Finding a qualified general contracting contractor in Ocoee, FL means working with professionals who understand both the scope of larger home and commercial projects and the local requirements that come with them. Florida's humid subtropical climate, combined with the standards set by the Florida Building Code, shapes how permitting, materials, and construction methods are approached on projects throughout the area.
Ocoee sits within the Orlando metropolitan area, where hot, humid summers, frequent afternoon thunderstorms, and the occasional threat of hurricanes are all factors a knowledgeable contractor will account for when planning and executing a project. Choosing someone familiar with these regional conditions can help ensure work is completed to code and built to hold up over time.
This directory currently lists 16 general contracting contractors serving Ocoee and the surrounding area. Browse listings below to compare local options.
A1 Construction & Estimating
★ 5.0 (2 reviews)
2582 Maguire Rd, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingLamosa construction LLC
★ 5.0 (2 reviews)
11 E Silver Star Rd, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingMIND CONSTRUCTION LLC
★ 5.0 (5 reviews)
1711 Amazing Way STE, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingWPC (Winter Park Construction)
Florida CGC License
★ 5.0 (19 reviews)
529 E Crown Point Rd Suite 140, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingJeBailey & Co.
★ 5.0 (1 review)
2222 Ocoee Apopka Rd Suite 104, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingKeator Construction, LLC
Florida CGC License
★ 5.0 (5 reviews)
599 Maguire Rd, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingBurns & Sons Contracting LLC
★ 5.0 (4 reviews)
2222 Ocoee Apopka Rd Suite 106-128, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingKura Design Pools
★ 4.9 (240 reviews)
2751 Old Winter Garden Rd, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingJ Richard Watson Construction Co
★ 4.5 (4 reviews)
885 Sedalia St, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingGibbs & Register Inc
Florida CGC License
★ 4.3 (3 reviews)
340 Story Rd B, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingAll County Fence Contractors
★ 4.1 (13 reviews)
1746 E Silver Star Rd Suite 154, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingExcelis Hospitality Construction
★ 4.0 (4 reviews)
1500 Wurst Rd #1, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingLMG Construction Services
Florida CGC License
★ 3.7 (3 reviews)
529 Ocoee Apopka Rd, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingD & D Construction Services
★ 1.0 (1 review)
2707 Rew Cir, Ocoee, FL 34761
General Contracting51 Maguire Rd
Maguire Rd #51, Ocoee, FL 34761
General ContractingJZ Landscaping & Construction LLC
1521 Sagebrook Ct, Ocoee, FL 34761
Hiring a general contracting contractor in Ocoee, FL
A general contractor in Ocoee, FL is the right hire when your project touches structure, multiple trades, or anything requiring a building permit beyond a single sub-trade — home additions, full remodels, garage conversions, ADUs, and major renovations. The directory below lists active general contractors so you can shortlist by location, then verify each one's Florida license before signing.
In Florida the general contractor of record is legally responsible for the permit, the inspections, and the trades they bring onto your job — which is why hiring an unlicensed "handyman" for a permitted project leaves you, the homeowner, holding the liability if something goes wrong.
How to verify a general contracting contractor's license in Florida
Look for license type: CGC — Certified General Contractor
Go to myfloridalicense.com, the official Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) portal, and use "Verify a License." Search by the contractor's business name, the qualifier's individual name, or the license number itself. Confirm the license type is "CGC — Certified General Contractor," the status reads "Current, Active," the expiration date is in the future, and there is no disciplinary or complaint history attached to the record.
CGC is the broadest residential/commercial certification. You may also see CBC (Certified Building Contractor — limited to structures 3 stories or less and 20,000 sq ft or less) or CRC (Certified Residential Contractor — 1- and 2-family dwellings only). All three are valid for most home projects; the difference is scope.
Why verifying matters in Florida
Florida law (§ 489.127, F.S.) makes it a third-degree felony to contract without a license on a project valued at $5,000 or more, or any size project during a declared state of emergency. Verifying licensure before you sign a contract is the single most important step you can take to protect your home and your deposit. Central Florida's hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, and unlicensed storm-chasing crews routinely move through Orange, Seminole, and Osceola counties after a major event. Confirming an active state license — and an in-state business address you can actually drive to — keeps you out of that risk pool. Generals coordinate every other trade on your project, so a missing or expired license here cascades into uninsured subs and uninspected work.
Questions to ask before you hire
- Will you pull the permit in your company's license, and can you give me the permit number once it's filed?
- Can I see your current Certificate of Insurance — general liability and workers' compensation — listing me as certificate holder?
- Who is the project manager I will actually talk to day-to-day, and how often will I get written progress updates?
- What is your draw schedule, and is the final draw tied to passing the final inspection and a punch list being closed?
- Which subcontractors will you bring onto the job (electrical, plumbing, HVAC, roofing), and are they all separately licensed in Florida?
Frequently asked questions
- What's the difference between a general contractor and a handyman?
- In Florida, a handyman can legally perform minor repairs and individual non-structural tasks under $1,000 with no permit required. The moment a project requires a building permit, involves structural work, or combines multiple trades, you need a state-licensed contractor (CGC, CBC, or CRC). The dividing line is the permit, not the price.
- Should I pay a large deposit upfront?
- Florida law caps the upfront deposit on residential work at 10% of the contract price before any materials are delivered or work begins (§ 489.126, F.S.). Any contractor asking for 30%, 40%, or 50% upfront before mobilizing is operating outside that rule.
- Do I need a separate architect for a remodel?
- Florida requires sealed plans from a registered architect or engineer for most structural work, additions over a certain size, and any change to load-bearing walls. Cosmetic remodels (paint, flooring, non-structural cabinetry) typically do not. A reputable general contractor will tell you upfront if sealed plans are required.
- How long do permits usually take in Ocoee?
- Residential permit turnaround in the Ocoee area typically runs 2–6 weeks for additions and major remodels, faster for simple permits like water heaters or windows. Your contractor should give you a realistic timeline based on the current backlog at the relevant Ocoee or county building department — not a fixed promise.