Public Record · California Contractor

Is Glass Craft licensed, insured & complaint-free in California?

Glass Craft has held an active California contractor license (CSLB #213504, C17) for 63 years, with no open enforcement actions on record as of June 27, 2026, according to the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB).

Contractor record · CSLB #213504

Glass Craft

Glazing (C-17) · Vancouver, CA
License Active

Active · no open actions

License status is CLEAR with no open enforcement actions on record, per the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB).

As of June 27, 2026CSLB code: CLEARVerify on CSLB
License #
CSLB #213504
Classification
C17
Glazing (C-17)
Years licensed
63
since November 4, 1962
Contractor's bond
Active
$25,000
The full dossierRedacted preview
Bond suretywho to file a claim against
Bond number
How to make a bond claim
What “Active · no open actions” means + what to ask
License expiration date
Registered business entity & contact
Dated certificate PDF — emailed with your receipt

Unlock every field above for Glass Craft — including who to file a claim against the $25,000 bond. Delivered as a dated certificate PDF, emailed with your receipt. Public records, not a background check.

$9 · instant PDF · emailed with receipt

Principals on record · CSLB

BEATY HAROLD OWENSole Owner · Deceased
BEATY HAL MARKSole Owner

Workers’ compensation · CSLB

Exempt
Effective
April 6, 2025

What this record means

How to verify this yourself

Every fact on this page comes from the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB). You can confirm it directly: look up CSLB license #213504 on the official CSLB site. This page is current as of June 27, 2026; the CSLB record is updated continuously.

What the contractor's bond covers

California requires most licensed contractors to carry a $25,000 contractor's bond. It can pay certain claims for license-law violations — it is not insurance for your project and is not a measure of work quality. The CSLB lists the surety and bond number.

What "workers'-comp exempt" means

A contractor with no employees can file a workers'-comp exemption with the CSLB. It is a normal, filed status — not a lapse — but it means there may be no workers'-comp coverage if the contractor brings on help. Confirm coverage before work that involves a crew.

What this record does and does not tell you

The California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) tracks license status, classification, bond, and workers'-comp. It does not rate work quality, track general-liability insurance, or collect customer reviews. Use it to confirm the license is real and in good standing, then check references and a written contract separately.

What classification C17 covers

CSLB #213504 is classified Glazing (C-17). A California contractor is licensed only for the classifications on record; work outside them may fall outside the license. The full classification list is on the official CSLB record.

Common questions

Is Glass Craft licensed in California?

Yes. As of June 27, 2026, the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) lists Glass Craft with an active contractor license, CSLB #213504 (classification C17), in a CLEAR status.

Is Glass Craft insured?

The California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) records Glass Craft as workers'-comp exempt as of June 27, 2026 — typically a sole owner with no employees. An exemption is a filed declaration, not a lapse.

Does Glass Craft have complaints or violations?

As of June 27, 2026, the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) shows no open enforcement actions, citations, or disciplinary bonds on record for CSLB #213504. The CSLB is the authoritative source for complaint history.

Who runs Glass Craft?

The California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) lists Glass Craft as a sole-owner or single-principal license (CSLB #213504). The named principal is shown in the personnel section below, as recorded by the CSLB.

Is Glass Craft bonded?

As of June 27, 2026, the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) shows an active contractor's bond on file for CSLB #213504. California requires a $25,000 contractor's bond; it protects against certain license-law violations, not a guarantee of work quality.

How long has Glass Craft been licensed?

The California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) shows CSLB #213504 was first issued on November 4, 1962, about 63 years ago.

Get a free quote from a vetted glazing contractor in Vancouver.

Comparing options? We can connect you with a licensed, insured glazing contractor for a free quote. Optional — the verdict above is already free and never behind a form.

Free · no obligation

This record compiles California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) data — license, insurance, principals, and enforcement — that CSLB publishes across separate pages, current as of June 27, 2026. IsItLicensed is not affiliated with or endorsed by the CSLB or the State of California. Always verify against the official record.