What Is the Difference Between a General Contractor and a Residential Contractor?

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About the Author: Sebastian Olarte is the Founder and Lead Architect of Blanco Design + Build, a Miami Beach–based design and construction firm specializing in fully integrated, custom single-family homes. He holds a degree in Architecture with a minor in Fine Arts and Graphic Design from Florida Atlantic University and began his career with established studios including Pavlik Design Team and Gustavo Carbonel.

Sebastian founded Blanco in 2010 to close the gap between architectural design and construction execution. His design process starts with a close study of site conditions — climate, light, wind, landscape, and neighborhood context — before form takes shape. Influenced by international travel and a background in art and graphic composition, his work balances restraint, proportion, and constructability, ensuring custom homes move from concept to completion with clarity and continuity.

 

About the Author: Hank Bush is CEO of Blanco Design + Build, bringing more than 26 years of experience across real estate development, construction, and project execution. Raised in Georgia, Hank entered the construction and real estate industry at a young age before ultimately choosing a career in development.

His background includes co-founding Southern Investment Associates in Atlanta, leading large-scale adaptive reuse projects and mixed-use developments such as the Lenox Collection, and pioneering office condominium conversions along Brickell Avenue in Miami. Hank joined Blanco in 2019 to apply his operational and construction expertise within a fully integrated design-build model, where he focuses on execution, risk management, and aligning architectural ambition with disciplined construction delivery.

About the Author: Esteban Navia is Director of Construction and Director of Operations at Blanco Design + Build. Born and raised in Mexico within a family rooted in residential construction, he developed hands-on building skills from an early age before pursuing formal studies at ITESO and graduating from Florida International University with a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering.

Esteban joined Blanco through field-level collaboration, progressing from job-site operations to Assistant Project Manager, Project Manager, and into his current leadership roles. He oversees project delivery, quality assurance, and construction strategy while working across departments to strengthen internal systems, streamline processes, and elevate company-wide operational performance.

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June 2, 2026

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The difference between a general contractor and a residential contractor comes down to three things: the breadth of their license, the complexity of work they’re authorized to manage, and whether they can move between residential, commercial, and mixed-use projects. For an owner planning a high-investment build in South Florida — where FEMA elevation, hurricane-impact code, and county-specific permitting dictate everything from site prep to final inspection — that distinction is not academic. It determines who is qualified to run the project. 

This is the question we field most often from principals weighing how to engage their next build. The short version: a residential contractor is licensed to build and renovate homes; a general contractor is licensed to manage residential, commercial, industrial, and mixed-use construction at any scale. For larger residences, compounds, or any work that crosses into commercial — and for any project requiring multi-trade sequencing, regulatory navigation, and a single point of accountability — a general contractor is the right partner. Blanco operates as a General Contractor in Miami-Dade on both residential and commercial work. For the broader view of how we deliver across project types, see our overview of General Contractors at Blanco. 

Is a Residential Contractor the Same as a General Contractor?

No. The two roles overlap in some responsibilities and diverge sharply in others. 

general contractor manages the entire construction process across project types — residential, commercial, retail, hospitality, mixed-use. They hold the contract, hire and coordinate the trades, run the schedule, control the budget, manage permitting and inspections, and serve as the single point of accountability from groundbreaking through certificate of occupancy. The best general contractors are not just builders; they are orchestrators of complex work. 

residential contractor specializes in homes — new construction, additions, remodels. Their license is narrower, their projects smaller in scale, and their experience confined to the residential side of the code book. 

What they share: both are licensed and insured, both run subcontractors, both pull permits, and both are responsible for safety and quality on site. 

Where they diverge: licensing, scope, and project type. In Florida, a Certified General Contractor (CGC) license permits the holder to build, repair, or alter any structure statewide — residential, commercial, or industrial. A residential contractor’s license is restricted to homes and light-scale builds. That single difference shapes what each can legally take on. 

The misconception worth correcting is that any contractor can run any project. The best general contractors are licensed and resourced to manage builds where multiple trades, complex sequencing, code-driven design constraints, and regulatory compliance all sit on the same job site. 

There is one more distinction that matters for principals planning a luxury build. A fully integrated design-build firm eliminates the coordination gap that opens up when an outside architect hands drawings to a separate contractor mid-project. When design, architecture, engineering, permitting, and construction sit under one roof, planning, pricing, and constructability are addressed together — early, before drawings are finalized. The result is alignment from day one and a disciplined process that the principal can actually see. For owners working with an outside architect they want to keep, Blanco operates as the general contractor on those plans as well; both engagements are first-class. For more on how the work breaks down across project types, see the common projects general contractors manage.

General Contracting for the Extraordinary

When the space is an extension of your business’s brand — not a backdrop to it — Blanco Design + Build delivers construction at a standard the ordinary GC can’t match.

What Are the 4 Main Types of Construction?

Construction projects fall into four categories, and the distinction matters because it determines which license, which experience, and which delivery model the project actually needs. 

  • Residential. Single-family homes, condos, townhouses, multifamily. Residential contractors specialize here. General contractors with residential experience also operate in this category — and at the high end of the market, they typically dominate it. 
  • Commercial. Office, retail, hospitality, restaurants, private clubs, tenant build-outs. The top general contractors Miami owners engage are sought out for this work because of its regulatory density and the coordination required across mechanical, electrical, plumbing, life safety, and finish trades. 
  • Industrial. Factories, warehouses, distribution centers, manufacturing facilities. Specialized industrial knowledge required. 
  • Infrastructure. Roads, bridges, utilities, public works. Civil engineering and government compliance dominate; a different class of contractor than the firms that build private homes and commercial spaces. 

Residential contractors operate only in the first category. General contractors can operate across all four, though most specialize in residential plus commercial — the two categories that share construction methods, code regimes, and client profiles. In South Florida, the project types weave together more than they do elsewhere: a custom waterfront home with a private dock, a boutique hotel with a chef-driven restaurant, a family-office headquarters paired with a primary residence on the same compound. All are coordinated more cleanly by a contractor fluent in both residential and commercial code. 

The regional context tightens the requirements further. South Florida builds must address FEMA elevation mandates, hurricane-impact ratings (NOAs), Miami-Dade Product Approvals, and the permitting realities of Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties. A general contractor with regional mastery understands how sun, water, wind, and code shape every build — and structures the work accordingly. 

What Is the Difference Between CGC and CBC in Florida?

Florida regulates contractor licensing through the Department of Business and Professional Regulation, and two licenses sit at the center of the residential-versus-general distinction. 

  • CGC — Certified General Contractor. Authorizes the holder to build, repair, or alter any structure, anywhere in Florida — residential, commercial, industrial, and mixed-use. No height limit, no use restriction. 
  • CBC — Certified Building Contractor. Restricts the contractor to commercial buildings up to three stories and residential work. Useful for most home projects and small commercial; limited beyond that. 

For a principal commissioning a high-investment build, the license is the first qualification to verify. The best commercial general contractors Miami owners engage carry CGC licenses because that is what the work requires — high-rise tenant build-outs, mixed-use development, hospitality projects, and any structure outside the CBC envelope. For complex residential work — large estates, compounds, multi-structure properties — a CGC also expands the firm’s range without forcing a license-driven workaround. 

Beyond licensing, the principal should verify bonding capacity, insurance limits, prequalification status, and the firm’s specific experience in South Florida’s permitting environment. A general contractor that has never moved a project through Miami-Dade’s product approval process or a Coral Gables Board of Architects review is going to learn on your job. Avoid that. For trends shaping the commercial side of the market, see recent trends and innovations among Miami commercial general contractors.

Could I Manage the Project Myself Instead of Hiring a General Contractor?

For minor work — a paint refresh, a single-trade repair, simple landscaping — owner-management can work. Beyond that threshold, the math changes quickly. 

What an owner takes on when they self-manage: 

  • Pulling permits and managing inspections 
  • Sequencing every trade and resolving conflicts in real time 
  • Holding subcontractor schedules accountable 
  • Tracking the budget against a moving scope 
  • Carrying liability for code compliance, safety, and warranty 
  • Absorbing every delay personally 

For a high-investment residence or commercial space, the work is not realistic to self-manage — and the cost of a single mistake (a failed inspection, a sequencing error, a code miss) usually exceeds the GC’s fee multiple times over. The best general contractors compress that complexity into one contract, one schedule, and one principal-level relationship. For luxury work, especially, the value is not just construction management — it is the ability to stay in your own work while the build moves forward predictably. 

For owners who want full integration from the first sketch through move-in day, the design-build delivery model carries that further: design, architecture, engineering, permitting, and construction inside one firm, with the principal working directly with leadership rather than a project manager. For owners who already have an architect, a general contractor with the right license, regional fluency, and execution discipline carries the same delivery weight on the construction side.

For more, see “Is It Worth Getting a General Contractor?

Choosing Between a General Contractor and a Residential Contractor

The choice comes down to the project, not the title. 

For a straightforward single-family home or a smaller renovation, a residential contractor is fully equipped. For a larger residence, a compound, a commercial space, a mixed-use property, or any project requiring multi-trade sequencing, regulatory navigation, and a single point of accountability, a general contractor is the right partner. The top general contractors Miami owners hire are CGC-licensed, regionally fluent, and structured to manage complexity rather than explain it. 

The best general contractors do not make complex projects feel simple by accident. They do it through a disciplined process, accountable communication, and execution caliber that scales to the work in front of them. 

Build With Blanco

If you are weighing how to engage your next build in South Florida — either as a fully integrated design-build engagement or as a general contractor working with your architect — start with a Meet & Greet with Blanco leadership. We will walk through your site, your goals, and the delivery model that fits the project. 

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