Permits, inspections, and code compliance aren’t just bureaucratic hoops to jump through — they’re the legal framework that protects you, your buyers, and your business. Builders who treat this part of the process as an afterthought spend more time fighting it. Builders who systematize it move faster and close more cleanly.

Why Permits Matter More Than You Think

Unpermitted work is a liability bomb. Here’s what can happen:

The short-term cost savings from skipping permits almost never justify the long-term risk.

Understanding the Permit Process

The permit process varies by jurisdiction but generally follows this flow:

  1. Pre-application meeting: Most jurisdictions allow or require a pre-app meeting for major projects. Use it. Get your questions answered before you submit.
  2. Application and plan check: Submit permit drawings, site plans, energy calculations, and structural calculations. The jurisdiction reviews for code compliance.
  3. Corrections: Almost every set of plans gets corrections. Respond quickly and completely. Delays here are builder-controlled.
  4. Permit issuance: Once approved, permits are issued. Keep permitted drawings on-site at all times.
  5. Inspections: Required at key milestones throughout construction. Must be called in and passed before work can proceed past that stage.
  6. Final inspection and CO: After all work is complete, the final inspection results in a Certificate of Occupancy. The home cannot legally be occupied without it.

Key Inspections and When They Happen

Different jurisdictions have different inspection schedules, but common required inspections include:

How to Build a Great Relationship With Your Permit Office

The people at your local building department have enormous influence over your project timelines. Here’s how to make that relationship work for you:

Code Compliance: Build It Right the First Time

The International Residential Code (IRC) is the foundation of most residential building codes in the US. Most states and jurisdictions adopt the IRC with local amendments. Key areas to stay current on:

Managing Inspections Like a Pro

The Bottom Line

Builders who build a system around permitting and inspections stop seeing it as a burden and start seeing it as just another trade to manage. Get your processes tight, build your relationships with the permit office, and let your competitors be the ones who get stopped by code issues on closing day.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *