Programs to check first
District of Columbia procurement portal and statewide contracts
Open program- Eligibility
- Public browsing is open. Contractors and suppliers must satisfy District vendor registration, solicitation, bonding, insurance, licensing, CBE or subcontracting, and award requirements before they appear as eligible bidders or awarded vendors. Homeowners should treat this as public-contract evidence, not a private-job endorsement.
- Provides
- Vetted list: public solicitation, contract, award, or bidder records. It does not provide household financial assistance and does not guarantee residential workmanship.
- How to access
- Open the OCP solicitations page or transparency portal, search construction, maintenance, roofing, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, facility, public-space, or relevant commodity terms, then confirm DLCP license, DOB permit history, insurance, references, and local scope before requesting a private estimate.
BBB serving Metro Washington DC accredited contractor search
Open program- Eligibility
- Consumers can search the BBB directory without applying. Businesses shown under the accredited filter must maintain BBB accreditation, but BBB accreditation is not a District license, DOB permit, bond, insurance certificate, or guarantee that a contractor is right for a rowhouse, condo, or public-space job.
- Provides
- Vetted list: accredited marketplace listings, complaint history, ratings, and business profiles. It does not provide grants, loans, or repair subsidies.
- How to access
- Use the accredited search, enter a DC ZIP code, filter by trade, read complaint patterns, and still verify license status, DOB permits, HPO requirements, insurance, written scope, payment schedule, and local references.
Associated General Contractors of America member directory
Open program- Eligibility
- The public can search the AGC directory. Listed companies are AGC members or are connected through AGC chapters; membership signals construction-industry participation, but it is not the same as a consumer referral, residential license, public bid award, DOB permit history, or proof of insurance.
- Provides
- Vetted list: trade-association member directory for general contractors, specialty contractors, suppliers, and service firms. It does not provide direct financial assistance.
- How to access
- Search by location and service category, then ask any DC firm whether it performs residential work, which DLCP or trade credentials it holds, who will pull DOB permits, and whether it can provide current insurance certificates.
District of Columbia Weatherization Assistance Program
Open program- Eligibility
- Weatherization is for income-qualified District homeowners and renters. Federal guidance generally treats households at or below 200% of federal poverty guidelines, SSI recipients, or households meeting state energy-assistance criteria as eligible, with priority for older adults, people with disabilities, families with children, high energy users, and high energy-burden households.
- Provides
- Both: financial assistance through no-cost or subsidized energy audits and installed weatherization measures, plus access to local agency crews or contractors assigned by the program. It is not an open contractor-shopping list.
- How to access
- Use the DOEE WAP page or online application, submit income and home documentation, ask about waitlists and deferral repairs, and let the provider inspect the home before any crew or contractor is scheduled.
USDA Rural Development Single Family Housing Repair Loans & Grants in District of Columbia
Open program- Eligibility
- USDA Section 504 is for very-low-income rural homeowners who occupy the home and cannot obtain affordable credit elsewhere. Loans can repair, improve, modernize, or remove hazards; grants are limited to owners age 62 or older who cannot repay. In DC, rural address eligibility must be verified first.
- Provides
- Financial assistance: repair loans and grants for eligible rural homeowners. It can fund contractor work, but it is not a contractor endorsement directory.
- How to access
- Open the USDA DC page, contact Rural Development, verify property eligibility, gather income and ownership documents, and get written bids only after USDA confirms the project path.
When to use which program
Use the District procurement portal when you want evidence that a company has competed for or held public work; it is useful for commercial credibility, but it is not a homeowner warranty. Use BBB when you need a quick consumer-facing screen for accredited businesses, complaint patterns, and marketplace mediation history. Use AGC when the project is larger, technical, commercial-leaning, or tied to institutional work and you want association members before verifying DLCP, DOB, and insurance yourself. Use the Weatherization Assistance Program when the problem is energy loss, unsafe heating conditions, insulation, air sealing, or utility burden and the household may meet income rules; the provider will decide eligibility and assign work. Use USDA Section 504 only after confirming whether the exact District address can meet rural eligibility. For urgent safety defects, start with DOB, utilities, 311, or emergency services first, then use these programs for referrals or funding.
Keep referral lists separate from assistance programs
BBB, AGC, and procurement pages help you identify businesses to verify. Weatherization and USDA repair programs decide eligibility first, then coordinate or fund approved work.
Source: ProFix Editorial Team. Last updated 2026-06-09. This guide is informational and does not replace program eligibility review, license verification, legal advice, or emergency response.