How to Choose a Window Contractor in the DMV

How to Choose a Window Contractor · A Buyer’s Guide

How to Choose a Window Contractor in the DMV The credentials to verify, the questions that protect you, and the red flags that should send you running. From a company that has installed windows the right way since 1999.

Choosing the wrong window contractor is an expensive mistake that you live with for decades. The good news is that the right one is not hard to spot once you know what to ask. Here is the honest buyer’s guide we wish every DMV homeowner had before they signed anything, even when the company they end up choosing is not us.

Quick answer

To choose a good window contractor in Virginia or Maryland, verify a current state license (VA Class A or Maryland MHIC), confirm liability insurance and manufacturer certification, read recent reviews, and get a fixed written estimate with itemized scope. Then ask three questions that separate pros from salespeople: is this a retrofit or full-frame install, is foam insulation around the frame included, and is the price on the estimate the price on the final invoice. Walk away from “today only” pricing, large upfront deposits, and quotes that hide the trim and sealing as add-ons.

Verify these first

The Credentials That Actually Matter

Before you talk price, confirm the basics. Any legitimate DMV window contractor will show you these without hesitation.

State License

In Virginia, look for a Class A contractor license. In Maryland, look for an MHIC number. You can verify both with the state. DreamHome holds VA Class A #2705060193 and MHIC #86964.

Insurance

The contractor should carry general liability and workers’ compensation insurance, and be willing to show proof. If a crew is hurt on your property and the company is uninsured, that can become your problem.

Manufacturer Certification

A certification like ProVia Master Installer means the crew is trained on the exact product and your warranty is backed by an install the manufacturer stands behind. It is earned, not bought.

Verify the license yourself. You can check a Virginia contractor license through the Virginia DPOR license lookup and a Maryland home improvement license through the Maryland MHIC license search. It takes two minutes and tells you a lot.
Ask every contractor

Seven Questions That Protect You

Print these and ask each company the same ones. The answers, and how comfortable they are answering, tell you everything.

Is this a retrofit or a full-frame installation?

A pro knows immediately and explains why your home needs one or the other. Retrofit keeps a sound existing frame. Full-frame goes to the rough opening and is required when frames are rotted or you are resizing. If they cannot tell you which one they are quoting, they have not really looked at your home.

Good answer: a clear choice with a reason behind it.

Is foam insulation around the frame included?

This is the single most revealing question. A window set without foam insulation around the frame leaks air and lets moisture into the wall cavity, which is how rot starts behind brand new trim. Many cheap quotes quietly skip the foam. With us it is always included on every window.

Good answer: yes, always, on every window.

Is the price on the estimate the price on the final invoice?

A fixed written estimate means no surprises. Be wary of any company whose number moves between the quote and the bill, or who needs to call a manager to “approve” a price. The number on the page should be the number on the invoice.

Good answer: yes, the written estimate is the price.

Does the quote include trim, exterior wrap, and disposal?

Headline per-window prices sometimes exclude interior trim, exterior aluminum wrap, and hauling away the old windows, then add them later. Ask for an itemized estimate so you can compare apples to apples between contractors.

Good answer: itemized scope with nothing hidden.

What warranty do I get, and is it transferable?

There are two warranties that matter: the manufacturer’s product warranty and the contractor’s workmanship warranty. Ask about both. ProVia’s lifetime warranty transfers to the next owner if you sell, which protects your resale value.

Good answer: both warranties explained, in writing.

Who actually does the install, employees or subcontractors?

It is a fair question. You want to know who will be in your home and whether they are trained and certified on the product. There is nothing wrong with a good crew, but you deserve to know who is setting your windows and that they stand behind the work.

Good answer: a straight, confident answer.

How long have you been doing this in the DMV?

Experience in our specific region matters. A local contractor has seen the rotted frames, lead paint, asbestos putty, historic-district rules, and HOA restrictions that come with DMV homes. DreamHome started in replacement windows in 1999, so we have seen what surprises newer crews.

Good answer: years of local, verifiable track record.
Trust your gut

Red Flags vs. Green Flags

Red Flags: Walk Away

  • “Today only” pricing that vanishes if you do not sign now
  • Four-hour high-pressure sales presentations
  • Quotes that start sky-high and “drop” with manager calls
  • Large upfront deposits of 30 to 50 percent
  • No state license number on the contract
  • Cannot or will not show proof of insurance
  • Foam sealing and trim listed as surprise add-ons
  • Pressure to sign before you get other estimates
  • Cash-only or no written contract

Green Flags: Good Sign

  • A fixed written estimate you can take a week to review
  • State license and insurance offered without being asked
  • Manufacturer certification on the product they sell
  • Itemized scope including foam, trim, wrap, and disposal
  • Honest answer on retrofit vs. full-frame for your home
  • Recent, verifiable reviews from local homeowners
  • Reasonable, modest deposit terms
  • Comfortable with you getting other quotes
  • Both product and workmanship warranties in writing

“The window business has more high-pressure sales theater than almost any trade. The premium brands fly a salesperson out, run a four-hour presentation, start at a crazy number, and walk you down with manager calls until you feel like you won. You did not win. That spread was the plan. My advice to every homeowner, even the ones who do not hire us, is simple: get a fixed written estimate, take a week, and compare line by line. Anyone who will not let you do that is telling you who they are.”

Lenny Scarola, Founder, DreamHome RemodelingProVia Master Installer · Founded 1999 · Locally owned
Choosing a contractor questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I verify a window contractor’s license in Virginia or Maryland?
In Virginia, look up the contractor’s Class A license through the Virginia Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation (DPOR) license lookup. In Maryland, search the contractor’s MHIC number through the Maryland Department of Labor’s home improvement license search. Both checks are free, take a couple of minutes, and confirm the license is current and in good standing. DreamHome holds VA Class A #2705060193 and MHIC #86964.
What is the most important question to ask a window installer?
Ask whether foam insulation around the frame is included on every window. It is the most revealing question because many low quotes quietly skip it, and a window set without that foam leaks air and lets moisture into the wall, which causes rot behind new trim. A quality contractor includes the foam as standard, never as a surprise add-on.
How many window quotes should I get?
Get at least two or three. Make sure each estimate is itemized so you are comparing the same scope, including the window line, glass package, foam sealing, trim, exterior wrap, and disposal. A good contractor is comfortable with you shopping around and will give you a fixed written estimate you can review at your own pace, with no pressure to sign on the spot.
Is a large upfront deposit normal for window replacement?
A modest deposit is normal because your windows are custom-built to order. A demand for 30 to 50 percent upfront is a red flag. Reputable contractors ask for a reasonable deposit to start the manufacturing order, then bill the balance as the work is completed. Be cautious with anyone who wants most of the money before any work begins.
Why does local DMV experience matter for window installation?
DMV homes come with specific challenges: rotted frames hidden behind painted trim, lead paint in pre-1978 homes, asbestos glazing putty on older windows, historic-district rules, and HOA color and style restrictions. A contractor with deep local experience has seen these and knows how to handle them, so your project does not stall when something unexpected turns up. DreamHome has been replacing DMV windows since 1999.
What warranties should a window contractor provide?
Two. The manufacturer’s product warranty covers the window itself, and on ProVia it is a lifetime warranty that transfers to the next owner if you sell. The contractor’s workmanship warranty covers the installation. Get both in writing. A manufacturer certification like ProVia Master Installer also means the install meets the standard required to keep the full product warranty valid.
Free written estimate · Northern Virginia & Maryland

Put Us to the Test with These Questions

Ask us all seven. We will give you straight answers, a fixed written estimate, and a week to compare line by line. Licensed, insured, ProVia Master Installer. 4.9 stars across 712+ reviews. Locally owned, with offices in Springfield VA and Hanover MD.