timed lookup system for contracts, permits, construction methods, safety, plans, specifications, codes, and residential jobsite scenarios.
Use these checkpoints to confirm the Division I path, exam timing, domain weights, and reference strategy before scheduling.
DBPR treats Residential Contractor as a Division I construction classification requiring Business and Finance, Contract Administration, and Project Management exam parts.
The at-a-glance chart lists Residential Contractor Contract Administration and Project Management as 45 scored questions each, 4.5 hours each, and daily computer-based testing.
Contract Administration emphasizes project contracts at 40%, followed by preconstruction activities, licenses and permits, approvals, and construction procedures.
Project Management emphasizes construction methods, materials, tools and equipment at 64%, with safety and plan/specification reading each listed at 18%.
Residential Contractor candidates should not treat this as a single trade test. DBPR identifies Division I contractors as needing Business and Finance, Contract Administration, and Project Management, so HiraEdu builds the study calendar around all required parts, eligibility timing, Professional Testing approval, and Pearson VUE scheduling.
The Contract Administration outline is weighted toward project contracts, preconstruction estimating and bidding, licensing, permits, inspections, payments, closeout, and scheduling. The Project Management outline shifts heavily into site layout, soils, earthwork, concrete, masonry, wood and metal framing, energy efficiency, gypsum, moisture control, safety, plans, specifications, and codes.
The 2026 General, Building and Residential reference list includes AIA documents, OSHA 29 CFR 1926, Contractors Manual, Florida Building Code volumes, energy guidance, truss bracing, and other construction references. Prep should turn those books into a fast lookup system for calculations, code questions, contract clauses, site conditions, and inspection scenarios.
Use this Prov Residential Contractor License Exam exam help page for exam-specific context, then compare the broader online exam help services page or contact HiraEdu if you need a direct handoff. This page stays focused on Prov Residential Contractor License Exam while the linked service pages cover broader exam support options.
Florida Residential Contractor Exam preparation for candidates pursuing the DBPR Construction Industry Licensing Board Division I residential contractor path. DBPR's examinations-at-a-glance document states that Division I contractors, including Residential, must pass Business and Finance, Contract Administration, and Project Management. It lists Residential Contractor Contract Administration as 45 scored questions in 4.5 hours, Residential Contractor Project Management as 45 scored questions in 4.5 hours, and Business and Finance as 120 scored questions in 6.5 hours, all offered as daily computer-based testing. The Contract Administration outline weights Project Contracts at 40%, Preconstruction Activities at 29%, Licenses, Permits and Approvals at 20%, and Construction Procedures and Operations at 11%. The Project Management outline weights Construction Methods, Materials, Tools and Equipment at 64%, Safety at 18%, and Reading Plans and Specifications at 18%. HiraEdu helps candidates confirm the correct residential licensing path, organize the 2026 General, Building and Residential reference list, practice open-book lookup, study Florida residential code and construction methods, and build pacing for each CBT exam part.
DBPR identifies Residential Contractor as a Division I path, which requires Business and Finance, Contract Administration, and Project Management.
DBPR's at-a-glance chart lists Residential Contractor Contract Administration as 45 scored questions with a 4.5-hour time limit.
DBPR lists Residential Contractor Project Management as 45 scored questions with a 4.5-hour time limit.
The official Project Management outline weights Construction Methods, Materials, Tools and Equipment at 64%, making it the largest listed area.
HiraEdu helps candidates verify the required exam parts, organize approved references, study DBPR outline weights, practice open-book lookup, and build pacing for each computer-based exam session.
Verify the licensing classification, application status, required exam parts, Professional Testing approval, and Pearson VUE scheduling instructions before building the study plan.
Study Contract Administration by contracts, estimates, permits, approvals, and operations, then study Project Management by construction methods, safety, and plans.
Set up the 2026 reference list within DBPR rules and practice locating AIA, OSHA, Contractors Manual, Florida Building Code, energy, truss, concrete, and gypsum topics quickly.
Practice 45-question, 4.5-hour residential sessions plus Business and Finance pacing, using mixed calculations, plan reading, code lookup, contract, permit, and jobsite scenarios.
Use the guide to self-serve, or talk to a coordinator if you need help mapping timelines, official requirements, or troubleshooting day-of logistics.
Prov General Contractor License Exam
ExamRoom.AI
View serviceProv Building Contractor License Exam
ExamRoom.AI
View serviceProv Commercial Pool Contractor Exam
ExamRoom.AI
View serviceProv Residential Pool Contractor Exam
ExamRoom.AI
View serviceProv Pool Servicing Contractor Exam
ExamRoom.AI
View serviceProv Underground Utility Contractor Exam
ExamRoom.AI
View service