Lead Paint Providers
The lead paint services sector in the United States is structured around federal certification requirements, state licensing programs, and distinct professional disciplines — abatement, inspection, risk assessment, and renovation. This page describes how service provider providers on this site are organized, what information each provider contains, how provider data is maintained for accuracy, and how to use provider network providers alongside authoritative regulatory sources when identifying qualified professionals.
How currency is maintained
Provider accuracy in a regulated service sector depends on tracking certification cycles, licensing renewals, and regulatory changes at both the federal and state levels. The EPA's Renovation, Repair, and Painting (RRP) Rule, codified at 40 CFR Part 745, requires certified renovator firms to renew certification every 5 years. State-authorized programs — administered in states holding EPA-delegated authority — operate on independent renewal schedules that may differ from the federal baseline.
Providers reflect the information submitted or confirmed by verified entities and are cross-referenced where possible against publicly accessible state licensing databases and EPA certification records. Because certification status can change between publication cycles, readers verifying active credentials for contracting or compliance purposes should confirm status directly with the relevant issuing authority: the EPA's Lead-Based Paint Programs, a state environmental or public health agency, or HUD's Office of Lead Hazard Control and Healthy Homes for federally assisted housing contexts governed by 24 CFR Part 35.
How to use providers alongside other resources
Provider Network providers function as a starting point for identifying service providers, not as verification of current licensure or compliance standing. The distinction matters because lead paint work in pre-1978 structures carries civil penalty exposure under EPA enforcement authority and OSHA's construction lead standard at 29 CFR 1926.62.
The full scope of the provider network and its role within the broader resource structure is described on the page. Readers navigating the site for the first time or assessing which resource category matches their need should consult How to Use This Lead Paint Resource, which maps the site's sections to professional use cases including contractor sourcing, regulatory research, and property owner inquiry.
Providers complement — but do not replace — direct engagement with:
How providers are organized
Providers are organized by professional discipline and service type, reflecting the regulatory classifications that govern who may perform which category of lead paint work. The four primary classifications tracked within this network correspond to EPA and state-recognized credential categories:
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Abatement Contractors — Firms certified to perform lead abatement, defined as measures designed to permanently eliminate lead-based paint hazards through removal, encapsulation, enclosure, or replacement. Abatement is governed under 40 CFR Part 745, Subpart L and requires separate firm certification from renovation work.
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Certified Renovators and RRP Firms — Contractors certified under the EPA's RRP Rule for projects disturbing more than 6 square feet of painted surface per room in interior spaces, or more than 20 square feet on exterior surfaces, in pre-1978 target housing and child-occupied facilities.
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Lead Inspectors and Risk Assessors — Licensed professionals authorized to conduct lead-based paint inspections (identifying the presence and location of lead paint) and risk assessments (identifying hazards and recommended response actions). These are distinct credentials with different training hour requirements under 40 CFR Part 745.
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Dust Sampling Technicians and XRF Analysts — Technicians authorized to collect clearance samples and operate X-ray fluorescence (XRF) analyzers for paint testing, operating under the supervision of a certified inspector or risk assessor.
Geographic organization follows state boundaries, with notation where a state holds EPA-delegated program authority versus states where the EPA administers the program directly. Colorado, for example, does not operate an EPA-authorized state RRP program; contractors there are regulated directly by the EPA for RRP purposes while the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) administers separate abatement licensing.
What each provider covers
Each provider entry is structured to provide the information relevant to a service engagement decision in a regulated context. Standard fields across provider types include:
- Business name and legal operating structure — as registered with the relevant licensing or certification authority
- Primary service classification — drawn from the four discipline categories above, with notation of secondary certifications where applicable
- Certification or license number — the identifier issued by the EPA or state program authority
- Geographic service area — by state or metropolitan area, with notation of any federally assisted housing specialty under HUD's Lead Safe Housing Rule
- Contact information — phone, address, and website where publicly verified
- Regulatory authority — identifying whether certification was issued under direct EPA authority or a state-delegated program, which affects which agency has primary enforcement jurisdiction
Providers do not include performance ratings, project pricing, or outcome data. The provider network does not adjudicate disputes or validate insurance coverage. For a full explanation of what this resource covers and its defined scope boundaries, the Lead Paint Providers index provides the classification framework used across all verified entities, cross-referenced against the federal and state regulatory bodies whose licensing programs underpin the sector.