Maryland Structural Engineer License Guide: PE Exam, Firm Permits, and Renewal

Mar 12, 2026Arnold L.

Maryland Structural Engineer License Guide: PE Exam, Firm Permits, and Renewal

Structural engineers play a central role in safe construction. In Maryland, that means more than strong technical skills. If you want to sign and seal engineering work, you must meet the state's professional engineering licensing rules, keep your credentials current, and ensure any business entity you use is properly permitted.

This guide explains how structural engineers can qualify for licensure in Maryland, what the current exam path looks like, when a firm permit is required, and how renewal works. It also highlights the compliance steps engineering firms should track so they can stay in good standing while focusing on projects.

What Structural Engineers Do

Structural engineers evaluate how a building, bridge, addition, or other structure will respond to loads, environmental conditions, and long-term use. Their work may include:

  • Designing load-bearing systems
  • Reviewing drawings and specifications
  • Analyzing wind, gravity, seismic, and other forces
  • Selecting structural materials and connection details
  • Checking that a project satisfies safety and code requirements
  • Signing and sealing engineering documents when authorized to do so

Because their work affects public safety, structural engineering is regulated closely. In Maryland, the key credential is the Professional Engineer, or PE, license.

Do Structural Engineers Need a Maryland License?

Yes, if they want to practice engineering in a licensed capacity and sign or seal documents in the state.

Maryland licenses professional engineers rather than issuing a separate discipline-specific PE license. That means the state reviews your education, experience, and examination history under the engineering licensure rules, rather than issuing a standalone structural title.

That distinction matters. A structural engineer may work in structural design and analysis, but the authority to practice comes from holding the appropriate Maryland PE license and staying compliant with all state requirements.

If you are operating through a company, the company may also need a firm permit. A PE license for the individual does not replace the firm-level requirement.

Maryland PE Licensure Path for Structural Engineers

Maryland offers several routes to qualify for the Professional Engineers examination. The exact path depends on your education and experience.

1. ABET-Approved Engineering Degree Path

A common route is:

  • A four-year engineering degree approved by the Board
  • Four years of qualifying engineering experience
  • Passing the required examinations

This path is often the most straightforward for recent graduates and engineers who followed a traditional academic route.

2. Non-Approved or Foreign Curriculum Path

If your engineering degree was not approved by the Board, Maryland allows a different experience-based route. In general, this path requires:

  • A four-year engineering degree or equivalent that the Board has not approved
  • Eight years of qualifying engineering experience
  • Passing the required examinations

This option is important for engineers with international education or nontraditional academic backgrounds.

3. Experience-Based Path

Maryland also recognizes an experience-only route in certain cases. Under this option, an applicant may qualify with:

  • At least 12 years of engineering work experience
  • At least five years in responsible charge
  • A showing that the overall experience demonstrates competence to practice engineering

As of October 1, 2025, Maryland requires applicants for a professional engineering license to pass both the Fundamentals of Engineering exam and the Principles and Practice of Engineering exam. That change is important because older guidance sometimes described experience-based exceptions differently.

FE and PE Exams in Maryland

Exam requirements are the core of the licensure process.

Fundamentals of Engineering Exam

The FE exam is usually the first exam in the licensing sequence. In Maryland:

  • Board approval is not required to take the FE exam
  • The exam is administered year-round through NCEES-approved Pearson VUE test centers
  • Passing the FE exam is part of the EIT credential path
  • The FE exam alone does not authorize practice as a PE

If you are planning to become a licensed structural engineer, the FE exam is the starting point for most candidates.

Principles and Practice of Engineering Exam

The PE exam is the key professional licensure exam. In Maryland:

  • You must apply through the Board for exam approval
  • The application for first-time candidates is due 120 days before the exam date
  • Exam registration and payment are handled directly through NCEES
  • Maryland does not license PE holders by discipline

That last point is especially important for structural engineers. Maryland evaluates licensure under its professional engineering rules, and NCEES determines the exam administration details.

What This Means for Structural Engineers

If your work is structural in nature, you should plan your licensure strategy around the Maryland PE requirements and the NCEES exam structure. Do not assume that a structural engineering title by itself gives you authority to practice independently. In Maryland, the license is what matters.

How to Apply for an Original Maryland PE License

Once you pass the PE exam, you can move toward the original license application.

The process generally looks like this:

  1. Complete the Board's exam and licensure requirements.
  2. Receive your registration number from the Maryland Board after your NCEES PE results are reported.
  3. Submit any additional documentation the Board requests, such as transcripts or license verification from another state, if applicable.
  4. Finish the original license application through the Board's electronic licensing system.

Maryland's current license period is two years from the date of issuance.

Do Engineering Firms Need a Maryland Firm Permit?

Yes, if engineering is being practiced through a business entity in Maryland.

Maryland requires firm permits for entities such as:

  • Corporations
  • LLCs
  • LLPs
  • Partnerships

If you run a structural engineering practice through one of these entity types, the firm itself may need a permit in addition to the individual PE license.

Firm Permit Requirements

Maryland's firm permit process generally includes:

  • Verifying good standing with the Maryland Department of Assessments and Taxation for most entity types
  • Applying online through the Board's firm permit process
  • Completing a managing agent or responsible charge certification form
  • Making sure the licensed designee submits the required form to the Board

The permit will not be issued until the certification form is received.

Renewing a Firm Permit

Maryland sends electronic renewal notices about 60 days before expiration. A firm cannot renew until the responsible member or managing agent has renewed their individual license.

That is a common compliance trap for engineering firms. If the managing agent lets their PE lapse, the firm permit renewal can be delayed or blocked.

Renewal and Continuing Professional Competency

Maryland PE licenses are renewed on a two-year cycle.

To renew, licensees should pay attention to both timing and continuing education.

Renewal Timing

Maryland sends renewal notices approximately 60 days before expiration. If a license expires before renewal is completed, the process can shift into reinstatement territory and may trigger additional fees.

Continuing Professional Competency Requirements

For renewal, Maryland requires:

  • 16 PDH units during the licensing term
  • At least one PDH in ethics, Maryland law, standards of practice, or related conduct topics
  • Up to 8 PDH hours carried forward to the next term, if earned above the required 16

The Board also offers a free ethics and law training opportunity that counts toward the competency requirement.

Reinstatement After Lapse

If a license lapses, reinstatement usually requires:

  • An explanation for the failure to renew on time
  • A statement certifying that you did not sign and seal documents in Maryland while the license was lapsed
  • A statement about whether you were licensed in another state during the lapse

Do not assume a lapsed license is a paperwork issue only. If your work involved signing or sealing during that period, the compliance risk is much higher.

Common Mistakes Structural Engineers Should Avoid

Maryland's rules are manageable when tracked carefully, but the same mistakes repeat across firms and individuals.

Assuming the FE Exam Is Optional

That is no longer a safe assumption. Current Maryland guidance requires FE and PE passage for licensure applicants.

Confusing an EIT Credential with a PE License

An Engineer-in-Training certificate is not the same thing as a PE license. It is a stepping stone, not authority to practice independently.

Forgetting the Firm Permit

A licensed engineer and a compliant firm are not the same compliance question. If engineering is practiced through an entity, the entity may need its own permit.

Letting the Managing Agent Expire

If the firm's managing agent or responsible member is not renewed, the firm may not be able to renew either.

Failing to Track PDHs

Renewal problems often start with poor recordkeeping. Keep certificates, course descriptions, and dates organized from the start of each cycle.

How Zenind Can Help Engineering Firms Stay Organized

Zenind is built to help U.S. business owners form and maintain companies with less friction. For structural engineering firms, that can be useful before and after licensure.

Zenind can help with tasks such as:

  • Forming an LLC, corporation, or other business entity
  • Providing registered agent service
  • Helping with EIN and business setup tasks
  • Tracking annual report and compliance deadlines
  • Supporting good standing maintenance for your entity

For engineering firms, this matters because licensing compliance is only part of the operational picture. A practice also needs the business entity itself to stay organized, current, and ready for renewals.

Maryland Structural Engineer License Checklist

Use this as a simple planning list:

  • Confirm whether your education path qualifies you for Maryland PE licensure
  • Complete the FE exam and PE exam requirements
  • Apply for the original PE license after exam approval and passing
  • Make sure any engineering business entity has the correct firm permit
  • Keep the managing agent or responsible member renewed
  • Track continuing professional competency hours every cycle
  • Renew before the expiration date whenever possible
  • Keep reinstatement documents handy in case of a lapse

FAQs

Does Maryland issue a separate structural engineer license?

No. Maryland licenses professional engineers, not a separate structural-only PE license.

Can I take the FE exam before I am approved by the Maryland Board?

Yes. Maryland does not require Board approval to take the FE exam.

How many PDH hours do I need for renewal?

Maryland requires 16 PDH units per renewal cycle, with at least one hour in ethics, law, or a closely related topic.

Can I carry PDH hours into the next renewal period?

Yes. Maryland allows up to 8 excess PDH hours to carry forward.

Does a firm permit replace a PE license?

No. The firm permit is separate from the individual's PE license.

Can a firm renew if the managing agent has not renewed?

No. The managing agent or responsible member must renew first.

Final Takeaway

A Maryland structural engineer license is about more than passing a test. It is a full compliance process that combines education, experience, examination, continuing education, and, for many firms, a separate entity permit.

If you are building a structural engineering practice in Maryland, the best strategy is to treat licensure and entity compliance as two connected systems. Keep the individual license current, keep the firm permit current, and make sure your business records are organized before renewal deadlines arrive.

Disclaimer: The content presented in this article is for informational purposes only and is not intended as legal, tax, or professional advice. While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy and completeness of the information provided, Zenind and its authors accept no responsibility or liability for any errors or omissions. Readers should consult with appropriate legal or professional advisors before making any decisions or taking any actions based on the information contained in this article. Any reliance on the information provided herein is at the reader's own risk.

This article is available in English (United States) .

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