Contact

The National Flooring Repair Authority operates as a public-facing reference directory for the flooring repair and restoration sector across the United States. This page details how to reach the administrative office, what geographic scope the directory covers, what information to include when submitting an inquiry, and what response timelines apply. Readers submitting contractor inquiries, listing corrections, or research requests will find the relevant protocols outlined below.

How to reach this office

The National Flooring Repair Authority administrative office accepts inquiries submitted through the site's contact form, which routes messages to the directory management team responsible for listings, data accuracy, and sector reference content. The contact form is the primary intake channel for all inbound requests — including contractor listing submissions, listing update requests, factual corrections to directory entries, and general questions about the directory's scope and classification standards.

The directory does not maintain a public telephone line for general inquiries. All structured communications are handled through written form submission to ensure accurate routing and documented handling. Requests involving commercial flooring contractor listings, repair category classifications, or geographic coverage should be directed through the form rather than through informal channels.

For inquiries related to the flooring repair service landscape covered in the Flooring Repair Listings, the contact form includes a category selector that allows the sender to route the message to the appropriate review queue.

Service area covered

The National Flooring Repair Authority operates as a nationally scoped directory covering the continental United States, Alaska, and Hawaii. The directory indexes flooring repair contractors and related service providers across all 50 states, with no regional exclusions applied at the intake level.

Contractor listings are organized by state and metropolitan service area, with classification structured around 3 primary repair categories:

  1. Structural subfloor and underlayment repair — addresses load-bearing defects, moisture-related deterioration, and code-compliance remediation under the International Residential Code (IRC) Section R503 and the International Building Code (IBC) Chapter 4 floor construction standards.
  2. Surface material repair and refinishing — covers hardwood, engineered wood, tile, stone, laminate, luxury vinyl plank (LVP), and resilient sheet flooring. Surface-level restoration work is distinguished from full replacement by the extent of material removal and subfloor exposure involved.
  3. Safety and accessibility compliance repair — encompasses remediation work tied to ADA Standards for Accessible Design (Section 302 and 303, addressing floor surface tolerances and changes in level), OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 walking-working surface standards, and state-level building department requirements.

The distinction between surface repair and structural repair carries permitting implications in most jurisdictions. Structural subfloor work typically requires a building permit and scheduled inspection under local authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) review, while cosmetic surface refinishing generally does not. Contractors listed in the directory are indexed against these classification boundaries to assist searchers in identifying appropriately scoped providers.

The directory's geographic indexing covers urban, suburban, and rural service areas. Contractors serving multi-county or multi-state regions are listed with explicit service radius disclosures within their directory entries.

What to include in your message

Submissions that include complete, structured information receive faster processing. The following breakdown applies to the 4 most common inquiry types received by the administrative office:

Contractor listing submissions:
- Business legal name and DBA (if applicable)
- State of primary licensure and license number
- Flooring repair categories serviced (structural, surface, accessibility compliance, or combination)
- Geographic service area with ZIP code or county boundaries
- Proof of current general liability insurance and, where applicable, state contractor license documentation

Listing correction requests:
- The specific listing name and URL as it appears in the directory
- The field requiring correction (address, license number, service category, contact detail)
- The corrected information with a supporting source or documentation reference

Research and data inquiries:
- A description of the research purpose
- The specific data fields or contractor categories being researched
- Any applicable institutional affiliation or project context

General sector questions:
- A specific question referencing the relevant section of the directory or the Flooring Repair Directory Purpose and Scope page
- Enough contextual detail to route the message to the appropriate subject-matter queue

Submissions that omit license numbers, service area definitions, or category classifications will be returned for completion before processing begins. The directory maintains a standing requirement that all listed contractors carry a minimum of $1,000,000 in general liability coverage, consistent with standard commercial contractor insurance thresholds applied across the construction sector.

Response expectations

The administrative office processes contact form submissions on a rolling review cycle. Standard listing submissions and correction requests receive an acknowledgment within 3 business days of receipt. Full review and publication or update of a listing entry takes between 7 and 14 business days depending on queue volume and the completeness of submitted documentation.

Research inquiries involving aggregated contractor data or sector classification questions are reviewed by the editorial team and may require up to 21 business days for a substantive response, particularly if the inquiry requires cross-referencing against state licensing databases maintained by individual state contractors' boards.

Submissions that reference regulatory compliance questions — such as ADA-related flooring surface tolerances, OSHA walking-working surface standards, or permit requirements under a specific jurisdiction's AHJ — will be acknowledged but not answered with professional or legal interpretation. The directory operates as a reference and indexing resource; regulatory interpretation falls within the scope of licensed professionals, state licensing boards, or agencies such as the U.S. Access Board (which administers ADA accessibility standards) and OSHA's Directorate of Standards and Guidance.

Inquiries about how the directory is structured, what listing criteria apply, and how service categories are defined can also be reviewed on the How to Use This Flooring Repair Resource page before submitting a message, which may resolve common questions without requiring a formal submission.

Report a Data Error or Correction

Found incorrect information, an outdated fact, or a broken link? Use the form below.

Explore This Site

Regulations & Safety Regulatory References
Topics (35)
Tools & Calculators Board Footage Calculator