Montana registers construction contractors, applies the federal EPA lead rule, and does not license mold. We line up your restoration coverage with it.
In Montana, the restoration licensing picture and the insurance are tied together, and the details depend on the kind of restoration you do. Here is a plain-language overview of what tends to apply, with the official sources to confirm it.
Construction contractors in Montana with employees generally must register with the Department of Labor & Industry (DLI), and independent contractors have their own requirements. Restoration reconstruction is construction, so if you rebuild what you restore, the same Montana licensing that applies to general construction generally applies to your rebuild work. Verify your situation with Montana DLI.
Most states, including Montana, do not have a separate mold assessment or remediation license, so mold work generally falls under general contractor and consumer-protection rules rather than a dedicated mold license. That can change, and some clients, referral networks, or insurers may still expect specific certification such as IICRC, so it is worth verifying current requirements with the state and checking what your contracts require.
Montana does not run its own RRP program, so the federal EPA Renovation, Repair and Painting rule applies directly. Firms doing work that disturbs lead-based paint in pre-1978 housing and child-occupied facilities generally need EPA firm certification and certified renovators, with specific work practices and recordkeeping. Because restoration often disturbs surfaces in older buildings, this can apply to your work, so confirm the requirements with the EPA.
Whatever the licensing picture, insuring a restoration business in Montana comes down to the exposures a generic contractor policy excludes: contaminated water, soot, and mold (pollution), the customer property you handle and store (care, custody, and control), and faulty-work allegations (professional liability). We are independent, so we place those coverages with markets that write restoration and line them up with Montana licensing and any referral requirements.
This page is general information for Montana restoration contractors, not legal advice, and rules change and vary by project and locality. Mold, lead, and licensing requirements in particular change over time. Confirm current requirements with the official sources below before you bid, hire, or buy coverage.
Last verified July 2026 by Vantage Point Risk.
Tell us the restoration you do, what you store, and the contracts you sign, and we will check whether pollution, mold, care-custody-control, and professional exposure are actually covered. Educational, no obligation.
We are independent, so we shop your coverage and line it up with what Montana requires and what your work exposes. Tell us about the restoration and we will handle it.
General education, not a coverage determination. A licensed advisor confirms your policy.