Solar Installer license in Michigan

Michigan requires a state-level solar installer license.

State license requiredTypical cost $1,7002026 prices

Michigan does not publish a state-level licensing board specific to solar installer work. Most solar installer jobs in Michigan fall under the electrician board's scope. The board, fees, and renewal cycle shown below are the closest related state authority — always verify the specific scope of your job with the board before applying.

Required license type

Michigan does not license general contractors but licenses Residential Builders + Maintenance & Alteration Contractors through LARA's Bureau of Construction Codes. Electrical, plumbing, and mechanical (HVAC) contractors are licensed by separate LARA boards.

Application requirements

Working as a solar installer in Michigan typically requires submitting an application packet to the Michigan LARA — Electrical Administrative Board — including proof of experience, exam scores, and insurance.

This is the standard packet most U.S. state boards require. Verify the exact list with the Michigan LARA — Electrical Administrative Board before applying — requirements change by trade classification.

Fees and renewal cycle

Total cost to become a licensed solar installer in Michigan ranges from $200 to $9,000 (typical $1,700). The range covers application + exam fees, bond + insurance premiums, and the first year of business registration.

Floor
$200
Typical
$1,700
Ceiling
$9,000

Most state boards renew on a 1-3 year cycle and require continuing education credits. Verify the exact renewal window and CE requirement with the Michigan LARA — Electrical Administrative Board — late renewal typically triggers a reinstatement fee.

Reciprocity with neighboring states

Michigan borders 3 other launched states ProFix Directory tracks. Reciprocity is set by each state board individually — check the destination state for the current rule before relying on it.

Where to apply

Michigan LARA — Electrical Administrative Board

Open the board lookup →

Board phone: +1-517-241-9320

Michigan does not license general contractors but licenses Residential Builders + Maintenance & Alteration Contractors through LARA's Bureau of Construction Codes. Electrical, plumbing, and mechanical (HVAC) contractors are licensed by separate LARA boards.

Why ProFix verifies every solar installer

Every pro we list in Michigan is matched against the Michigan LARA — Electrical Administrative Board record, the Secretary of State business registry, and OSHA inspection data. We surface license status, revocation history, and bond filings on every profile so homeowners can shortlist verified pros without trusting a single review-platform score.

See the full verification methodology →

Common questions

Do I need a solar installer license in Michigan?
Michigan requires solar installer contractors to hold a Michigan Solar Installer license from the Michigan LARA — Electrical Administrative Board. Apply through https://www.michigan.gov/lara/bureau-list/bcc/divisions/electrical with a typical $1,700 total fee (range $200-$9,000) and a 1-3 year renewal cycle. Verify the exact classification with the board before submitting.
Which board handles solar installer licensing in Michigan?
Michigan LARA — Electrical Administrative Board is the relevant authority shown in the Michigan licensing seed for this page. The verification or application URL in the loader is https://www.michigan.gov/lara/bureau-list/bcc/divisions/electrical.
How much does a solar installer license cost in Michigan?
The recorded licensing cost range is $200-$9,000, with a typical total around $1,700. That range comes from the page loader and covers application, exam, bond, insurance, or registration costs where they apply.
What requirements should Michigan solar installer applicants verify?
Michigan does not license general contractors but licenses Residential Builders + Maintenance & Alteration Contractors through LARA's Bureau of Construction Codes. Electrical, plumbing, and mechanical (HVAC) contractors are licensed by separate LARA boards.
How does Michigan license electricians?
The Electrical Administrative Board — Apprentice, Journey, Master, Electrical Contractor, Sign Specialist, Fire Alarm Specialty.
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Licensing facts shown for this trade are anchored to the closest related Michigan state board. Seed-backed numbers are used wherever a hand-curated entry exists.

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