TEST BANK" PROTOCOL:
California Contractors
State License Board B
General Contractor
License Exam
PART 0: THE (Table of Contents)
Section Cognitive Tier Subject Matter Focus Question Range
PART I N/A The Preview & Critical N/A
Axioms
PART II Tier 1: Foundational Fundamental Code, Q1 – Q10
Syntax & Application Licensing & Contracts
PART II Tier 2: Complex Advanced Timeline Q11 – Q20
Application & Execution & Code
Simulation Translation
PART II Tier 3: Grandmaster High-Stakes Project Q21 – Q30
Synthesis Failures & Legal
Synthesis
PART I: THE Preview
Mastery of this material translates directly to elite operational competence, bridging the gap
between passing a licensing exam and executing flawless, legally bulletproof construction
projects in California. This document demands a precise, mechanistic understanding of the
2025/2026 Title 24 building codes, Cal/OSHA safety standards, and strict civil code timelines,
stripping away amateur guesswork and replacing it with absolute statutory clarity.
The "Critical Axioms" Cheat Sheet
● The "2026 Private Works Retainage & Claim" Axiom: California Civil Code § 8811
caps private construction retention strictly at 5% (non-waivable). Civil Code § 8850
, demands owners respond to claims within 30 days and pay undisputed amounts within 60
days, or face a 2% monthly (24% annual) penalty and trigger a contractor's right to stop
work with a 10-day notice.
● The "6-Foot Fall Protection" Axiom: Effective July 2025, Cal/OSHA lowered the fall
protection trigger height from 15 feet to 6 feet for all residential roofing and framing,
measured vertically from the walking/working surface to the level below (explicitly
excluding parapet walls).
● The "Lien Timeline" Axiom: Direct contractors have 90 days from completion to record a
mechanics lien. If a Notice of Completion (NOC) is properly recorded, this window shrinks
to 60 days for direct contractors and 30 days for subcontractors/suppliers. Foreclosure
lawsuits MUST be filed within 90 days of recording the lien.
● The "Title 24 ECC-Rater" Axiom: For 2025/2026 code compliance, the legacy HERS
Rater program is abolished and replaced by the Energy Code Compliance (ECC)
Program. ECC-Raters verify all heat pump, ventilation, and HVAC alterations under Title
24.
● The "Class B Single-Trade" Axiom: A General Building (Class B) contractor CANNOT
take a prime contract for a single trade (e.g., painting only) unless they also hold that
specific Class C specialty license or subcontract the work to an appropriately licensed
specialty contractor.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Tier 1: Foundational Syntax & Application
Q1: A property owner fails to pay a direct contractor upon completion of a private commercial
project. No Notice of Completion (NOC) or Notice of Cessation (NOCes) is recorded with the
county. Based on California Civil Code mechanics lien statutes, what is the exact timeframe the
direct contractor has to record their claim of lien? A) 60 days from the date of final inspection. B)
30 days after the owner occupies the building. C) 90 days after completion of the work of
improvement. D) 120 days from the last day labor or materials were furnished.
● The Answer: C (90 days after completion of the work of improvement.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: The 60-day statutory deadline applies exclusively when the owner
properly records and serves a Notice of Completion or Cessation.
○ B is incorrect: While occupation can sometimes signal project completion, the
30-day window applies strictly to subcontractors and suppliers when an NOC is
filed, not to direct contractors.
○ D is incorrect: This 120-day timeline represents a common novice confusion with
out-of-state statutes or legacy federal bond rules, possessing no validity under
current California Civil Code § 8412.
The Mentor's Analysis: Mechanics lien rights are entirely dictated by the calendar and the
county recorder's office. Without a recorded Notice of Completion, all claimants default to the
standard 90-day window following absolute completion of the project. Professional/Academic
Intuition: Never assume an NOC is filed; verify the county records. If no NOC exists, the
Hard Deck is exactly 90 days from completion.
Q2: A homeowner wants to hire a Class B General Building contractor solely to repaint the
exterior of their 3,000-square-foot house. The contractor does not hold a C-33 Painting and
, Decorating classification. According to CSLB regulations, which action is the MOST
ACCURATE? A) The contractor may accept the contract because painting is an integral part of
building maintenance. B) The contractor may accept the contract only if the total value is under
$500. C) The contractor cannot accept this contract unless they subcontract the entire job to a
licensed C-33 contractor. D) The contractor may accept the contract provided they utilize direct
W-2 employees for the labor.
● The Answer: C (The contractor cannot accept this contract unless they subcontract the
entire job to a licensed C-33 contractor.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: A Class B contractor's principal business requires the use of at least
two unrelated building trades. They are legally barred from taking single-trade
contracts without the corresponding specialty license.
○ B is incorrect: The $500 threshold dictates the legal requirement for holding any
contractor's license at all, not the scope limitations of a licensed Class B entity.
○ D is incorrect: Utilizing W-2 employees does not circumvent statutory classification
limits. The license holder must possess the specific trade classification to
self-perform the work.
The Mentor's Analysis: A Class B license is not a blanket authorization to perform all
construction tasks. To operate legally, a single-trade project must either be rejected, or passed
down through a formal sub-contract to an appropriately licensed specialty contractor.
Professional/Academic Intuition: Class B equals two or more trades. Single-trade prime
contracts require the specific C-license or a legal subcontract pass-through.
Q3: Beginning January 1, 2026, California Civil Code § 8811 mandates strict limits on retention
for private construction contracts. If a direct contractor enters into a private contract for a
commercial building, what is the maximum allowable retention they can withhold from a
subcontractor? A) 10% of any progress payment. B) 5% of the total contract price, provided the
owner withheld 10%. C) 5% of any progress payment. D) 0%, as retention is fully abolished in
2026 for private works.
● The Answer: C (5% of any progress payment.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: While 10% was the standard industry practice prior to the enactment
of Senate Bill No. 61, withholding 10% on standard commercial projects is now
illegal.
○ B is incorrect: The flow-down provision mandates that retention withheld
downstream cannot exceed what is legally withheld upstream, which is statutorily
capped at 5%.
○ D is incorrect: Retention is capped to alleviate financial pressure on the supply
chain, but it is not completely abolished.
The Mentor's Analysis: Civil Code § 8811 radically shifted private works financing by
implementing a hard 5% cap on retention across the entire supply chain. This is a non-waivable
statutory requirement designed to increase liquidity and prevent top-tier entities from using
subcontractor capital as free financing. Professional/Academic Intuition: Private retention is
now identical to public retention: 5% maximum, universally applied, and strictly enforced.
Q4: A framing contractor is working on a residential project. Under the Cal/OSHA regulations
effective July 1, 2025, at what minimum vertical height is the contractor REQUIRED to utilize a
fall protection system (such as guardrails, safety nets, or personal fall arrest systems)? A) 15
feet B) 10 feet C) 6 feet D) 7.5 feet
● The Answer: C (6 feet)