5 Questions You Should Ask Before Hiring a Drywall Pro

Most homeowners know they should get a few quotes before hiring a drywall contractor. Fewer know what to actually say during those conversations. Without the right questions, it’s easy to confuse a confident pitch for genuine expertise, or to miss the warning signs buried inside a low bid.

These five questions cut through the noise. They’re the ones that reveal whether a contractor is truly qualified, organized, and worth trusting with your walls.


Question 1: Are You Licensed, Bonded, and Insured?

Why this question matters more than most homeowners realize

This isn’t just a formality. If a worker is injured on your property and the contractor doesn’t carry workers’ compensation insurance, you can be held financially responsible. If the job causes damage to your home and the contractor has no general liability coverage, you’re absorbing that cost too.

Licensing requirements vary by state. In California, for example, drywall contractors must complete four years of journey-level experience and pass both a trade exam and a law and business exam before earning a license. Some states require only a general contractor’s license for work above a certain dollar threshold. Either way, you can verify a contractor’s license directly through your state’s licensing board online.

Bonding is a separate layer of protection. A bonded contractor means there’s a surety bond in place that can compensate you if the contractor fails to complete the job or causes a financial loss. Most reputable contractors carry all three. If a contractor hesitates or gets vague when you ask, that tells you something.

What to ask for: Certificates of insurance showing current general liability and workers’ comp coverage, plus their license number so you can verify it yourself.


Question 2: Have You Done Projects Like This Before?

What “experience” really means in drywall work

Not all drywall work requires the same skill set. Hanging sheets in a new-construction basement is a different job from matching existing texture in a 1960s ranch home. Finishing a Level 5 smooth ceiling for high-gloss paint is a completely different discipline from a basic Level 4 wall finish.

Most drywall pros are highly competent in one or two areas and less experienced in others. Texture matching in particular, where a contractor has to blend new work seamlessly into decades-old walls, is a niche skill that takes years to develop. If your project involves any specialty work, ask specifically whether the contractor has done it before and ask to see examples.

Beyond matching your project type, ask how long the contractor has been in business. A company with fewer than two years of operating history is a higher risk, not because newer contractors are less skilled, but because they don’t yet have a track record you can investigate.

What to ask for: Photos or references from two or three jobs similar to yours. If they can’t produce them, they may not be the right fit.


Question 3: Who Will Actually Be Doing the Work?

The subcontractor question most homeowners forget to ask

This question catches a lot of homeowners off guard, but it’s one of the most important ones on this list. Some drywall companies operate with their own dedicated crew. Others act more like brokers, bidding the job and then subcontracting the actual labor to whoever is available.

Subcontracting isn’t automatically a red flag. Many excellent contractors use trusted subs they’ve worked with for years. The issue arises when the person who sold you on the job, showed you the portfolio, and answered all your questions has no real connection to the crew showing up at your door. You want to know whether the subcontractors are covered under the contractor’s insurance, how they’re vetted, and whether the person you’ve been talking to will actually be on-site during the work.

Most drywall pros recommend having a single point of contact throughout the project. That person should be reachable, should visit the site during key phases, and should be accountable if something goes wrong.

What to ask for: Clarity on who does the work, whether subs are covered under the company’s insurance, and who your go-to contact will be from start to finish.


Question 4: What Does Your Quote Actually Include?

How to read a drywall bid before you sign anything

Two quotes for the same job can look very different on paper and still be comparing completely different scopes of work. A thorough quote should spell out all of the following:

Line ItemWhat to Confirm
Total square footageDoes it match your own measurements?
Finish levelLevel 3, 4, or 5? (This changes both cost and final appearance)
Debris removalIs haul-away included or billed separately?
Texture workIs texture application included, or is that an add-on?
TimelineProjected start date and completion window
Payment scheduleWhen is each payment due, and what triggers it?

Pay close attention to the finish level. Most residential walls are finished to a Level 4, which includes tape, two coats of compound, and sanding. A Level 5 adds a full skim coat on top and is worth specifying in rooms where you plan to use high-gloss or semi-gloss paint, or anywhere light hits the wall at a sharp angle. The difference in cost can run $1.00 to $2.00 or more per square foot, so it needs to be explicit in the quote.

On the payment schedule: a reasonable contractor will ask for partial payment when materials are delivered to the job site and the remainder upon satisfactory completion. If a contractor asks for a large payment before a single sheet of drywall has arrived at your home, treat that as a significant red flag.

What to ask for: A written, itemized quote. Any contractor worth hiring will provide one without hesitation.


Question 5: What Happens If Something Goes Wrong?

How a contractor’s answer reveals their professionalism

This is the question most homeowners feel awkward asking, and the one that reveals the most. A confident, experienced contractor won’t be put off by it. They’ll walk you through exactly what their process is for handling callbacks, touch-ups, and disputes.

What you’re listening for is whether the contractor stands behind their work after the final check clears. Do they offer any kind of workmanship guarantee? What’s the process if you notice something after they’ve left? How quickly do they respond to callbacks?

You’re also listening for how they communicate. If a contractor is slow to return calls during the bidding phase, when they’re still trying to earn your business, that pattern tends to get worse once the job is underway. Clear, prompt communication isn’t a bonus; it’s a baseline requirement for a project that will run smoothly.

What to ask for: A clear explanation of their callback and warranty policy, in writing if possible, and a sense of how quickly they respond to issues once a job is complete.


When Should You Call a Pro Instead of Handling It Yourself?

Small nail pops and hairline cracks are often manageable for a handy homeowner. But the following situations call for a professional every time:

  • Any water-damaged area larger than a few square feet (hidden mold or structural issues may be involved)
  • Texture matching on older walls, where blending new work into existing surfaces requires years of experience
  • Full room or basement installations, where hanging, taping, and finishing properly requires a crew and professional equipment
  • Any project involving ceilings, which are physically harder to work on and less forgiving of mistakes
  • Rooms that will be painted with semi-gloss or high-gloss paint, where surface imperfections become very visible

The real cost of a DIY finish that needs to be redone almost always exceeds the cost of hiring a pro from the start.


Ready to Find a Qualified Drywall Contractor?

Knowing the right questions is only useful if you have the right people to ask them. DrywallProCenter.com connects homeowners with verified drywall professionals across the country. Search by zip code, compare contractor profiles, and request quotes from multiple pros in one place.

You’ve got the questions. Now find someone worth asking them.


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This article was drafted with the assistance of AI and has been reviewed and edited by our editorial team for accuracy and quality.