Authority Industries Listings

The Authority Industries listings database aggregates verified repair service providers across the United States, organized by trade category, geographic footprint, and credential status. Each entry is drawn from publicly documented business registrations, licensing records, and trade association membership data rather than self-reported claims alone. Understanding how entries are structured, what data they contain, and where gaps exist allows readers to use this resource with appropriate precision. The authority-industries-directory-purpose-and-scope page covers the broader mandate behind this database.


How to read an entry

Each listing presents a structured record composed of distinct data fields, not a narrative profile. Entries are organized so that the most operationally critical information — trade category, service area, and credential status — appears before supplementary details such as founding year or fleet size.

A standard entry resolves into five layers:

  1. Provider identity — Legal business name, operating name (if different), and primary state of registration.
  2. Trade classification — Assigned using the repair category taxonomy described at repair-service-categories-us-national, which maps to 27 distinct trade types.
  3. Geographic scope — Expressed as a radius in miles, a named metro area, a state, or a multi-state region depending on how the provider submitted and what licensing records confirm.
  4. Credential indicators — Flags for active state license, active liability insurance, and active trade certification where applicable. Each flag is binary (confirmed or unconfirmed), not graded.
  5. Verification timestamp — The calendar quarter in which the listed data was last cross-referenced against primary sources. This is not a real-time feed.

Confirmed vs. unconfirmed entries represent the key distinction readers must internalize. A confirmed entry has had at least one credential independently cross-referenced with a state licensing board, a named insurer, or a recognized trade body. An unconfirmed entry has been submitted but not yet cleared through that process. Both appear in listings, but unconfirmed entries carry a visible status marker. The difference between these two states is detailed further under digital-verification-of-repair-service-credentials.


What listings include and exclude

Listings include providers operating under a documented legal business structure — sole proprietorships, LLCs, corporations, and partnerships that have filed with at least one state authority. Sole operators with active licensing are eligible; informal or unlicensed contractors are excluded by design.

Included data fields:

Excluded data fields:

The exclusion of pricing and reviews is a deliberate structural boundary, not a technical limitation. Aggregating pricing introduces liability exposure for both listed providers and the directory operator, and review data requires moderation infrastructure that falls outside the scope of a reference-grade listings resource.


Verification status

Verification operates on a three-state model: Confirmed, Pending, and Flagged.

Verification methodology follows the standards outlined at repair-service-provider-vetting-standards. Primary sources used include state contractor licensing board databases, the National Insurance Crime Bureau's public tools, and rosters published by trade associations recognized under the framework at repair-trade-associations-and-certifications.

Verification does not constitute an endorsement, a quality rating, or a warranty of workmanship. A confirmed status means a specific document was found; it does not mean the provider performed any job to a particular standard.


Coverage gaps

The listings database does not achieve uniform national coverage across all 27 trade categories. Three structural gaps affect reliability in specific areas.

Geographic gaps are most pronounced in rural counties across the Great Plains and Mountain West regions, where licensed contractor density is lower and state licensing board data is less frequently digitized. Providers in these areas are underrepresented relative to their actual market presence.

Trade category gaps exist in 6 specialty categories — including elevator repair, high-voltage electrical, and medical equipment servicing — where licensing is handled at the federal or multi-agency level rather than by a single state board, complicating primary-source verification.

Recency gaps affect entries in states that update their public licensing databases on an annual rather than quarterly cycle. In these cases, the verification timestamp on an entry may reflect a confirmed status that has since changed without the database having received updated data.

Readers researching providers in gap-affected areas are directed to the finding-verified-repair-specialists-nationally resource, which documents supplementary lookup methods beyond this database, and to the repair-industry-licensing-requirements-by-trade page for trade-specific regulatory context that can inform independent verification.

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