Window & Door Subcontractors in Florida
67 Florida-licensed window & door subcontractors statewide. Sign in to see phone and email and invite a sub to bid on your RFQ.
Window and door subcontractors furnish and install exterior openings — impact-rated windows, storefront systems, sliding glass doors, entry doors, and the related hardware, thresholds, flashing, and perimeter sealants. On Florida commercial and multifamily jobs the scope is shaped by hurricane code: products typically carry Florida Product Approval or, in the high-velocity hurricane zone, a Miami-Dade NOA. The trade is related to but usually scoped separately from glazing and is coordinated with framing, waterproofing, and exterior finishes.
What GCs ask for
A window-and-door RFQ usually references the architectural plans, the door and window schedules, and any storefront elevations, with a clear scope: opening count and sizes, product series and finish, impact rating or NOA where required, hardware sets, and flashing or buck details. For bid prep a GC typically wants the quote broken out by opening type, confirmation the sub priced to the schedule and product-approval requirements, and a note on whether the quote includes anchors, sealants, and the operable-window screens. Lead times for impact and storefront product are usually called out.
Browse window & door subs by metro
Licensing in Florida
Window and exterior door installation is not a state-licensed trade in Florida — there is no statewide DBPR window-and-door-installation license the way there is for electrical or plumbing work. Instead, installers are regulated at the county or municipal level: many jurisdictions require a specialty competency card or contractor registration, and general-liability insurance (a current certificate of insurance) is the baseline a GC should confirm. Product selection is separately governed by Florida Product Approval and, in the high-velocity hurricane zone, Miami-Dade NOA — those are product credentials, not contractor licenses. Window-and-door subs in this directory earn their verified status through the insurance path rather than a license upload.
Common questions
Do window and door installers in Florida need a state license?
No. Florida has no statewide window-and-door installation license. The trade is regulated locally — most counties and cities require a specialty competency card or registration, plus general-liability insurance.
What about HVHZ and Florida Product Approval?
Those are product credentials, not contractor licenses. In the high-velocity hurricane zone, windows and doors must carry a Miami-Dade NOA; elsewhere in the state, Florida Product Approval governs. A GC should confirm the proposed products match the project's wind zone and the architect's schedule.
What should a GC include in a window-and-door RFQ?
The door and window schedules, opening count and sizes, product series and finish, impact rating or NOA where required, hardware sets, flashing or buck details, and whether anchors, sealants, and screens are included.
Can I invite a window-and-door sub to bid on Sunstate Trades?
Yes. GCs post an RFQ and invite matched subs by trade and service area; invited subs are notified and can submit a bid for your bid prep.
Why do some subs show Insurance Verified instead of License Verified?
The badge reflects what was reviewed: a verified state license earns License Verified; a verified certificate of insurance earns Insurance Verified; both earn the Verified Pro umbrella. For trades with no state license, like window-and-door installation, the certificate of insurance is the credential subs upload, so Insurance Verified is the natural badge for the trade.