Siding Listings
The siding contractor listings on National Siding Authority aggregate provider records across residential and commercial exterior cladding services in the United States. Entries span installation, replacement, repair, and inspection work across material categories including vinyl, fiber cement, wood, engineered wood, stucco, metal panel, and composite systems. Understanding how these records are structured, what data points are included, and where gaps exist helps service seekers and researchers navigate the directory with accuracy. For context on the scope and purpose of this reference, see the Siding Directory Purpose and Scope overview.
How to read an entry
Each listing record presents contractor data in a standardized field structure. Entries are not ranked by quality, performance, or endorsement — the ordering reflects geographic indexing and data availability at the time of record creation.
A standard entry presents the following data fields, in the order they appear:
- Business name — The registered trade name or legal business name as submitted or sourced from public business registries.
- Service category — A classification tag indicating the primary work type (installation, repair, replacement, inspection, or multi-service).
- Material specialization — One or more material codes indicating the cladding systems the contractor works with (e.g., fiber cement, vinyl, metal panel, engineered wood).
- Geographic service area — A county, metro, or state-level designation. Not all entries include zip-code-level granularity.
- License indicator — A flag showing whether a state contractor license number was recorded at the time of indexing. This is not a real-time license verification.
- Contact data — Phone and/or web address where provided. Email addresses are excluded from public-facing records.
- Insurance notation — A binary flag (recorded / not recorded) indicating whether general liability documentation was on file at the time of listing. This does not confirm current coverage status.
- Last indexed date — The date the record was last refreshed against source data. Records older than 18 months carry a staleness flag.
Entries marked with a staleness flag should be independently verified before use. The how to use this siding resource page describes recommended verification steps for both service seekers and researchers.
What listings include and exclude
Included in listings:
- Contractors operating as sole proprietors, LLCs, S-corps, or incorporated entities registered in at least 1 US state
- Providers offering exterior cladding work as a primary or declared secondary service
- Both residential-focused and commercial-focused contractors where the service type is identifiable
- Records sourced from state contractor licensing databases, business registry filings, and directly submitted profiles
Excluded from listings:
- General contractors who list siding only as an incidental or unlisted subcapability
- Suppliers, distributors, and manufacturers — the directory covers installed services, not product sales
- Inspectors operating exclusively under home inspection licenses (as distinct from dedicated exterior envelope specialists)
- Contractors with active license suspensions or revocations in the state of primary operation at the time of last index
- Franchise networks listed as a single national entity without discrete local operator records
The distinction between a repair specialist and a full-replacement contractor is material in this directory. Repair specialists typically hold a narrower scope of work and may operate under different licensing thresholds than full installation contractors. In California, for example, the Contractors State License Board (CSLB) classifies exterior siding installation under the C-35 (Lathing and Plastering) and B (General Building) license categories depending on material and scope — a distinction that affects which record type a provider appears under. Similar classification boundaries exist in Florida (Construction Industry Licensing Board) and Texas (Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation).
Verification status
Listings in this directory are reference records, not credentialed endorsements. Three verification tiers apply across the index:
- Tier A — Source-confirmed: License number matched against a named state licensing database at the time of indexing. Covers approximately 40% of current records.
- Tier B — Submitted and plausible: Information submitted directly by the contractor and cross-referenced against public business registry data, but license number not independently confirmed.
- Tier C — Aggregated: Record sourced from secondary aggregation with no independent confirmation. Staleness flags are applied automatically at 12 months for Tier C records.
Licensing requirements for siding contractors vary by state. The International Building Code (IBC), adopted in whole or in modified form by 49 states, establishes baseline standards for exterior wall assembly and cladding installation, but enforcement and contractor licensing authority sits at the state level. The National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI) and the Siding and Window Dealers Association of America (SWDAA) maintain voluntary credentialing programs that some listed contractors hold — these credentials are noted where documented.
Coverage gaps
The directory does not yet hold complete coverage for all 50 states. As of the most recent index cycle, rural counties across the Great Plains and Intermountain West regions have the lowest record density — in some counties, fewer than 3 active contractor records exist. Metropolitan areas in California, Texas, Florida, Illinois, and New York have the highest record density and the most frequent index refresh cycles.
Additional known gaps include:
- Stucco and EIFS (Exterior Insulation and Finish Systems) specialists — These subsets intersect with plastering trades and are indexed separately where data permits. Coverage here is incomplete; the National Stucco Repair Authority maintains a parallel index for stucco-specific providers.
- Manufactured and modular housing exterior work — Contractors operating under HUD code structures rather than standard state building codes appear inconsistently in the index.
- New construction vs. retrofit — The directory does not consistently distinguish between contractors who work exclusively on new construction and those who specialize in retrofit or replacement on existing structures. This boundary affects permit requirements under IRC Section R703 (Exterior Covering) and should be confirmed directly with the provider.
Researchers and service seekers requiring records not present in these siding listings are encouraged to cross-reference state contractor licensing portals directly, as those databases are authoritative for licensure status.
References
- 28 CFR Part 35 — Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability in State and Local Government Services
- Advisory Council on Historic Preservation — Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act
- 24 CFR Part 3280 — Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards
- Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies — Leading Indicator of Remodeling Activity (LIRA)
- Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies — Leading Indicator of Remodeling Activity (LIRA)
- Uniform Commercial Code Article 2 — Sales (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
- ADA Standards for Accessible Design — U.S. Department of Justice
- 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design — U.S. Department of Justice