New Hampshire homeowners often face the same dilemma: you have something that needs fixing, and you're not sure whether to call a handyman or whether the job requires a licensed contractor. The stakes are real — hire the wrong type of person, and you might end up with unpermitted work, insurance problems, or a repair that has to be torn out and redone. This guide gives you a straight answer.
What Is a Handyman?
The term "handyman" doesn't have a single legal definition in New Hampshire, but in practice it refers to a skilled tradesperson who handles a wide variety of general repair and improvement tasks — typically without holding specific trade licenses (electrician, plumber, etc.). A good handyman can handle things like patching drywall, painting rooms, installing fixtures, replacing hardware, doing carpentry work, and assembling furniture. What a handyman generally cannot legally do in NH: major electrical work requiring permits, plumbing beyond minor repairs, structural work requiring engineering review, or work that triggers required inspections.
What New Hampshire Requires Licensed Contractors For
New Hampshire has specific licensing requirements for certain trades. Here's a simplified overview:
- Electrical work: Any electrical work beyond very minor repairs requires a licensed electrician in NH. This includes panel upgrades, adding circuits, running new wiring, and installing hard-wired fixtures. Unlicensed electrical work is a significant insurance and safety risk.
- Plumbing: New installations, modifications to drain lines, and water heater replacements typically require a licensed plumber and permit. Minor repairs (replacing a faucet, fixing a running toilet) generally don't.
- HVAC: Heating and cooling system installation and major repairs require licensing. Maintenance and minor repairs may not.
- General contractors for large projects: If your project involves structural changes, additions, or exceeds a certain dollar threshold, NH may require a licensed general contractor and building permit.
What a Skilled Handyman (Like VixFix) Can Handle
A multi-trade handyman with experience and insurance can handle a remarkably wide range of work that doesn't require specific trade licenses. This includes:
- Painting (interior and exterior)
- Drywall repair, patching, and installation
- Flooring installation (hardwood, LVP, laminate, tile)
- Carpentry — trim, doors, cabinetry, framing repairs
- TV mounting and simple electrical fixture swaps (outlet replacement, switch replacement)
- Furniture assembly and restoration
- Window and door hardware replacement
- Minor water damage repair (drywall, painting after a leak is fixed)
The advantage of a skilled multi-trade handyman is that you get one person who can handle multiple aspects of a project without coordinating between four separate licensed contractors.
When You Definitely Need a Licensed Contractor
Don't cut corners on these — they involve safety, insurance coverage, and resale value:
- Adding or upgrading electrical circuits. Even if someone offers to do it cheap without a permit, don't. NH home inspectors find unpermitted electrical work routinely during home sales, and it can kill a deal or create significant liability.
- Moving or extending gas lines. This requires a licensed plumber or gas fitter in NH.
- Structural work. Removing load-bearing walls, modifying rooflines, building additions — these require permits and licensed contractors.
- New plumbing runs. Adding a bathroom, rerouting drain lines, or installing a new water heater typically requires a licensed plumber and permit.
The Insurance Question
Before hiring anyone — handyman or licensed contractor — ask if they're insured. An uninsured contractor working in your home creates real liability: if they're injured on your property, you may be responsible. Ask for a certificate of general liability insurance before any work begins. VixFix Professional Services LLC is fully insured — it's a basic professional standard that every legitimate contractor should meet.
How to Choose: A Practical Test
Ask yourself three questions:
- Does this work require a permit? If yes, you typically need a licensed contractor.
- Does this work involve gas, major electrical, or structural changes? If yes, get a licensed contractor.
- Is the person I'm hiring insured? If no, don't hire them regardless of the work type.
For everything else — painting, drywall, flooring, carpentry, TV mounting, minor repairs — a skilled, insured multi-trade professional is typically the right choice. You get faster scheduling, more flexibility, and often better value than a licensed specialty contractor who's priced for high-complexity work.
If you're not sure which category your project falls into, call us. Justin will give you an honest answer — and if your project needs a licensed specialist, he'll tell you that too. 603-202-5309.