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When a permit is required
Permit triggers and exempt work for El Dorado County
A permit is required before an owner or authorized agent constructs, enlarges, alters, repairs, moves, demolishes, or changes occupancy of a building or structure, or installs, enlarges, alters, repairs, removes, converts, or replaces regulated electrical, gas, mechanical, or plumbing systems. The county FAQ also says major renovations, new construction, electrical work, plumbing, and structural changes typically require permits.
- Exempt One-story detached accessory structures not over 120 square feet, other than storm shelters
- Exempt Fences not over 7 feet high
- Exempt Retaining walls not over 4 feet high unless supporting a surcharge
- Exempt Water tanks supported directly on grade if capacity does not exceed 5,000 gallons and the height-to-width ratio does not exceed 2:1
- Exempt Sidewalks and driveways
- Exempt Painting, papering, tiling, carpeting, cabinets, countertops, and similar finish work
- Exempt Prefabricated swimming pools less than 24 inches deep
- Exempt Swings and other playground equipment
- Exempt Window awnings that project no more than 54 inches and need no additional support
- Exempt Detached decks not exceeding 200 square feet, not more than 30 inches above grade, not attached to a dwelling or townhouse, and not serving the required exit door
- Exempt Minor electrical, gas, mechanical, and plumbing items listed in the county's 2025 permit-exemption handout, including certain portable equipment, minor part replacements, leak repairs, and stoppage clearing where piping and fixtures are not replaced or rearranged
Note: Permit exemptions do not authorize work that violates the code or any other law or ordinance. Separate zoning, grading, stormwater, fire safe, utility, septic, floodplain, HOA or CC&R, or TRPA approvals may still be required depending on the parcel and scope.
- Signed permit application
- Owner-builder or agent authorization forms as applicable
- Site or plot plan
- Floor plan
- Foundation plan
- Floor and roof framing plans
- Elevations
- Building sections or structural plans
- Electrical or mechanical plan and gas schematic if applicable
- Title 24 energy forms
- CALGreen checklist
- One additional floor plan for the Assessor
- Project-specific documents such as fire sprinkler design, stormwater documents, MWELO materials, grading information, utility or septic approvals, and TRPA materials for Tahoe Basin projects
- Building code
- Effective January 1, 2026, El Dorado County is using the 2025 California Building Standards Code package in Title 24, together with applicable county ordinances, including Building Title 110 and Zoning Title 130.
- Permit validity
- Applications become null and void if the permit is not issued within 365 days from the application date. Once issued, the permit expires two years from issuance if the work is not completed with final approval. The county allows up to two one-year renewals if construction has been pursued in good faith with regular inspections, and reactivation may be requested after the four-year permit period if the structure is still unfinished and unoccupied. Tahoe Basin permits affected by TRPA follow the Tahoe-specific exception noted by the county.
- Owner-builder
- The county will not issue an owner-builder permit until the property owner completes the owner-builder acknowledgement and verification form. Owner-builders are legally and financially responsible for the work, may become employers under state and federal law, and must verify licensing and workers' compensation status for any hired contractors.
- Contractor requirements
- Contractors acting as agent for the owner must have a current active California contractor's license, workers' compensation coverage, and a current El Dorado County business license. The contractor supplement also requires CSLB and workers' compensation disclosures.
Source: El Dorado County Planning and Building Department, Building Division ↗
Application process
Typical processing: The county does not publish a fixed turnaround. Processing can range from a few days to several weeks depending on project complexity, and reviews are handled in the order received.
- 01 Confirm whether your project needs a permit and pull the correct county guidance or checklist from the Building Division's What's Required and How to Submit page.
- 02 Prepare the application package, including the signed application, required forms, and project plans such as site or plot plan, floor plan, foundation plan, framing plans, elevations, structural details, energy forms, and any project-specific items like fire sprinklers, CALGreen, stormwater, MWELO, grading, or TRPA materials.
- 03 Include ownership, contractor, and authorization documents as applicable. Owner-builders must complete the owner-builder supplement; contractor applicants must provide current CSLB information, workers' compensation information, and current El Dorado County business license information.
- 04 Submit the application. Contractor applications for trade permits, residential solar, and EV charging stations can be emailed to epermit@edcgov.us; all other permits must be applied for in person.
- 05 Wait for plan review. Plans are reviewed in the order received, and incomplete applications lose their place in line until missing information is resubmitted.
- 06 Pay the required fees. The county collects half of the building permit fee and the full planning fee at application, with the balance and outside-agency fees due at issuance.
- 07 Do not start work until the permit is issued, then schedule inspections online or by phone as construction progresses toward final approval.
Typical processing time: The county does not publish a fixed turnaround. Processing can range from a few days to several weeks depending on project complexity, and reviews are handled in the order received.
Source: El Dorado County Planning and Building Department, Building Division ↗
Fee schedule
El Dorado County building permit fees
The county accepts cards with a 3% service fee. Personal checks, bank draft checks, and U.S. currency are also accepted. Multiple checks may be required at issuance because school, air quality, and DOT or other outside-agency fees may be collected separately.
Fees change periodically. Confirm at the official fee schedule ↗ before budgeting.
Required inspections
Scheduling and sequence
- eTRAKiT portal (online)
- (530) 621-5377 (phone)
- Permit status / linked permit management (online)
- Scheduling deadline
- Requested inspection dates can be selected from 3 to 10 days out.
- Time windows
- AM means on site between 8:00 AM and 11:30 AM; PM means noon to 3:30 PM. Requests for AM or PM are not guaranteed.
Typical sequence: Required inspections depend on scope and can include foundation, framing, plumbing, electrical, sheetrock, and final inspections. County checklists and permit conditions may add project-specific inspections such as grading, driveway, fire sprinkler, or stormwater stages.
Source: El Dorado County Planning and Building Department, Building Division ↗
Frequently asked
Common questions about unincorporated El Dorado County permits
01 Do I need a building permit in unincorporated El Dorado County, CA? ▸
02 How much does a building permit cost in unincorporated El Dorado County, CA? ▸
03 How do I apply for a building permit in unincorporated El Dorado County, CA? ▸
04 How long does it take to get a building permit in unincorporated El Dorado County, CA? ▸
05 What work is exempt from building permits in unincorporated El Dorado County, CA? ▸
06 How do I schedule a building inspection in unincorporated El Dorado County, CA? ▸
Educational reference. Permit rules and fees change — confirm current requirements directly with El Dorado County Planning and Building Department, Building Division before applying. Jaspector is not legal advice.