By: Anne-Marie Gianoudis, IIDA, RID, NCIDQ
In 1982, Alabama was the first state to pass a Title Act for the registration of interior designers!
The legislation was later revised in April 2010 by Governor Riley signed HB440. This is the Practice Act that Registered Interior Designers (RIDs) in Alabama operate under today. It established the Alabama Board for Registered Interior Designers and continued to protect the title “Registered Interior Designer.” As of 2023, Alabama is only one of two states that have legislation that includes commercial permitting privileges.
Registered Interior Designers are able to seal and submit construction documents for commercial interior projects of less than 5,000 contiguous square feet within a building of any size which has a total area of 2,500 square feet or more – as long as it is not a school, church, auditorium or other building intended for the assembly occupancy of people.
The law also allows RIDs to submit for permitting in single family residential projects of unlimited square footage and they may use the term “Registered Interior Designer” or “RID” and/or their State of Alabama registration number on any sign, card, listing, advertising, business name, stationery or in any other manner.
The Alabama Board for Registered Interior Designers registers and regulates qualified individuals to practice as a Registered Interior Designer in the State of Alabama.
Key points about becoming a Registered Interior Designer after passing the NCIDQ:
Validation of Expertise:
Industry Advocacy:
Increased Job Prospects and Earnings:
RID Registration brings unity to our profession. Consumers are familiar with the terms registered, certified and licensed indicating competency in a field of study, accountability for work produced and a responsibility to ethical behavior.
It encourages continuing education, provides qualified mentors to new professionals and promotes confidence of ability to consumers and partner industries.
Numbers don’t lie. If we want to enhance our state’s interior design legislation, high numbers of RIDs show legislators that registration matters to the profession. Registration shows that interior designers are professionals on par with architects, landscape architects and engineers for their specific areas of expertise.