HVAC Authority Network: State-by-State Coverage Map
The HVAC Authority Network spans all 50 US states plus the District of Columbia, linking state-level and city-level reference properties to a hub structure that reflects how HVAC licensing, permitting, and compliance actually operate across jurisdictions. Regulatory authority over HVAC contractors and systems is distributed across state licensing boards, municipal building departments, and regional code adoption bodies — not concentrated in a single federal agency. Understanding which member site covers which jurisdiction, and how the network's compliance and standards verticals fit into that structure, is the primary function of this coverage map. The National HVAC Authority Hub serves as the authoritative entry point for navigating that structure.
Definition and scope
The HVAC Authority Network is a structured reference system composed of 44 member properties organized by geographic jurisdiction and regulatory subject matter. Member sites fall into three functional categories: state-level authority sites, city-level authority sites, and cross-jurisdictional compliance and standards sites. Each category carries distinct scope boundaries, and those boundaries are defined by how HVAC licensing law actually works in the United States.
State-level sites track contractor licensing requirements, continuing education mandates, mechanical code adoption status, and permit fee structures as administered by individual state licensing boards — for example, the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation or the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation. City-level sites address municipal-layer requirements where local jurisdictions maintain independent permitting authority that supplements or departs from state baseline rules. Compliance and standards sites address cross-cutting regulatory frameworks — refrigerant handling under EPA Section 608, energy efficiency standards under ASHRAE 90.1, and equipment certification requirements under DOE appliance rules — that apply regardless of geographic location.
The regulatory context for HVAC systems establishes the federal, state, and local layers within which all member sites operate. The full network geographic reach spans every US state, with coverage depth varying based on the complexity of each state's licensing structure.
How it works
The network operates on a hub-and-spoke model. The hub (this site) maintains the classification framework, membership criteria, and cross-network standards reference. Member sites carry jurisdiction-specific content calibrated to local licensing boards, code adoption status, and permit authority.
How member sites are organized follows a three-tier geography logic:
- State authority sites — Cover the full state regulatory environment, including contractor classification tiers (Class A/B/C in states that use tiered licensing), exam requirements, bond and insurance minimums, and reciprocity agreements with neighboring states.
- City authority sites — Cover municipal permitting authority, local amendments to state mechanical codes, and inspection processes administered by city or county building departments that operate independently of state licensing boards.
- Compliance and standards sites — Cover subject-matter verticals (refrigerant compliance, energy standards, equipment ratings) that apply nationally but intersect differently with each state's enforcement posture.
The state vs. city member distinctions page details how jurisdictional overlap is handled when a city site and a state site cover the same geography.
Common scenarios
High-population state coverage represents the network's densest reference tier. States with complex, multi-board licensing structures and active code amendment cycles receive dedicated authority sites.
- Florida HVAC Authority covers the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation's Certified and Registered contractor classifications, the Florida Building Code mechanical provisions, and county-level permit authority that operates in parallel with state licensing.
- California HVAC Authority addresses the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) C-20 heating and air-conditioning classification, Title 24 energy code compliance, and the California Air Resources Board's refrigerant regulations, which are stricter than federal EPA Section 608 baselines. The companion property California HVAC Reference and Standards focuses specifically on CARB compliance and Title 24 equipment substitution rules.
- Texas HVAC Authority covers the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) HVAC contractor licensing, the Texas mechanical code adoption schedule, and the role of the Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners where HVAC and plumbing scopes intersect. Texas HVAC Standards Reference addresses energy code and SEER2 equipment compliance specific to Texas.
- Georgia HVAC Authority covers the Georgia State Licensing Board for Residential and General Contractors and the Georgia Energy Code, including local jurisdictions like Atlanta that have historically applied local amendments.
- Illinois HVAC Authority addresses the Illinois Department of Public Health's role in licensing and the Chicago-area municipal layer, which operates one of the most independently structured permitting systems in the Midwest.
Mid-size state coverage addresses states with single-board licensing and moderate permit complexity:
- Pennsylvania HVAC Authority covers the Pennsylvania Bureau of Professional and Occupational Affairs and the state's home improvement contractor law, which applies to residential HVAC replacement work.
- Ohio HVAC Authority addresses the Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board's HVAC classifications and the Ohio Mechanical Code's relationship to the International Mechanical Code (IMC) base document.
- Michigan HVAC Authority covers the Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA) mechanical contractor licensing and the Michigan Mechanical Code amendment cycle.
- Tennessee HVAC Authority addresses the Tennessee Board for Licensing Contractors and the state's tiered HVAC classification system, which distinguishes residential from commercial scope.
- Indiana HVAC Authority covers the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency and Indiana's adoption of the IMC with state-specific amendments.
- Maryland HVAC Authority addresses the Maryland Home Improvement Commission and county-level licensing requirements, which in Maryland are legally separate from state credentials.
- Massachusetts HVAC Authority covers the Massachusetts Board of State Examiners of Plumbers and Gas Fitters (which has HVAC jurisdiction overlap) and the Massachusetts Stretch Energy Code.
- Missouri HVAC Authority addresses Missouri's municipal-dominant licensing structure, where cities like Kansas City and St. Louis administer independent licensing rather than relying on a state board.
- Washington HVAC Authority covers the Washington State Department of Labor and Industries, which administers the HVAC/Refrigeration Specialty contractor registration and the Washington State Energy Code.
- Arizona HVAC Authority addresses the Arizona Registrar of Contractors and the CR-39 and CR-67 license classifications for mechanical work.
Smaller-state and specialty coverage ensures the network reaches jurisdictions where HVAC licensing structures are less complex but regulatory gaps create distinct reference needs:
- Alabama HVAC Authority and Mississippi HVAC Authority address the Southeastern states' licensing boards and their adoption status relative to ASHRAE 15 safety standards for refrigeration systems.
- Alaska HVAC Authority covers unique cold-climate mechanical requirements, including the Alaska Fuel Code's interaction with heating system installation standards.
- Hawaii HVAC Authority addresses the Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs contractor licensing and the state's high-humidity climate code considerations.
- Arkansas HVAC Authority, Iowa HVAC Authority, Kansas HVAC Authority, and Nebraska HVAC Authority cover the Central Plains states where county-level permit authority frequently diverges from state licensing board jurisdiction.
- Louisiana HVAC Authority addresses the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors and the post-hurricane coastal construction standards that affect HVAC equipment placement and anchorage.
- Maine HVAC Authority, Vermont HVAC Authority, and Connecticut HVAC Authority cover the New England states, where cold-climate efficiency standards and oil heating system licensing create distinct regulatory profiles.
- Minnesota HVAC Authority covers the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry's residential contractor licensing and the state's building code, which uses ASHRAE 90.1 as its energy compliance reference.
- Montana HVAC Authority and Idaho HVAC Authority address the Mountain West states, where county-level enforcement is primary and state licensing boards have narrower direct-enforcement roles.
- Nevada HVAC Authority covers the Nevada State Contractors Board's C-21 air conditioning and refrigeration classification and the Las Vegas metro permit environment.
- Oklahoma HVAC Authority addresses the Oklahoma Construction Industries Board and its HVAC contractor classification tiers.
- Oregon HVAC Authority covers the Oregon Construction Contractors Board and the Oregon Mechanical Specialty Code.
- Utah HVAC Authority