Plumbing Providers

The plumbing providers indexed on this provider network cover water filtration contractors, licensed plumbers specializing in filtration system installation, and related service providers operating across the United States. Each entry represents a business or individual licensed to perform plumbing work within their respective state jurisdiction. The providers support service seekers, procurement professionals, and researchers locating qualified providers in the water filtration segment of the plumbing industry. For context on how this provider network fits within the broader reference framework, see the Water Filtration Provider Network Purpose and Scope page.


How to read an entry

Each provider entry is structured to convey professional identity, service scope, and jurisdictional reach at a glance. Entries are not endorsements — they are indexed records drawn from publicly available licensing data and provider submissions.

A standard entry contains the following fields in order:

  1. Business or practitioner name — Legal operating name as registered with the relevant state licensing board.
  2. License type and number — Specifies whether the holder carries a master plumber, journeyman, or specialty contractor license, and the alphanumeric identifier issued by the state authority.
  3. Jurisdiction — The state or states in which the license is active and work may legally be performed.
  4. Specialty classification — Indicates focus areas such as point-of-entry (POE) system installation, point-of-use (POU) filtration, reverse osmosis system plumbing, or whole-house water treatment integration.
  5. Verification status — A flag indicating whether the license was cross-checked against the issuing board's public lookup tool at the time of indexing.
  6. Contact method — A phone number, web address, or both, as provided by the verified entity.

License type is the single most consequential field. A master plumber license permits independent contracting and system design; a journeyman license requires supervision by a master. In most states, specialty contractor licenses cover filtration equipment installation but restrict scope to that category. Comparing these three license types matters when a project requires system design modifications, permit applications, or inspection sign-off — all of which typically require a master license holder.


What providers include and exclude

Providers on this provider network are scoped to the water filtration segment of the plumbing industry. The Water Filtration Providers index focuses specifically on providers whose documented service scope includes filtration system work.

Included:

Excluded:

The distinction between a licensed plumbing contractor and a water treatment dealer who installs their own products is operationally significant. Under most state plumbing codes, connecting any device to a potable water supply line requires a licensed plumber to perform or supervise the connection. An equipment dealer operating outside that requirement may be in violation of state plumbing statutes, even if the device itself is certified under NSF/ANSI Standard 58 (reverse osmosis systems) or NSF/ANSI Standard 42 (aesthetic effects filtration).


Verification status

Verification status reflects the currency and method of license confirmation at the time a record was added or last reviewed. Three status designations appear in the providers:

Verification is a point-in-time check, not a continuous monitoring service. Licenses expire, are suspended, or are revoked on an ongoing basis through state licensing authorities — for example, the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) or the Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners (TSBPE). Any service seeker conducting due diligence on a provider should independently confirm license status directly with the issuing agency before entering a service agreement.

Permit and inspection requirements add a second layer of verification relevance. In jurisdictions that require permits for filtration system installation — which includes most municipalities under adopted versions of the IPC or UPC — only a licensed contractor may pull the permit. A provider with verified master plumber status is the baseline indicator of permit-pulling eligibility.

For guidance on navigating this resource, the How to Use This Water Filtration Resource page describes search and filtering conventions in detail.


Coverage gaps

The provider network does not achieve complete national coverage. Identifiable gaps exist in the following areas:

Coverage gaps are not uniformly distributed. High-population states with centralized licensing databases — including Florida, Illinois, and Oregon — have higher index saturation than states relying on local jurisdictional records. Researchers requiring exhaustive coverage for a given geography should treat this provider network as a starting point and supplement with direct queries to state licensing boards.

References