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Tennessee Contractor License Tool

License Limit Estimator

Estimate whether your working capital and net worth may support a requested Tennessee contractor license monetary limit, using the same conservative balance-sheet approach contractors often plan around before filing.

Read how Tennessee license limits work

Before you start: required figures

Use figures from the business or entity applying for the license. Do not enter annual revenue.

  • Current assets
  • Current liabilities
  • Total assets
  • Total liabilities
  • Receivables over 90 days, if any
  • LOC or guarantor support, if applicable

Optional fields can stay blank. Enter $0 only when the statement truly shows zero.

Transaction type

New license, renewal, or higher limit request. Renewals may be reviewed under different rules.

Cash, receivables, inventory. From the balance sheet, not revenue.

Due within about a year. Do not double-count in total liabilities.

Full statement total, including long-term assets.

All liabilities; current portion is included here.

Adjustments and supplemental support

Past-due portion only. Already in current assets; do not subtract from total assets.

Unused credit for the filing. Adds to working capital only; half may count if WC is negative first.

Gross documented support. Counted at 50% toward both working capital and net worth.

Additional filing-strength factors (optional)

These do not automatically change the formula, but they may affect how strong the filing appears.

$

Optional. Used to compare against the estimate and plan support needed.

Your filing estimate

Your estimate will appear here after you enter your financial figures and run the calculation.