Louisiana is one of the handful of U.S. states that licenses mold professionals at the state level. That means an extra layer of qualification -- and a few specific things you should verify before hiring.
What Louisiana licensing actually requires
Louisiana operates its mold-licensing program through the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors. Year-round high humidity, hurricane impact, and below-sea-level housing stock combine to make LA one of the most mold-prone states in the U.S.
At a high level, every licensed program shares these elements:
- Formal training hours at an approved training provider
- Documented field experience under a qualified supervisor
- Passage of a state-administered written examination
- Background disclosures and (typically) fingerprinting
- Carrying minimum-required insurance coverage
- Annual or biennial continuing-education hours to renew
How to verify a licence before you hire
Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors publishes an active-licensee roster. The simple rule: ask the inspector for their licence number before scheduling, then verify it at the state site independently.
- Ask for the licence number (a copy of the licence card, even better).
- Visit https://lslbc.louisiana.gov/ and search by number or by company name.
- Confirm the licence is ACTIVE and the class of licence matches the work being quoted.
- Check for any open disciplinary actions or complaints.
Legitimate licensees carry their number in their heads -- it's on every report they write. An inspector who has to 'check and get back to you' is a yellow flag.
Separate assessment vs. remediation licences
Louisiana treats assessment and remediation under a single state licence program through the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors. Even where the state permits the same firm to do both, best practice (borrowed from New York's separation-of-duties rule) is to use an independent third party for the assessment to avoid conflict-of-interest concerns.
What happens if you hire unlicensed in a licensed state
Hiring an unlicensed inspector in Louisiana when the state requires licensure creates several downstream problems:
- Insurance carriers will typically reject the report for claim purposes.
- Real-estate transactions may not accept the report as satisfying a mold contingency.
- Legal proceedings may exclude the report as non-admissible evidence.
- The inspector faces fines and potential criminal charges -- not your problem directly, but it often signals other corners being cut.
- The state complaint process (Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors) only covers licensees, so your recourse for substandard work is limited.
The pricing premium for a licensed inspector is typically $100-$300. That's cheap insurance against a report you can't use.
Frequently asked questions
Sources & references
- EPA: Mold Cleanup in Your Home — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- ACAC Certification Registry (CMI, CMC, CMRS) — American Council for Accredited Certification
- IICRC Certification Verification — IICRC
- Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors -- Louisiana mold licensing program — Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors
Browse our directory of mold inspection professionals, or submit a single request and let up to 8 qualified pros in your area respond. No phone-spam, no upsells.
Continue reading
A practical guide to choosing a qualified mold inspector. What credentials matter, what questions to ask, and the red flags that mean you should keep looking.
What you'll typically pay for a mold inspection in 2026, what's included at each price point, regional variation, lab-fee breakdown, and how to avoid common upcharges. Real industry data, no fluff.
Inspection and testing solve different problems. Here's exactly when each is the right call -- and why doing both 'just to be safe' often wastes money.
