National Trades Authority Glossary of Terms

The National Trades Authority Glossary of Terms defines the specialized vocabulary used across licensed trade contracting in the United States, from licensing classifications and credentialing standards to geographic coverage designations and directory eligibility criteria. Understanding this terminology is essential for property owners, project managers, and procurement officers who evaluate trade contractors across plumbing, electrical, HVAC, roofing, and more than a dozen other skilled trades. The glossary draws on definitions established by state licensing boards, the U.S. Department of Labor, and national trade associations. It functions as a reference companion to the broader National Trades Authority FAQ and to the detailed breakdowns found across the trades covered under National Trades Authority.


Definition and scope

A trade glossary in the contracting context is a curated index of standardized terms that govern how contractors are classified, credentialed, listed, evaluated, and geographically scoped within a directory or regulatory framework. The scope of this glossary is national — it applies to all 50 U.S. states and Washington D.C., reflecting the variation in licensing requirements across jurisdictions.

Key terms defined within this glossary fall into 5 primary categories:

  1. Licensing and credentialing terms — Definitions tied to state-issued licenses, certifications, and bonding requirements.
  2. Trade classification terms — Labels that identify a contractor's specialty, such as "journeyman," "master," or "specialty subcontractor."
  3. Directory and listing terms — Language specific to how contractors appear in structured directories, including profile fields, eligibility status, and listing tiers.
  4. Geographic scope terms — Designations that describe where a contractor is authorized to work, such as "state-licensed," "multi-state," or "nationally registered."
  5. Compliance and verification terms — Vocabulary related to audits, credential checks, and dispute resolution processes.

The trade specialization classifications resource expands on category 2 in particular, providing jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction breakdowns of how classification labels are applied.


How it works

Each glossary entry follows a three-part structure: the term, its regulatory or operational definition, and its practical application within trade contracting or directory use. Where a term has different meanings across state licensing systems — which occurs in at least 23 states that use non-uniform classification frameworks (U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Requirements Survey) — the glossary notes the dominant definition and flags common variations.

Contrast: License vs. Certification

These two terms are frequently conflated but carry distinct legal weight:

This distinction directly affects how contractors are evaluated under authority industries contractor vetting standards, where license verification and certification documentation are treated as separate checklist items.


Common scenarios

The glossary terms appear most frequently in three operational contexts:

Scenario 1 — Contractor vetting during procurement. A facilities manager sourcing a commercial roofing contractor across 4 states must confirm that the contractor holds active licenses in each jurisdiction. Terms such as "reciprocal license," "temporary work permit," and "out-of-state registration" become directly relevant. Misinterpreting these terms can expose a project owner to liability if unlicensed work is performed.

Scenario 2 — Directory listing and profile completion. When a contractor submits information for inclusion in a trade directory, profile fields ask for data coded in standardized terminology. Fields such as "primary trade category," "service radius," and "bond amount" reference defined terms. The authority industries contractor profile fields page maps each field to its glossary definition.

Scenario 3 — Credential verification disputes. When a property owner or general contractor challenges the validity of a listed contractor's credentials, the resolution process depends on agreed definitions of terms like "active license," "lapsed certification," and "pending renewal." The authority industries complaint and dispute process outlines how these terms govern dispute outcomes.


Decision boundaries

Not all terms in trade contracting are universally applicable. The glossary applies the following decision boundaries to scope each definition:

Terms that appear identical across trades but carry different meanings (e.g., "journeyman" in electrical versus plumbing) receive separate entries rather than merged definitions.


References

Explore This Site