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How to Choose a Restoration Contractor in Flower Mound, TX (No State License? Here's What to Verify)

Texas has no statewide GC license. Learn how Flower Mound homeowners vet a restoration contractor: bonding, insurance, IICRC certs, references, and red flags.

If you've just had a hail-battered roof, a slab leak, or storm-damaged drywall in your Flower Mound home, your first instinct is probably to search for a "licensed restoration contractor." Here's the part that surprises most Texas homeowners: there is no statewide general contractor license to look for. That single fact changes how you should vet anyone who knocks on your door or answers your call.

Why "Licensed" Means Something Different in Texas

Unlike some states, Texas does not issue a statewide license for general restoration or remodeling contractors. There is no central board you can phone to confirm a contractor's standing, and no license number that proves competence for rebuilding your home. Certain trades inside a project, such as electrical and plumbing, do carry their own state licenses, but the company managing your overall restoration and remodel does not.

That means the burden of vetting falls on you, the homeowner. The good news is that a handful of concrete, verifiable credentials separate a legitimate restoration company from an opportunist, and you can check every one of them before signing anything.

The Credentials That Actually Matter

Instead of chasing a license that doesn't exist, ask for proof of the things that do. A reputable contractor will hand these over without hesitation:

  • **Bonding and insurance:** General liability and workers' compensation coverage protect you if property is damaged or a worker is injured on your site. Ask for a current certificate of insurance and confirm the dates.
  • **IICRC certification:** The Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification sets the industry standard for water, fire, and mold restoration work. This is the credential that signals trained, accountable technicians.
  • **EPA Lead-Safe certification:** Many homes built before 1978 contain lead paint. If your remodel disturbs those surfaces, EPA Lead-Safe practices are required to keep your family safe during demolition and rebuild.
  • **Local references and a real footprint:** Ask for recent jobs in Denton County, ideally in neighborhoods like Bridlewood or Wellington. A company that has actually worked near The Flower Mound landmark can speak to the specific challenges of homes here.

Go Green Restoration carries all of these: bonded, insured, IICRC-certified, and EPA Lead-Safe certified. Those are the credentials worth verifying on any contractor you consider.

Get Everything in Writing

A written estimate is not a formality. It is your protection. Before any demolition begins, you should have a detailed scope of work that itemizes materials, labor, timeline, and payment milestones. Vague one-page quotes with a single lump sum are a warning sign, because they leave room for surprise charges once your walls are already open.

This matters even more with Flower Mound's larger luxury homes. Properties around the Bridges of Flower Mound often have complex plumbing and multi-zone HVAC systems, which means more potential failure points and a more involved rebuild after water damage. When clay soil shifts and causes a slab leak, the repair can touch flooring, cabinetry, and drywall across several rooms. A precise written estimate keeps that kind of multi-trade project from spiraling, and it gives you a document to share with your insurance adjuster.

Red Flags to Walk Away From

After a hail storm rolls through Denton County, out-of-town "storm chasers" tend to follow. These crews canvass neighborhoods, pressure homeowners into fast decisions, and often vanish before warranty season arrives. High-end roofing materials common on Flower Mound homes are expensive to replace correctly, and a rushed, underqualified crew can leave you with leaks that surface months later.

Watch for these signals and treat them as reasons to pause:

A contractor who demands full payment upfront. Legitimate companies work on a reasonable deposit and milestone schedule, never the entire sum before a single board is hung. Be equally wary of anyone who only accepts cash, won't provide a physical business address, pressures you to sign today, or offers to "waive your deductible," which is insurance fraud. A door-to-door pitch right after a storm, with no local references and no proof of IICRC or insurance, is the classic storm-chaser profile.

The contractors worth hiring expect you to ask questions. They welcome the scrutiny because their credentials hold up.

Talk to a Local Team You Can Verify

When your home near Twin Coves Park needs restoration and remodeling done right, work with a company you can actually check out. Go Green Restoration is bonded, insured, IICRC-certified, and EPA Lead-Safe certified, with real references across Flower Mound and the wider Dallas-Fort Worth area. Call (469) 727-3217 for a detailed written estimate and a straightforward conversation about your project.

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Go Green Restoration provides 24/7 emergency services throughout the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex. Bonded, insured, and EPA Lead-Safe certified.

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