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Under California law, when must a contractor provide a certificate of workers' compensation insurance to a property owner for residential work?

Correct Answer

A) For projects exceeding $1,000 or when requested by the owner

Labor Code Section 3700 and Business and Professions Code Section 7125 require contractors to provide workers' compensation insurance certificates for home improvement contracts exceeding $1,000 or when requested by the property owner. This protects homeowners from liability for workplace injuries and ensures contractor compliance with workers' compensation requirements.

Answer Options
A
For projects exceeding $1,000 or when requested by the owner
B
Only for projects exceeding $500
C
For all projects regardless of amount
D
Only when specifically requested by the owner

Why This Is the Correct Answer

Option A is correct. Under California Labor Code Section 3700 and Business and Professions Code Section 7125, contractors performing home improvement work must provide proof of workers' compensation insurance when the contract value exceeds $1,000 OR when the property owner specifically requests it — whichever comes first. The dual trigger protects homeowners in both high-value and lower-value contract situations.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option B: Only for projects exceeding $500

The $500 threshold appears in other California contractor regulations (e.g., written contract requirements), but it does not apply specifically to workers' compensation certificate obligations. Mixing up the $500 and $1,000 thresholds is a very common exam error.

Option C: For all projects regardless of amount

'All projects regardless of amount' is overbroad and not what the statute says. A contractor working for less than $1,000 is not automatically required to provide the certificate unless the owner asks. Always look for the specific statutory threshold.

Option D: Only when specifically requested by the owner

'Only when specifically requested' ignores the independent $1,000 threshold. The law provides two separate triggers; owner request is one of them, but not the only one. Choosing D would incorrectly let high-value contracts proceed without certificate disclosure.

Memory Technique

Think of it as a '$1,000 safety net': once a job crosses $1,000, you must show the owner you have workers' comp coverage. Below that, you only need to show it if asked. The number 1,000 = 'one safety certificate.'

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