What Qualifies as an Authority Industry in the United States

The designation of an "authority industry" carries specific structural implications for how businesses, professionals, and regulators interact within a given sector of the U.S. economy. This page defines the criteria that distinguish authority industries from general commercial markets, explains how the classification functions in practice, and identifies the scenarios and decision points that determine whether a sector qualifies. Understanding this framework matters because misidentifying a regulated sector as either more or less authoritative than it is affects licensing obligations, enforcement exposure, and consumer protections.

Definition and scope

An authority industry is a sector of economic activity in which a recognized governmental or quasi-governmental body holds legally enforced power to set standards, issue credentials, investigate complaints, and impose penalties — and where participation by individuals or organizations without meeting those standards is prohibited by statute or regulation. The defining feature is not merely that rules exist, but that enforcement mechanisms carry legal consequence, including license revocation, civil fines, or criminal prosecution.

The scope of authority industries in the United States spans federal and state jurisdictions. At the federal level, agencies such as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (securities), the Federal Aviation Administration (aviation), and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (healthcare financing) exercise authority over entire national sectors. At the state level, occupational licensing boards — covering professions including medicine, law, engineering, and cosmetology — exercise authority within geographic boundaries. The National Conference of State Legislatures has documented that more than 1,100 occupations are licensed in at least one U.S. state.

The Authority Industries Overview provides broader context on how these sectors are organized across the national landscape.

How it works

Authority industry classification operates through a three-part structure:

  1. Statutory authorization — A legislative body (Congress, a state legislature) enacts a law that creates or delegates regulatory power over a defined sector. Without statutory grounding, a regulatory body lacks legal force.
  2. Administrative rulemaking — The authorized agency issues binding rules through formal processes such as notice-and-comment rulemaking under the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. § 551 et seq.), defining the specific standards, licensing requirements, and prohibited conduct within the industry.
  3. Enforcement and adjudication — The agency (or a delegated body) investigates violations, holds hearings, and imposes remedies. Enforcement actions at the federal level are subject to judicial review in federal court; state-level actions are subject to state administrative law procedures.

This three-part structure is what separates an authority industry from a self-regulated or voluntary-standards industry. A trade association that issues certifications but cannot compel compliance or revoke legal standing does not constitute an authority industry by itself — unless its certification has been incorporated by statute as a licensing prerequisite.

The National Authority Industry Standards page describes how standards bodies interact with this statutory framework at the national level.

Common scenarios

Authority industry classification arises in four recurring scenarios in the United States:

Decision boundaries

Not every regulated or licensed activity constitutes a qualifying authority industry. The following contrast clarifies the boundary:

Authority industry — Participation without a valid credential, license, or registration is prohibited by law; enforcement can result in injunctions, criminal charges, or civil penalties imposed by a governmental or delegated body; the regulatory framework derives from statute.

Non-authority industry — Participation is governed by market norms, voluntary codes, or civil contract law; no governmental body can compel withdrawal from the market solely on the basis of non-certification; penalties arise from civil litigation rather than administrative enforcement.

A professional service may also occupy a partial authority status — where some activities within a sector are authority-regulated and others are not. Home renovation contracting illustrates this: general contracting may require a state or local license (authority status), while consulting on design without performing construction may not (non-authority status in most jurisdictions).

The State vs. Federal Authority Jurisdiction page examines how overlapping jurisdictions affect this classification in practice, and the Licensing Requirements for Authority Industries page details the credential structures that define participation thresholds.

The nationalservicesauthority.com platform provides reference-grade information across the full range of authority industry sectors covered under this framework.

References