How to File a Complaint Against a Connecticut Contractor
Connecticut homeowners and property owners who have experienced contractor misconduct, abandoned work, or licensing violations have access to structured complaint mechanisms through state regulatory agencies. This page describes the complaint filing process, the agencies that govern it, the types of violations that fall within scope, and the distinctions between administrative, civil, and criminal remedies. Understanding how these pathways differ determines which agency receives a complaint and what outcomes are available.
Definition and scope
A contractor complaint in Connecticut is a formal allegation submitted to a state or local regulatory body asserting that a licensed or registered contractor has violated applicable statutes, registration conditions, or consumer protection laws. The primary receiving agencies are the Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection (DCP) and, for specific regulated trades, the Connecticut Department of Public Health (DPH).
The DCP administers the Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration program under Connecticut General Statutes § 20-417a through § 20-417r. Complaints filed with the DCP can result in administrative penalties, registration suspension or revocation, or referral to the Office of the Attorney General. The DPH handles complaints involving lead abatement, asbestos, and similar public health-regulated contractor activities, as detailed in Connecticut contractor DPH regulations.
Scope limitations: This page addresses complaints against contractors operating under Connecticut jurisdiction. Federal contractor complaints, disputes involving municipal or state public works contracts exceeding prevailing wage thresholds, and matters involving licensed attorneys or design professionals fall outside the DCP's complaint jurisdiction. Disputes arising from public construction projects are governed separately — see Connecticut prevailing wage contractor rules for that framework. Interstate contractor operations may implicate multiple jurisdictions beyond Connecticut's authority.
How it works
The Connecticut complaint process follows a sequential administrative structure:
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Document the issue. Gather the written contract, all invoices, payment records, photographs of defective or incomplete work, and any written communications with the contractor. Under Connecticut law, home improvement contracts above $200 must be in writing (CGS § 20-429); absence of a written contract is itself a violation relevant to the complaint. See Connecticut contractor contract requirements for the full statutory baseline.
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Verify contractor registration status. Confirm the contractor's registration or license before filing, using the DCP's public license lookup tool. Complaints against unregistered contractors may be forwarded to the Attorney General's office rather than handled administratively. See verifying a Connecticut contractor license for lookup procedures.
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File with the Connecticut DCP. Complaints can be submitted through the DCP's online Consumer Affairs portal at portal.ct.gov/DCP or by mail to the DCP at 450 Columbus Blvd., Hartford, CT 06103. The complaint form requests the contractor's full name, registration number, a description of the alleged violation, and the monetary amount in dispute.
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Investigation phase. DCP investigators review submitted materials and may contact both parties. Mediation is offered in qualifying disputes. If mediation fails or the violation is administrative in nature, the DCP may issue a formal notice of hearing before an administrative law officer.
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Adjudication and penalties. Substantiated violations can result in fines up to $5,000 per violation under CGS § 20-417o, registration revocation, or referral for criminal prosecution for aggravated cases. The Connecticut contractor violations and penalties page covers the penalty schedule in full.
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Parallel civil remedies. Administrative complaints do not preclude civil litigation. Connecticut's Home Improvement Act provides a private right of action. Small Claims Court handles disputes up to $5,000; Superior Court handles larger amounts.
Common scenarios
Complaints filed with the Connecticut DCP typically fall into four categories:
- Abandonment. The contractor accepted a deposit and ceased work without completing the project or refunding payment. This is the most frequently cited violation in DCP records.
- Defective workmanship. Work completed does not meet industry standards or the contractual specifications. Roofing and siding disputes are common — see Connecticut roofing contractor requirements for the applicable standards.
- Unlicensed or unregistered contracting. The contractor performed regulated work without holding a current HIC registration or trade license. Electrical, plumbing, and HVAC work each require specific licensure; complaints in these trades involve both DCP and trade-specific licensing boards. See Connecticut electrical contractor licensing, Connecticut plumbing contractor licensing, and Connecticut HVAC contractor licensing.
- Contract violations. The contractor failed to provide a required written contract, did not include the rescission notice, or charged amounts materially different from the written agreement.
A complaint about an unregistered contractor (no HIC registration) differs procedurally from one against a registered contractor who performed defective work. Unregistered contractor complaints are typically escalated to enforcement or the Attorney General; registered contractor complaints proceed through mediation and administrative hearings first.
Decision boundaries
Not every contractor dispute warrants or benefits from a DCP complaint. The DCP does not award damages directly — it imposes administrative penalties on contractors and may facilitate mediation, but monetary recovery requires a separate civil action or Small Claims filing.
Disputes that are purely contractual in nature — pricing disagreements without a statutory violation — are better resolved through Connecticut contractor dispute resolution mechanisms before escalating to agency complaints.
Homeowners uncertain whether their contractor is properly registered or bonded should review Connecticut home improvement contractor registration and Connecticut contractor bonding requirements to assess whether a violation exists before filing. The broader contractor services landscape in the state is mapped at the Connecticut Contractor Authority index.
For complaints involving insurance coverage disputes related to contractor work, Connecticut contractor insurance requirements outlines the minimum coverage mandates that may support a complaint's factual basis.
References
- Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection — Home Improvement Contractor Program
- Connecticut General Statutes § 20-417a through § 20-417r — Home Improvement Act
- Connecticut General Statutes § 20-429 — Written Contract Requirement
- Connecticut Department of Public Health — Environmental Health Contractor Licensing
- Connecticut Office of the Attorney General — Consumer Protection
- Connecticut Judicial Branch — Small Claims Court