Pinellas County Contractor List With Phone Numbers: 446 Verified Contacts From Live Building Permits (2026)
Pinellas County logged 2,891 building permits in the last 90 days, 2,173 of them in just the last 30. Riding on that feed are 446 distinct, verified contractor phone numbers across 412 active contractor profiles in the St. Petersburg and Clearwater market.
A permit is a contractor who just committed to spending money. When an owner pulls a building permit in Pinellas County, they have already chosen a project, and very often the licensed contractor who pulled it is named right on the record. For trade contractors, subs, and suppliers chasing the Tampa Bay market, that public feed is the cleanest signal of real, funded work there is.
PermitGrab tracks 2,891 Pinellas County building permits in the last 90 days ending June 19, 2026, and 2,173 of those landed in just the last 30 days — a fast, current feed, not a stale archive. Across that activity sit 446 distinct verified contractor phone numbers (431 of them on permits filed in the last 30 days alone) and 412 active contractor profiles. These are phone numbers attached to firms that are pulling permits this month in St. Petersburg, Clearwater, Largo, and the rest of the county.
What the Pinellas Permit Mix Tells You
The 90-day breakdown shows where the work is concentrated. Express building permits dominate at 1,853 filings, followed by 173 residential remodel, repair, and renovation permits, 91 residential electrical, 45 residential mechanical, 35 pool and spa, and 34 residential solar permits. That mix is a roadmap: it tells an HVAC company exactly how many mechanical jobs opened this quarter, a pool builder how much competition pulled spa permits, and a solar installer where the rooftop work is going.
Why a Contractor Phone List Beats Buying Cold Lists
A generic purchased list is a stale snapshot of every contractor in a region, most of whom are not currently working and many of whom have disconnected numbers. A permit-derived list is the opposite: every phone number is tied to a dated, address-level permit, so you know the firm is active, what trade they pull, and where. Suppliers and subs use it to reach generals who just won a job; recruiters and B2B services use it to reach firms that are demonstrably busy. The 446 numbers here are not a database dump — they are this quarter's working contractors.
Who Should Be Working Pinellas County
Subcontractors and suppliers use the contractor phone feed to reach generals the moment a project permit posts. Building-material and equipment vendors target the firms pulling the most permits by trade. HVAC, electrical, plumbing, pool, and solar specialists watch their own permit category to size the market and find partner referrals. And service businesses — insurance, bookkeeping, fleet, software — reach demonstrably active local contractors instead of buying a stale regional list.
How PermitGrab Sources Pinellas County Leads
Every permit we publish carries the property address, the permit type, the filing date, and — where the jurisdiction publishes it — the contractor of record and a verified phone number, pulled straight from Pinellas County's official permitting feed and refreshed daily. Florida is one of the better states for this: a large share of permits name the licensed contractor, which is why this market ships 446 distinct phone numbers rather than the handful you see in states that withhold contractor data.
Getting Started
To see how contractor phone lists work across markets, compare a high-coverage Texas market in our Austin contractor list with phone numbers, and see the same model in a neighboring Florida market via Tampa and Hillsborough County roofing permit leads. When you want the live Pinellas County feed in your inbox every morning, see PermitGrab pricing — one flat monthly subscription, no per-lead fees and no bidding wars — or go straight to the Pinellas County data page.