Engineering firm licensing. State-specific requirements.
Engineering firms (all disciplines: civil, mechanical, electrical, structural, others) require firm-level registration in addition to individual PE licensure. Multi-state operations require careful coordination.
Start here.
Most states require engineering firm registration at the firm level.
Many states require majority licensed engineer ownership.
Civil, mechanical, electrical, structural, chemical, environmental, others. Each has specific board oversight.
National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying facilitates multi-state licensure.
All engineering work signed and sealed by a licensed PE.
The full picture.
Firm registration
Engineering firms must register with the state engineering board in each state where engineering services are provided. Registration requires: ownership compliance, designated responsible engineer, firm name compliance, sometimes financial bonds or insurance.
Ownership requirements
Most states require majority (51%+) ownership by licensed Professional Engineers (PEs). Some states require 100% PE ownership. A few states allow flexible ownership with designated PE on staff.
Disciplines covered
Civil, mechanical, electrical, structural, chemical, environmental, manufacturing, software (some states), agricultural, mining, petroleum, nuclear, others. Each discipline has its own state board oversight.
Entity structure
PLLC or Professional Corporation typically required. Standard LLC and standard corporation often not permitted for engineering practice.
Designated responsible engineer
Each firm typically designates a PE who supervises professional work. This PE signs and seals drawings, calculations, and specifications.
NCEES coordination
National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying (NCEES) facilitates multi-state individual PE licensure through reciprocity ("Comity"). NCEES Record simplifies applications.
Multi-state firm operations
Firm registration separately in each state. Individual PEs must hold license in each state where they perform engineering. Comity simplifies but does not eliminate state-by-state requirements.
PE seal requirements
All engineering work product (drawings, calculations, specifications) must be signed and sealed by a licensed PE. Unsealed work is not legally permissible for many uses.
Continuing requirements
Annual firm renewal; individual PE renewal with continuing education (PDH/CEU requirements); periodic board audits; specific discipline updates.
Common questions.
Do I need firm registration?
What ownership is required?
What is NCEES?
What is comity?
Do I need PLLC?
Can a non-engineer own equity?
What is a PE seal?
How often is renewal?
Set up your professional firm.
PLLC formation, registered agent, ongoing compliance. We handle entity-level requirements; you handle the professional practice.
Professional licensing is handled by state boards. File.Business handles entity formation and ongoing compliance.
On the $129/yr Compliance Annual Filings plan, we cover state late fees.
When you autofile your annual report through the $129/yr plan and we miss the deadline, we pay the state's late fee. The guarantee applies to that specific plan and the filings it includes. Other File.Business services are billed at the prices on this page.