Location
Merrill Home Improvements Concrete Contractor
Merrill Home Improvements, LLC at West Jordan, UT 84081, held a Concrete Contractor license (#10768628-5501) with the Utah contractors license board with an expiration date of 11-30-2021. We last verified the license was expired on 09-18-2022.
Their BuildZoom score is 0 because we haven’t been able to verify an active license. As a result, they’re not ranked in the top 50% of 74,376 Utah contractors.
If you’re thinking about hiring them, we recommend double-checking their license status with your local licensing authority. Alternatively, use our project planner to be easily matched to qualified, licensed professionals in your area.
Merrill Home Improvements, LLC Services
Merrill Home Improvements, LLC Contact Information
Do you work for this business? Unlock this free profile to update company info and see who's viewing your profile.
Merrill Home Improvements, LLC Reviews
2 out of 5 stars, based on
1
review
-
By David Y.February 1, 2021
Similar Contractors See more
Recent Buildzoom Projects
Merrill Home Improvements, LLC License info
Inactive License
| License # | 10768628-5501 |
| Status | Inactive |
| State | Utah |
| Type | S260 Asphalt And Concrete Qualifier, R101 Res & Small Comm Nonstructural |
- According to the Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing, the status of this license was at one point cancelled. However, this information may have changed. If this is your business, please update your license status.
Check this license's status for Merrill Home Improvements, LLC at the Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing.
This is a sample of licensing data; click here to access a complete history.
ALERT*
BuildZoom Score
- How the BuildZoom Score works
- *No active license on file. If you are Merrill Home Improvements, LLC, click “This is My Business” to update your information.
Ryan, the owner, was a hard worker but, regrettably, sloppy. He tore out and replaced a sidewalk and driveway and most of the work was well done. BUT, he damaged an asphalt section abutting the driveway and then used the wobbly edge of the asphalt as the form for the driveway. Even though the edge was very uneven and anything but straight, he used a finishing edging trowel to form the concrete so it faithfully followed every uneven meander of the asphalt, proving he knew how sloppy the finished work would be, leaving a very disappointing result that is now, literally, etched in stone. :o(