Hiring a general contractor in Scottsdale is not the same as hiring one anywhere else. The projects are larger, the finish expectations are higher, and the stakes of choosing the wrong firm are significant. A $600,000 remodel that goes sideways because of a contractor handoff problem, an unlicensed subcontractor, or a design intent that never made it to the build team costs far more than the contractor's fee. This guide covers the seven things every Scottsdale homeowner should verify before signing a contract with a luxury general contractor.
1. Verify the Arizona ROC License Before You Sign Anything
Arizona requires general contractors to hold an active license through the Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC). Before hiring any GC for a residential project in Scottsdale, go to roc.az.gov and search the contractor's license number or business name. Confirm the license is active, covers the scope of your project (residential contractor vs. commercial), and has no open complaints or disciplinary actions on file.
This is not a formality. An unlicensed contractor cannot legally pull permits, cannot hire licensed subcontractors as contractor of record, and cannot be held to the same standards as a licensed firm if something goes wrong. For any project involving structural work, plumbing, electrical, or HVAC, the permit requirement alone makes a licensed GC non-negotiable.
Living with Lolo holds Arizona General Contractor License ROC #347577, which you can verify directly on the ROC website. That license is the legal foundation of every construction project we manage.
2. Ask Who Actually Pulls the Permits
Permit responsibility tells you who is legally accountable for the work. The licensed contractor of record is the party who pulls permits, which means they are responsible to the city for code compliance on every phase of the project. If a GC says the homeowner should pull their own permits, or if they are vague about who handles this, that is a red flag.
In Scottsdale, permits are required for virtually any significant remodel: structural modifications, kitchen reconfiguration, bathroom additions, window enlargements, pool construction, ADU additions, and more. A contractor who suggests skipping permits to save time or money is exposing you to significant liability, including the possibility of having to undo completed work if an unpermitted project is discovered during a future sale.
On every qualifying high-end remodel in Scottsdale, Living with Lolo pulls permits as a standard part of project management. You do not need to track this. It is included.
3. Understand Who You Are Hiring: Firm vs. Broker
Some companies market themselves as general contractors but function more as project brokers: they take your contract and subcontract the entire project to other firms. The original company you hired is not the one managing your build day to day.
Ask directly: Does your firm employ project managers and superintendents, or do you subcontract that role? Who is your day-to-day site representative? Who is accountable if a subcontractor causes a problem or misses a deadline?
A true full-service general contractor maintains ongoing relationships with trusted subcontractors, has a dedicated project manager on your job, and holds contractor-of-record responsibility from start to finish. That accountability structure is what protects your project and your investment.
4. Look for Demonstrated Experience With High-End Finishes and Complex Scopes
Luxury residential construction is not the same as standard residential construction. Working with imported stone slabs, custom millwork, specialty tile, engineered hardwood in large formats, and high-end appliance packages requires a team that has done it before. The tolerances for error are tighter, the lead times on materials are longer, and the cost of getting it wrong is higher.
Ask to see projects with a similar scope to yours. Ask for before-and-after photos. Ask whether the contractor completed the work exactly as designed or whether the design was compromised due to construction constraints. The best contractors find solutions that preserve the design intent. Less experienced contractors default to whatever is easiest for the build team.
Our portfolio includes whole-home renovations, kitchen remodels, primary suite expansions, and new construction fit-outs across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, and DC Ranch. The design and the build on every project were managed by the same team, which is why the finished results match the concept presentations.
5. Ask How Design and Construction Are Coordinated
This is where most Scottsdale remodels lose money and time. When the designer and the general contractor are two separate companies, every decision requires communication across that gap. A finish material the designer specified gets substituted by the GC without telling anyone. A wall gets framed before the designer has confirmed exact placement of outlets and fixtures. A millwork drawing gets handed to the cabinetmaker without the context of how the adjacent tile runs.
These are not hypothetical problems. They are the most common source of change orders, budget overruns, and schedule delays on luxury residential projects. And every one of them is a coordination failure between design intent and construction execution.
The design-build model solves this at the structural level. When one firm holds both the design credential and the contractor's license, the person who designed your kitchen is also the person overseeing its construction. There is no handoff gap. Read more about why hiring a licensed GC and interior designer together changes the outcome of a project.
6. Understand the Contract Structure Before You Sign
A well-structured contract protects both parties and keeps the project on track. Before signing with any general contractor in Scottsdale, confirm the contract clearly covers: scope of work (what is included and what is not), payment schedule tied to project milestones rather than a fixed calendar, change order policy with a clear process for documenting and pricing changes, schedule with defined start and completion dates, and warranty terms for labor and materials.
Be cautious of contracts that are vague about scope, that do not define a change order process, or that ask for a large upfront payment with no milestone-based structure. The payment structure in particular reflects how the contractor manages cash flow, and a firm that needs more than 10 to 20 percent upfront before work begins is often financing one project from another client's money.
At Living with Lolo, we use a single contract that covers both design and construction. Clients know what the project costs, how payments are structured, and what triggers a change order before we begin. Our process is built around transparency from day one.
7. Check References From Projects With a Similar Scope
Ask for three to five references from completed projects within the last two years. Specifically ask for references from projects with a similar scope to yours in terms of budget, type of work, and finish level. A contractor who is excellent at $150,000 kitchen remodels may not have the systems or subcontractor relationships to manage a $900,000 whole-home renovation.
When you call references, ask: Did the project finish on or near the original timeline? Were change orders clearly communicated before they were executed? Did the finished result match what was presented in the design? How was communication throughout the process? Would you hire them again?
The answers to those questions tell you more than any marketing material can.
What Makes Living with Lolo Different as a Luxury General Contractor in Scottsdale
Living with Lolo is the only luxury interior design firm in Scottsdale that is also a licensed Arizona general contractor (ROC #347577). Lauren Lerner holds both credentials, which means the person designing your home is the same person accountable for the construction. One contract. One point of contact. Design and build managed by the same team from concept through certificate of occupancy.
We have been named Phoenix Magazine Best Interior Design three consecutive years (2024, 2025, and 2026) and recognized by Architectural Digest, House Beautiful, Vogue, The Wall Street Journal, and GQ. Our clients are CEOs, entrepreneurs, professional athletes, and busy families who do not have time to manage a renovation themselves. They hand the project to us and return to a finished home.
If you are planning a high-end home remodel in Scottsdale or North Scottsdale and want to understand how a design-build approach changes the experience, book a complimentary discovery call here.
For a full cost breakdown of what luxury remodels cost in this market, see our Scottsdale luxury interior design cost guide.
Ready to Talk Through Your Project?
Living with Lolo is a full-service luxury interior design and design-build firm serving Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Arcadia, and the greater Phoenix metro. We hold an active Arizona ROC general contractor license and an interior design credential, which means we manage your entire project under one roof.
If you are planning a remodel, new construction project, or full furnishing and want to talk through what that looks like with a licensed Scottsdale general contractor, book a complimentary 15-minute discovery call.
Learn about our full-service approach →
Lauren Lerner is the founder and principal designer of Living with Lolo. She holds an Arizona interior design credential and General Contractor License ROC #347577. Her work has been featured in Architectural Digest, House Beautiful, Vogue, The Wall Street Journal, and GQ.
Related Resources
- General contractor services in Scottsdale, AZ
- High-end home remodel in Scottsdale
- Why hiring a licensed GC and interior designer together changes the outcome
- How much does luxury interior design cost in Scottsdale?
- Scottsdale kitchen remodeling
- Full-service design and build process
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a luxury general contractor in Scottsdale?
A luxury general contractor in Scottsdale is a licensed Arizona contractor (ROC-licensed) who manages high-end residential remodels and new construction. They pull permits, coordinate licensed subcontractors, and hold legal contractor-of-record responsibility for the build. A design-build firm like Living with Lolo holds both a GC license (ROC #347577) and an interior design credential under one roof.
How do I verify a general contractor's license in Arizona?
Go to roc.az.gov and search by license number or business name. A valid license will show as active with no open complaints. Living with Lolo's license is ROC #347577.
What should I ask a general contractor before hiring them in Scottsdale?
Ask to see their active Arizona ROC license. Ask who pulls permits. Ask for references from similar-scope projects. Ask how design and construction are coordinated if they are separate firms. Ask for a written contract that defines scope, payment milestones, and change order policy.
What is the difference between a general contractor and a design-build firm?
A general contractor manages construction only. A design-build firm holds both a contractor's license and a design credential, eliminating the handoff gap between designer and GC. Living with Lolo is a design-build firm: the same team that designs your project holds the license and manages the build.
Does a general contractor need to pull permits for a Scottsdale remodel?
Yes. Any project involving structural changes, plumbing relocation, electrical upgrades, or HVAC modifications requires permits pulled by a licensed Arizona general contractor. At Living with Lolo, permit management is included on every qualifying project under ROC #347577.
How much does a luxury general contractor charge in Scottsdale?
For a full-service design-build engagement, total project investment in Scottsdale typically ranges from $350,000 to over $1.2 million depending on scope and finish level. See our full cost guide for a detailed breakdown.
What the Data Shows About Renovation Spending in Scottsdale
Lauren Lerner is the founder and principal designer of Living with Lolo, Scottsdale’s luxury interior design and licensed design-build firm. Named Phoenix Magazine Best Interior Design three consecutive years, Lauren leads projects from concept through construction for high-end homes in Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, and Phoenix.