Trade licensing overview · auto body technician
How auto body technician licensing works — Georgia
How this trade is regulated in Georgia. none-in-pilot-states The framework below describes the national pathway most auto body technicians in Georgia follow.
Auto body repair is generally not a state-licensed occupation at the technician level; most techs work under a shop-level registration or license issued to the collision facility. Professional standing typically comes from ASE Collision Repair series certifications, I-CAR role-based credentialing, and the federally required EPA Section 609 credential for servicing motor-vehicle air conditioning.
STATE LICENSE STATUS
No pilot state (TX, CA, FL, NY, IL) issues a person-level auto-body technician license. Licensing is usually directed at the facility, not the individual: California requires registration of automotive repair dealers through the Bureau of Automotive Repair (https://www.bar.ca.gov), New York licenses motor-vehicle repair shops through the DMV (https://dmv.ny.gov/more-info/motor-vehicle-repair-shop-registration), Florida registers motor-vehicle repair shops through the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (https://www.fdacs.gov/Consumer-Resources/Motor-Vehicles-and-Boats/Motor-Vehicle-Repair), and Illinois does not require a statewide body-shop license. A small number of states, notably Michigan, Rhode Island, and Hawaii, tie shop licensing to certification of the technicians themselves; Michigan's Motor Vehicle Service and Repair Act requires each specialty-certified mechanic to hold a state mechanic certification in the categories the shop performs (https://www.michigan.gov/sos/all-services/business-services/mechanic). Verify the rule for a given address with the state Motor Vehicle department or equivalent before relying on it. The BLS OOH entry for automotive body and glass repairers describes no uniform state licensing (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/installation-maintenance-and-repair/automotive-body-and-glass-repairers.htm).
ASE CERTIFICATIONS
The National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence (ASE) administers the Collision Repair & Refinish (B-series) certification tests (https://www.ase.com/test-series). The series covers B2 Painting and Refinishing, B3 Non-Structural Analysis and Damage Repair, B4 Structural Analysis and Damage Repair, B5 Mechanical and Electrical Components, and B6 Damage Analysis and Estimating. A technician who holds current B2, B3, B4, and B5 certifications earns ASE Master Collision Repair and Refinish Technician status (https://www.ase.com/test-series). ASE certifications are valid for five years and require retesting to renew, with a documented work-experience prerequisite (https://www.ase.com/press-releases/ase-testing-recertification).
I-CAR TRAINING
I-CAR (Inter-Industry Conference on Auto Collision Repair) issues role-based credentials used by many insurer Direct Repair Program (DRP) networks (https://www.i-car.com). Individual training roles include Non-Structural Technician, Structural Technician, Refinish Technician, Steel Structural Technician, Aluminum Structural Technician, Mechanical Technician, and Damage Analyst (https://www.i-car.com/s/professional-development-and-training). Platinum Individual status recognizes a technician who has completed the required I-CAR courses for their role and maintains annual training hours (https://www.i-car.com/s/platinum). Gold Class is a shop-level designation awarded when a shop's required roles all hold current Platinum status and the shop meets the ongoing training requirement (https://info.i-car.com/gold-class). I-CAR credentials rely on annual continuing education and do not carry a state fee.
EPA 609 — MOTOR VEHICLE AC
Clean Air Act Section 609 requires any technician who services motor-vehicle air conditioning (MVAC) for compensation to be certified by an EPA-approved program (https://www.epa.gov/mvac/section-609-technician-training-and-certification-programs). Approved proctors include the Mobile Air Climate Systems Association (https://macsmobileairclimate.org/certification/), ASE (https://www.ase.org), and other organizations listed by EPA (https://www.epa.gov/mvac/section-609-technician-training-and-certification-programs). The credential is a one-time federal certification with no renewal requirement, but purchasing refrigerant in containers smaller than 20 lb requires proof of 609 certification at point of sale (https://www.epa.gov/mvac/stratospheric-ozone-refrigerant-sales-restrictions-motor-vehicle-air-conditioner-mvac).
TYPICAL PATHWAY
Entry pathways documented by the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook include postsecondary collision-repair programs at technical colleges, DOL-registered apprenticeships, and direct hire as a detailer or prep technician with on-the-job training (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/installation-maintenance-and-repair/automotive-body-and-glass-repairers.htm). The DOL RAPIDS apprenticeship finder lists registered collision-repair programs by ZIP code (https://www.apprenticeship.gov/apprenticeship-job-finder). OEM-specific training is increasingly required to work on late-model vehicles with bonded aluminum bodies, high-strength steel, and ADAS sensors; manufacturer programs include the Ford Accelerated Credential Training for Employment (Ford ACE / Ford ASSET) program (https://www.ford.com/dealerships/learn/become-a-tech/), the GM Automotive Service Educational Program (GM ASEP) (https://www.gm.com/careers/students/asep), and Tesla's START program (https://www.tesla.com/careers/programs).