Rules (5)
- rule Rule: never describe RenoMark as a "warranty program", "certification", "license", "regulator", or "guarantee" — use CHBA's own framing ("recognition program", "Code of Conduct", "Renovators' Mark of Excellence")
- rule Rule (renovator client sites): link the RenoMark logo to the contractor's renomark.ca profile AND show "RenoMark Verified 20YY" beside it — the highest-leverage tweaks almost nobody does
- rule Rule (renovator client sites): build a dedicated `/renomark` page with the verbatim 10-point Code and the current-year certificate image
- rule Rule (renovator client sites): display RenoMark in the footer affiliations strip with equal visual weight to local HBA, BBB, HomeStars, Houzz
- rule Rule: before trusting any RenoMark claim, verify the contractor on renomark.ca — directory presence is the only public proof
Reference entries (21)
- reference WRHBA member benefits: advocacy, networking, education, RenoMark eligibility, SAM Awards, plus the WRHBA Advantage Program (UPS shipping, Sarmazian Brothers flooring, Pioneer Craftsmen project credits)
- reference RenoMark display patterns across 12 Ontario renovator sites (sampled 2026-05-24): logo almost always in footer; year + member number almost never shown; logos almost never link to profile
- reference Canadians for Properly Built Homes (CPBH): industry self-regulation in residential construction has inherent conflicts of interest
- reference RenoMark enforcement: no public dispute-resolution procedure document, no public disciplinary statistics, no public list of de-listed contractors
- reference CHBA "Renovate Right. Renovate Now. RenoMark." Renovation Month campaign — October 2025
- reference CHBA Renovation Market Index inaugural release (Mar 11 2026): H2 2025 RMI = 48.3/100, Future Conditions = 35.2, >70% of renovators concerned about 2026
- reference CHBA: Canadian residential renovation/maintenance/repair sector = $105.5B nominal spend in 2023, ~526,000 jobs, $36.9B wages
- reference Clever Real Estate 2024 contractor-choice survey (n=1,000 US homeowners, Aug 14–16 2024): reputation 25%, experience 23%, cost 19%, recommendations 13%, availability 11%
- reference BBB Canada 2022 Scamtracker Risk Report (n=1,297): home improvement ranked #1 riskiest scam in Canada; 78.8% susceptibility; $1,900 CAD median loss (+187% YoY)
- reference HomeStars September 2021 Reno Report (n=1,103, Angus Reid Forum): >98% of Canadian homeowners read reviews before making a purchasing decision
- reference NARI (US) vs RenoMark (Canada): NARI has individual professional certifications with exams + 5y experience + 12 accredited companies total; RenoMark is company-level attestation
- reference Contractor trust signals compared: RenoMark vs BBB, HomeStars, Houzz, GuildQuality, Google reviews, BILD/OHBA/CHBA awards, Tarion/HCRA
- reference The Tarion gap: Tarion warranty covers new homes by HCRA-licensed builders, NOT most renovations — RenoMark's 2-year workmanship warranty is the only standardized warranty most Ontario renovation clients will see
- reference WRHBA RenoMark: 16 verified renovators, mandatory for any WRHBA renovator-category member (verified 2026-05-24)
- reference RenoMark is NOT a warranty provider, NOT an insurance scheme, NOT an arbitration tribunal — the 2-year warranty is a contractor obligation only
- reference RenoMark verification: 3-step online process (Code attestation + document upload + Licensing Agreement); now annual
- reference RenoMark Code of Conduct — 10 points, verbatim (current as of 2026-05-24)
- reference CHBA scale: 1,200+ RenoMark members (2023, possibly stale); ~8,500 CHBA member firms across Canada (October 2025)
- reference RenoMark governance: policy set by CHBA's Canadian Renovators' Council (CRC); no independent appeals panel or consumer rep
- reference RenoMark origin: launched 2001 by BILD (then GTHBA); trademark transferred from BILD-GTA to CHBA in June 2024
- reference Research brief: RenoMark — the CHBA renovation contractor recognition program, with marketing implications for Ontario renovators (May 24, 2026)