Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Mechanic License in Florida

Experience hours, license tiers and the state exam — plus a progress tracker that estimates your time to licensure.

Requirements as of June 28, 2026 — official requirements vary by state and locality and change. Always confirm with Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation — Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB).

Verify with Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation — Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB)

Experience to top license

8,000

hours toward Certified Class A Air-Conditioning Contractor

License tiers

1

apprentice → master

Licensing exam

Pearson VUE

Certified Class A Air-Conditioning Contractor Examination

State-licensed

Yes

Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Mechanic in Florida — license ladder

US SOC 49-9021 · Exams via Pearson VUE

License tierExperience hoursExam
Certified Class A Air-Conditioning Contractor8,000Certified Class A Air-Conditioning Contractor Examination

Florida licenses HVAC at the CONTRACTOR level via CILB under DBPR (Ch. 489, Part II). DBPR experience page: four years experience or college/experience combination (~8,000 hrs at 2,000 hrs/yr). Class A (no size limit) and Class B (<=25 tons / 500,000 BTU). Each Certified (statewide) or Registered (local). No statewide HVAC journeyman/mechanic license — handled locally. Exam by Pearson VUE.

Track your hours to licensure

Enter the experience you have logged. Saved on this device only — no account needed.

Hours toward Certified Class A Air-Conditioning Contractor0%

You appear to qualify at pre-apprentice based on hours logged.

Experience hours remaining

8,000

Percent complete
0%
Hours logged
0
Estimated eligibility
May 2030

License readiness

  • Experience hours met (8,000 required)
  • Eligible to sit the Certified Class A Air-Conditioning Contractor Examination (Pearson VUE)

Keep logging experience hours. When the hours are met, you can apply to sit the Certified Class A Air-Conditioning Contractor Examination.

Next step at Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation — Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB)

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Frequently asked questions

How do you become a licensed refrigeration and air conditioning mechanic in Florida?+

In Florida, becoming a licensed refrigeration and air conditioning mechanic typically requires about 8,000 hours of documented work experience to qualify for the Certified Class A Air-Conditioning Contractor exam (administered via Pearson VUE). Verified June 28, 2026 with Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation — Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB) — confirm current requirements there.

Does Florida license refrigeration and air conditioning mechanics at the state level?+

Yes. Florida licenses refrigeration and air conditioning mechanics through Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation — Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB), with tiers such as Certified Class A Air-Conditioning Contractor.

How many hours do you need to become a Red Seal tradesperson?+

It varies by trade and province. Most Red Seal apprenticeships run about 6,000–9,000 on-the-job hours over roughly four to five years, plus three to four levels of in-school technical training, then the Interprovincial Red Seal exam. Always confirm the current hours with your provincial apprenticeship authority.

What is a Red Seal endorsement?+

The Red Seal is the national standard for skilled trades in Canada. Passing the Interprovincial Red Seal exam in a designated trade adds a Red Seal endorsement to your provincial certificate, letting you work in that trade across participating provinces and territories without re-certifying.

Do apprenticeship requirements change?+

Yes. Required hours, technical-training levels and exam rules are set by each provincial authority and are updated periodically. The figures here were verified on their effective date, but you must confirm the current requirements with the official authority linked on every page before relying on them.

Does the tracker need an account?+

No. Your logged hours, completed levels and weekly average are saved in your browser on this device only — there is no sign-up and nothing is sent to a server.

Methodology & sources

Figures for the refrigeration and air conditioning mechanic license in Florida were verified against Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation — Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB) on June 28, 2026 (Florida DBPR — Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB), Experience Requirements). Licensing is set by the state board and may differ by city or county.

Requirements vary by state and locality and route and change over time. Confirm the current hours, levels and exam eligibility with Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation — Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB) before relying on them.

Last reviewed June 28, 2026. Estimates are indicative — verify against current product specs and local requirements before ordering.

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