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    Top 10 Montana cities by population. Select your city to see rated pros.

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    Cornerstone Home Pros

    Featured

    "Licensed handyman and home repair specialists."

    230 S 500 E, Salt Lake City, UT 84102
    4.8(1,092 reviews)
    cornerstonehomepros.com
    License UT-GC-44820

    Up to 5 home services company slots available in Montana. This is a separate advertising program from city directory listings.

    Cost Guide

    Home services pros Cost Guide for Montana

    Here's a quick read on what most Montana homeowners pay for home services work in 2026. Local labor in Montana runs about 2% above the national average, so the table below shows the national-average band next to a Montana-adjusted band you can use as a real-world benchmark.

    Service National Avg (2026) Montana Avg (2026)
    Service call / diagnostic$75 to $150$75 to $155
    Hourly labor rate$60 to $140 depending on the trade$60 to $145 depending on the trade
    Handyman small project (half day)$280 to $560$290 to $570
    Whole-home interior repaint (2,000 sqft)$3,500 to $8,500$3,550 to $8,700

    What pushes Montana prices up or down

    • Labor pool. A small contractor pool stretched across a huge state means scheduling ahead matters.
    • Climate factors. Deep cold, dry summers, and big freeze-thaw cycles adds wear and complicates scheduling around weather windows.
    • Permits and inspections. Contractors with employees must register with the state. Permitting happens at the city or county level.
    • Access and travel. Rural counties usually see a trip charge added on top of the labor estimate.

    Always ask for an itemized estimate. A quote on the phone is a starting point, not a promise. Browse home services pros in your city above to compare real local pricing.

    Regulations & Licensing

    Regulations and Licensing for Home services pros in Montana

    Montana doesn't run a single statewide license for every home services pro, but the Montana Department of Labor and Industry (contractor registration) oversees several pieces of the trade. Most permitting and inspections happen at the city or county level, so rules can shift block by block.

    Best practices that protect you

    • Match the credential to the job. Small repairs are fine for a handyman, but plumbing and electrical should go to a licensed trade.
    • Confirm general liability coverage and ask for proof.
    • Get an itemized written estimate that lists labor, materials, and timeline.
    • Ask about workmanship guarantees on bigger projects.
    • Confirm the company carries general liability coverage and ask for a copy.
    • Check whether your city requires a permit for the specific job you're hiring out.

    Why local matters

    Contractors with employees must register with the state. Permitting happens at the city or county level. A home services pro who works your zip code every week already knows the local inspector and the quirks of your housing stock. That saves you time and rework.

    Recent Trends

    Recent Home Trends in Montana

    Montana homeowners are spending differently in 2026 than they were five years ago. A small contractor pool stretched across a huge state means scheduling ahead matters. A few patterns keep showing up in quotes and project lists.

    What's hot right now

    • Bozeman-area new builds tied to in-migration
    • ICF construction for energy savings
    • wildfire-resistant siding and Class A roofs
    • garage organization and storage builds

    Trends matter because they shape lead times. When everyone in the neighborhood wants the same upgrade, schedules tighten and material costs creep up. If a project on this list is on your radar, it's smart to get on a home services pro's calendar early in the season.

    State Guide

    Home Services in Montana: What Every Homeowner Should Know

    The Most-Used Home Services in Montana

    Owning a home in Montana keeps you busy. Between big temperature swings and dry air and the everyday wear most houses see, you'll likely call on a handyman, painter, or appliance repair tech more than once a year. Other steady favorites include fencing, flooring, garage door repair, locksmith service, pool care, moving help, and the occasional general contractor for bigger projects.

    Most jobs fall into two buckets: small fixes that pile up, and bigger improvements that move the value of your home. Knowing which pro to call saves you time and usually money.

    Why Montana Homes Need Reliable Pros

    Local conditions matter. Montana deals with heavy snow and wildfire smoke, which puts real stress on roofs, fences, doors, paint, and even appliances. A good local pro understands these patterns and plans the work accordingly. They know which materials hold up, which products fade fast, and which seasons are smart for outdoor jobs like painting or fence work.

    Typical Costs to Expect

    Home services pricing in Montana can range a lot depending on the trade. Handyman work usually runs $60 to $125 an hour or a flat $200 to $600 for small jobs. Interior painting often falls between $2 and $6 per square foot, while fence installs can run $20 to $45 a linear foot depending on material.

    Appliance repair calls are typically $90 to $200 plus parts. Garage door repair averages $150 to $400, and a full opener replacement can hit $500 to $900. Locksmith calls usually run $80 to $250. Pool service runs $100 to $200 a month for routine care. Moving costs vary widely with distance and crew size, and a general contractor managing a remodel may take 10 to 20 percent of total project cost.

    One-Off Project vs Ongoing Service

    Some jobs are clearly one-and-done, like rekeying a lock, swapping a garage door spring, or refinishing a floor. Others, like pool service or seasonal handyman packages, work better on a recurring schedule. Recurring service often costs less per visit and helps you catch small issues before they become expensive ones.

    How to Vet a Home Services Pro in Montana

    Start with reviews from local homeowners and look for clear, written estimates that spell out labor, materials, and timeline. Ask how long the company has been working in Montana and whether they offer any kind of workmanship guarantee. Good pros communicate well, show up on time, and don't push you toward upgrades you don't need.

    For larger projects like remodels, fence installs, or new flooring, get two or three quotes so you can compare scope. Use our directory to connect with trusted home services pros near you.