Does Kansas require a state license to do mold remediation?
No, Kansas does not have a mold-specific state license. Mold remediation work in Kansas is performed by contractors operating under Kansas’s general contractor licensing system. Most contractor licensing is municipal in Kansas. Verify any contractor’s license at the Local jurisdiction (Kansas does not license general contractors at the state level) before signing a contract.
Who regulates mold work in Kansas?
In Kansas, mold work is governed by the contractor licensing rules of the Local jurisdiction (Kansas does not license general contractors at the state level). Most contractor licensing is municipal in Kansas. Because there is no mold-specific state license, the practical questions when hiring are: does this contractor hold a current Kansas license that covers the work, do they carry insurance, and do they use a written contract with a clear scope. For tenant-side issues, the Kansas Attorney General consumer pages and your local code enforcement department are the right places to start.
How do I verify a Kansas contractor’s license?
Use the Local jurisdiction (Kansas does not license general contractors at the state level) license verification or contractor search. Confirm the contractor is current, in the right classification for the work, and has no open disciplinary actions. Ask for proof of general liability insurance and (if the contractor has employees) workers’ compensation coverage.
What rights do Kansas tenants have when there is mold in a rental?
Most US states give residential tenants a statutory or common-law warranty of habitability. The exact mechanics in Kansas, including notice requirements, repair-and-deduct procedures, and termination remedies, are governed by state-specific statutes. The starting point is your state’s residential landlord-tenant law and, in some states, your local housing or health code.
This page is a state-level overview. Tenants in active disputes should not act unilaterally. Read the current statutes, talk to a Kansas attorney or a local legal aid organization, and document conditions in writing before withholding rent, vacating, or terminating a lease. The Kansas Attorney General consumer pages are a good starting point for state-specific guidance.
How do I file a complaint against a Kansas mold contractor?
Complaints about a Kansas licensed contractor go to the Local jurisdiction (Kansas does not license general contractors at the state level). For tenant-side mold problems with a landlord rather than a contractor, the right channel is generally local code enforcement or the local health department, plus the Kansas Attorney General consumer protection division.
Talk to a mold pro in Kansas
Looking for a mold remediator in Kansas? Lookmold connects homeowners with vetted pros across the state by phone. Call 866-871-0209 for a no-obligation phone consultation, available 24/7.
A note on this page
This guide is a state-level overview built from primary government sources. It is informational, not legal advice. Mold licensing rules, contractor licensing classifications, and tenant remedies change. Always verify current requirements with the agency directly before relying on a specific procedure or threshold.
- No-obligation phone consultation
- Vetted local mold pros
- 24/7 availability for emergencies
Mold remediation pages for Kansas cities
Each city page below has local mold remediation context, climate factors, and licensed-contractor guidance for that specific area.
Primary Sources
Every claim on this page links to the .gov source it was drawn from. Cross-references below.
- Local jurisdiction (Kansas does not license general contractors at the state level) . Kansas's contractor licensing authority
- Kansas Attorney General . Consumer protection and tenant resources
