Professional and occupational licenses in Connecticut are issued by state licensing boards — each profession has its own board with its own search tool. There is no single database of all licenses in Connecticut.
What this page covers: Connecticut professional license verification databases — medical, legal, real estate, contractor, financial, and other regulated professions. What it does not cover: Business entity filings (those are with the Secretary of State) or association memberships (those are private organizations).
Where to start: Identify the profession, then go to the specific licensing board for Connecticut. For attorneys, go to the state bar. For doctors, the medical board. For contractors, the contractor licensing authority. The databases below are organized by profession.
Common mistake: A professional license and a business registration are different. A license authorizes a person to practice a profession. A business registration authorizes a company to operate. They are filed with different agencies.
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The 4-Step Connecticut License Verification
Five Things People Get Wrong About Connecticut Professional & Occupational Licenses
Primary Sources (All .gov / Official)
- www.elicense.ct.gov — Official Connecticut Professional & Occupational Licenses — State portal for Connecticut professional & occupational licenses
- NCSL National Occupational Licensing Database — All-state licensing database
- USA.gov — Licenses & Permits — Federal licensing portal
- DOL Occupational Licensing — Dept of Labor licensing resources
- FTC Licensing Reports — FTC licensing economic analysis
- Minneapolis Fed — Licensure Data — Workforce licensure trends
- CLEAR Licensing Dashboard — Licensure regulation dashboard
Related Licenses Resources
- Connecticut Court Records →
- Connecticut Criminal Records →
- Connecticut Property Records →
- Connecticut Vital Records →
- Connecticut Voter Records →
- Connecticut Wants & Warrants →
- Connecticut Recorded Documents →
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Licenses Databases
18 official Connecticut licenses sources.
Licenses
Connecticut Counties
All 8 Connecticut counties. Click any county for local court, sheriff, recorder and assessor links.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where do I verify a Connecticut professional license?▼
Most Connecticut professional and occupational licenses (medical, legal, contracting, real estate, cosmetology, etc.) can be verified through the Official Connecticut Professional & Occupational Licenses at www.elicense.ct.gov. Look for the 'License Lookup' or 'Verify a Licensee' tool — searches are typically by name or license number and return active/inactive status.
How do I apply for a Connecticut business license?▼
Connecticut business licensing combines state, county, and city permits depending on activity. The Official Connecticut Professional & Occupational Licenses at www.elicense.ct.gov is the primary state portal; local business-tax certificates are issued by the city or county where you operate. The federal usa.gov permits guide is a helpful starting overview.
Is a Connecticut license required to work in my profession?▼
That depends on the profession. Connecticut, like most states, licenses regulated occupations such as healthcare, legal, construction, real estate, cosmetology, security, and many trades. The Official Connecticut Professional & Occupational Licenses publishes the full list and exemption criteria at www.elicense.ct.gov.
How do I report a complaint against a Connecticut licensee?▼
Complaints against licensed professionals in Connecticut are filed with the issuing board or division under the Official Connecticut Professional & Occupational Licenses. Most boards accept online complaint submissions at www.elicense.ct.gov, plus mail-in forms. Each board reviews complaints under the standards in Connecticut's occupational code.
Does Connecticut recognize licenses from other states?▼
Many Connecticut boards offer license-by-reciprocity, license-by-endorsement, or expedited pathways for applicants already licensed in another U.S. jurisdiction. The Official Connecticut Professional & Occupational Licenses at www.elicense.ct.gov publishes the reciprocity rules per profession; some require additional Connecticut-specific exams or jurisprudence tests.
