How many licensed electrical contractors are there in Llano County?
25 electrical contractors hold active TDLR licenses in Llano County as of the most recent nightly sync. That ranks Llano #63 of 220 Texas counties for active electrical contractors.
Texas › Llano County
25 licensed electrical contractors hold active TDLR licenses in Llano County as of the most recent nightly sync. That makes Llano the #63 county in Texas for active electrical contractors.
Showing 1–25 of 25
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires April 26, 2027
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires April 24, 2027
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires February 28, 2027
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires January 26, 2027
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires January 14, 2027
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires January 13, 2027
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires January 2, 2027
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires December 27, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires December 11, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires December 7, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires November 22, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires November 14, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires November 13, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires November 1, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires October 13, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires October 12, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires September 21, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires September 17, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires September 16, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires July 23, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires July 20, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires July 19, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires July 8, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires June 24, 2026
Electrical Contractor · Llano County
Expires June 23, 2026
Methodology
A Texas electrical contractor (TECL) holds a business license that authorizes the company to bid, contract for, and perform electrical work. Every TECL must designate a qualifying master electrician whose individual ME license backs the contractor license. The TECL must carry general liability insurance and is renewed annually. Cities may require additional local registration before pulling permits. The contractor license is what homeowners verify when hiring a company; the master electrician license is the individual whose qualifications support that contractor.
Every record on this page is published from the Texas Department of Licensing & Regulation All Licenses dataset and refreshed nightly. We display the status that TDLR published at last sync and re-derive each contractor’s verdict against the current date so the badge on a profile is honest about the moment you load the page.
Questions
25 electrical contractors hold active TDLR licenses in Llano County as of the most recent nightly sync. That ranks Llano #63 of 220 Texas counties for active electrical contractors.
Every license on licensed-tx is pulled directly from the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation. Search by name or license number, or view a profile to see the active status, expiration date, and license type. The verification badge on the profile reflects TDLR's published record at last sync.
Texas electrical contractors carry one of these designations on every contract, estimate, or invoice: TECL. The license number itself encodes the trade and class — if a contract is missing the number, that is a regulatory red flag.
TDLR electrical contractors renew annually. Continuing education is required for renewal, and the license number stays the same year over year. An expired license means the contractor is operating outside their authority until they complete renewal.
The TDLR license is required statewide. Some Texas cities — including parts of the Houston, Dallas, and San Antonio metros — also require local registration before a contractor can pull permits. Verify the TDLR license first, then check with the local permitting office for any city-level requirement.
An expired status on TDLR means the renewal deadline passed without the required continuing education or fee being submitted. The license can be reinstated, but until then the holder is not authorized to perform the regulated work. Always confirm an "active" status before signing a contract.
Every record comes from the TDLR All Licenses dataset published by the State of Texas. We pull the dataset nightly, validate every row, and republish it here with no edits to the underlying license facts. The original record is one click away on every contractor profile.
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Other trades in Llano County