Quick Answer: Verifying Contractor Credentials
Here is how to independently verify every important credential claim by a Woodcreek Reserve roofing contractor:
- Insurance: Request certificate of insurance directly from carrier, then call the carrier to verify.
- Licensing: Check Indiana Secretary of State records and any applicable local licensing requirements.
- Manufacturer certifications: Search contractor name on manufacturer websites (OwensCorning.com, GAF.com, Malarkey.com, CertainTeed.com).
- BBB accreditation: Search BBB.org for actual accreditation status and complaint history.
- Online reviews: Cross reference Google, Facebook, Nextdoor, and Yelp.
- Business registration: Indiana Secretary of State business entity search.
Verification takes within 2 hours and protects against contractors making false credential claims.
Insurance Verification
Why Insurance Verification Matters
Contractor insurance protects you from significant potential liability:
- Worker injuries on your property: Can become homeowner liability if contractor lacks workers comp
- Damage to your home during work: Covered by general liability insurance
- Damage to neighboring properties: Also covered by general liability
- Vehicle accidents on your property: Covered by commercial auto insurance
Without proper contractor insurance, any of these incidents can expose you to costs reaching into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
How to Actually Verify Insurance
The standard process:
- Request certificate of insurance (COI) from the contractor specifying you as certificate holder
- Contact the insurance carrier directly using the number on the certificate
- Confirm the policy is current and in good standing
- Verify coverage amounts meet or exceed standard requirements
- Request notification if the policy is cancelled during your project
Insurance carriers will verify policies for homeowners considering their insured contractors. This 5 minute phone call confirms real coverage rather than forged or expired certificates.
Required Coverage Minimums
| Coverage Type | Minimum Recommended | What It Protects |
|---|---|---|
| General Liability | $1 million per occurrence | Property damage and injury claims |
| Workers Compensation | State required amounts | Worker injury liability |
| Commercial Auto | $1 million combined | Vehicle accidents |
| Umbrella Policy | $2-5 million | Additional coverage beyond primary |
License Verification
Indiana Licensing Reality
Indiana does not require state level licensing for all roofing contractors, but several verification sources matter:
- Indiana Secretary of State business registration
- Local business licenses in Woodcreek Reserve or Marion County if applicable
- Professional licensing where required
- Insurance licensing for contractors offering financing
Verifying Business Registration
Indiana Secretary of State maintains a public database at inbiz.in.gov. Search for your contractor to verify:
- Business is actually registered in Indiana
- Registration is current (not expired)
- Business name matches what contractor provides
- Registered agent information for service of legal process
- Principal information showing owners and officers
Red flags in business registration:
- No registration found (illegal business)
- Registration from other states without Indiana foreign registration
- Recent registration with no previous history
- Multiple similar business names by same principals
- Registered agent is a service address rather than local office
Manufacturer Certification Verification
Why Certifications Matter
Shingle manufacturers certify contractors who meet specific standards:
- Training completion in proper installation techniques
- Quality performance tracking over time
- Financial stability to honor extended warranties
- Ongoing education for product updates
- Customer satisfaction tracking
Certified contractors can offer enhanced warranties that non certified contractors cannot access. For example, Owens Corning Platinum Preferred Contractors can offer the OC Roofing System Protection Pro warranty that covers both materials and workmanship for extended periods.
How to Verify Each Certification
Major manufacturers provide public contractor lookup tools:
- Owens Corning: owenscorning.com/roofing/find a pro
- GAF: gaf.com/en us/roofing contractors
- Malarkey Roofing Products: malarkeyroofing.com/find a contractor
- CertainTeed: certainteed.com/find a pro
- IKO: iko.com/na/find a contractor
Search by contractor name or location. Verified certified contractors appear in results with current certification status. Contractors claiming certification who do not appear in these databases are making false claims.
BBB Accreditation Verification
What BBB Accreditation Means
Better Business Bureau accreditation indicates:
- Meeting BBB standards for trust and ethical behavior
- Paying BBB dues (indicates legitimate business operation)
- Handling complaints properly through the BBB dispute resolution process
- Transparency about business practices
BBB accreditation does not guarantee contractor quality, but lack of accreditation or poor BBB records indicates problems.
How to Check BBB Records
Visit bbb.org and search for your contractor. Look for:
- Accreditation status: Accredited (A+ through D), Not Accredited, or No Rating
- Rating: Letter grade A+ through F
- Complaint history: Number and types of complaints
- Resolution patterns: How the business handled complaints
- Customer reviews: Direct customer feedback
A+ ratings with zero or minimal complaints indicate quality operations. F ratings or extensive unresolved complaints indicate problems.
Reference Verification
Getting Useful References
Request 3-5 references from recent projects in Woodcreek Reserve or surrounding areas. Ask specifically for:
- Projects completed within the past year (recent quality)
- Projects similar to yours (comparable scope)
- Local references you can potentially drive by and see
- Customer contact information for actual phone conversations
Reference Questions That Matter
Call each reference and ask:
- When was your project completed?
- How did the project timeline compare to estimates?
- Was the final cost close to original estimates?
- How did the crew treat your property?
- Were there any issues during the project?
- If issues occurred, how were they resolved?
- Have you had any warranty concerns?
- Would you hire this contractor again?
- Would you recommend them to neighbors?
References who cannot provide specific details, who give vague positive only responses, or who seem rehearsed may be fake references. Legitimate references share real experiences including any minor issues.
Online Review Verification
Multi-Platform Review Research
Different review platforms reveal different information. Comprehensive research covers:
- Google Business Profile: Most reviews, hardest to manipulate
- Better Business Bureau: Complaint focused, professional tone
- Facebook: Community based feedback
- Nextdoor: Neighbor recommendations specific to your area
- Yelp: Additional reviews with detailed photos
- Angi (Angie's List): Professional service focus
Recognizing Fake Reviews
Fake review patterns:
- All 5-star reviews with no negative feedback whatsoever
- Reviews posted in bursts on single dates
- Vague praise without specific project details
- Similar wording across multiple reviews
- Reviews from accounts with minimal history
- Reviews from geographically distant areas
Quality review profiles show natural patterns: mostly positive reviews with occasional constructive criticism, specific project details, varied writing styles, and consistent posting over months and years.