NYC Plumbing Contractor Requirements
Plumbing work in New York City is governed by a layered system of licensing, registration, and code compliance that distinguishes it from requirements in the rest of New York State. Licensed Master Plumbers hold the foundational credential authorizing plumbing contracting work, while additional registrations with the NYC Department of Buildings (DOB) establish legal authority to pull permits and supervise installations. Understanding how these requirements interact — and where city rules diverge from state standards — is essential for any contractor operating in the five boroughs.
Definition and scope
A plumbing contractor in New York City is an individual or business entity that installs, repairs, alters, or maintains plumbing systems, including water supply, drainage, gas piping, and sanitary systems within buildings. The NYC Plumbing Code, which is a locally amended version of the International Plumbing Code, governs the technical standards for all such work (NYC Department of Buildings — NYC Construction Codes).
The primary licensing credential is the Licensed Master Plumber (LMP), issued by the NYC Department of Buildings. A separate but related credential, the Journeyman Plumber, authorizes hands-on installation work under LMP supervision but does not authorize independent contracting. A plumbing contracting business must be either owned by, or have a licensed master plumber as its "Designated Representative of Record," before it can lawfully execute plumbing contracts in the city.
This scope covers the five boroughs: Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, The Bronx, and Staten Island. Requirements under New York State's licensing framework — administered through local municipalities outside NYC — are a separate matter and are not covered here. For statewide contractor licensing context, the New York Contractor License Requirements reference page addresses state-level credentials and their relationship to city-specific requirements.
How it works
Obtaining authorization to perform plumbing contracting work in NYC involves three distinct steps:
- Qualifying examination and experience: Candidates for the Licensed Master Plumber credential must document a minimum of 5 years of practical plumbing experience, including at least 2 years working under a licensed master plumber in New York City. The examination tests knowledge of the NYC Plumbing Code, building construction law, and trade practices (NYC DOB — Master Plumber License).
- License issuance: Upon passing the exam, the NYC Department of Buildings issues the LMP license. Renewal is required every 3 years and includes a continuing education component.
- Business registration and permit filing authority: A plumbing contracting company must register with the DOB, designate a licensed master plumber as the Designated Representative of Record, and maintain both general liability insurance and workers' compensation coverage meeting NYC minimums. Registered companies can file permits electronically through the DOB NOW system. Details on registration mechanics appear in the NYC Department of Buildings Contractor Registration reference.
Insurance requirements are not discretionary. General liability coverage must meet DOB-specified minimums, and workers' compensation certificates must be filed and kept current — failure results in permit suspension. The New York Contractor Insurance Requirements page covers coverage thresholds and filing procedures.
Common scenarios
Plumbing contractors in NYC encounter licensing and permitting requirements across a predictable range of project types:
- New construction: Full DOB permit required; the master plumber of record must file plans, and the work must pass DOB inspection at rough-in and final stages.
- Alteration of existing systems: Any change to water supply, drainage, or gas piping in an existing building requires a permit unless the work qualifies as a minor repair under the NYC Administrative Code.
- Gas piping work: Post-2016 amendments to the NYC Fuel Gas Code significantly tightened inspection and testing requirements for gas piping installations — a direct regulatory response to the East Village gas explosion. Gas piping work requires both a DOB permit and a pressure test inspection.
amlegal.com/codes/newyorkcity/latest/NYCadmin/0-0-0-1)). - Subcontractor relationships: General contractors overseeing renovation projects must ensure that any plumbing subcontractor has an independently licensed master plumber and valid DOB registration — the GC's own registration does not extend to specialty trade work. The NYC Subcontractor Regulations page covers subcontractor compliance obligations.
Decision boundaries
Licensed Master Plumber vs. Journeyman Plumber: A journeyman plumber may perform installation and repair work but cannot independently contract, pull permits, or supervise a plumbing business. Only an LMP or a DOB-registered business with an LMP as Designated Representative can execute plumbing contracts or file DOB permit applications.
NYC Plumbing License vs. New York State Plumbing License: New York State does not issue a unified statewide plumbing contractor license; licensing authority rests with individual municipalities and counties outside New York City. An LMP license issued by NYC DOB is valid only within the five boroughs. A contractor licensed in Nassau County, for example, must obtain a separate NYC LMP credential before operating in Brooklyn or Queens.
Permit-required vs. permit-exempt work: Routine maintenance — such as replacing faucet washers, clearing drain blockages, or repairing exposed supply lines of 2 inches diameter or smaller — is generally classified as minor repair work not requiring a permit under NYC Construction Code §28-105.4. Any work that alters the configuration of the drainage system, adds fixture units, or modifies gas supply lines does require a permit regardless of scope.
Prevailing wage obligations: On public works projects — including NYC agency-contracted building maintenance and construction — plumbing labor is subject to New York State prevailing wage schedules published by the NYS Department of Labor. The NYC Prevailing Wage Rules page provides rate schedule references and project thresholds.
Scope and coverage limitations
This page addresses plumbing contractor requirements specific to New York City and the regulatory framework administered by the NYC Department of Buildings, NYC Department of Environmental Protection, and related city agencies. It does not cover:
- Plumbing contractor requirements in New York State counties or municipalities outside the five boroughs
- Federal licensing or certification requirements (e.g., EPA Section 608 for refrigerant handling, which is an HVAC-adjacent matter addressed in the NYC HVAC Contractor Requirements reference)
- Boiler installation or steam fitting work, which fall under separate NYC DOB licensing categories
- Fire suppression and sprinkler system contractors, regulated under a distinct licensing scheme
References
- NYC Department of Buildings — Master Plumber License
- NYC Construction Codes (NYC DOB)
- NYC Administrative Code, Title 28 — Building Code Administration (American Legal Publishing)
- New York State Department of Labor — Prevailing Wage Schedules
- NYC DOB NOW — Permit Filing Portal
- NYC Fuel Gas Code (NYC Construction Codes)