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§ CA Kern County
City building permits

City of California City

How to apply for a building permit in City of California City, California. Permit authority, application steps, fees, and inspection requirements.

Min. permit fee
$56.00
Last verified
April 2026
On this page 6
§ 01

Permit authority

City of California City Building & Safety Division, Public Works Department

Street address
Community Development Department, 21000 Hacienda Blvd., California City, CA 93505
Coverage
California City issues building permits for work within incorporated California City limits. Kern County permit authority applies outside city limits in unincorporated Kern County.
Online portal
iWorQ Citizen Portal
iWorQ Citizen Portal
§ 02

When a permit is required

Permit triggers and exempt work for California City

California City says no residential permit is required only for a short exempt list; otherwise permits are required for most construction and trade work. The city specifically lists over-the-counter permits for electrical, plumbing, and mechanical upgrades or repairs, reroofing, fireplace installation, and portable spas; fast-track permits for garages, storage buildings, decks, carports, patio covers, additions to single-family dwellings, minor structural repair, foundation replacement or repair, conventional light-frame single-family dwellings, and residential pools and spas; and normal processing for major alterations, major additions, structural upgrades, second-story additions, and projects requiring planning review. The city also states all work in commercial locations requires a building permit.

Cosmetic work such as carpeting, painting, trim, and wall covering
One-story detached accessory buildings not on a permanent foundation, such as a shed, not exceeding 120 square feet, shell only
Platforms, walkways, and driveways no more than 30 inches above ground, at least 10 feet from the curb face, and not over a basement or story below
Window awning projects no more than 54 inches
  • Exempt Cosmetic work such as carpeting, painting, trim, and wall covering
  • Exempt One-story detached accessory buildings not on a permanent foundation, such as a shed, not exceeding 120 square feet, shell only
  • Exempt Platforms, walkways, and driveways no more than 30 inches above ground, at least 10 feet from the curb face, and not over a basement or story below
  • Exempt Window awning projects no more than 54 inches

Note: California City says these are the only listed residential exemptions on its page. The city also warns that any work done without a permit is subject to penalties, and all work in commercial locations requires a building permit.

Required documents
  • California City's public materials show applicants should expect a permit application, project-specific plans, and uploaded supporting documents through iWorQ. The portal directs applicants to upload all required plans and documents, and the city publishes separate residential and commercial form libraries, design criteria forms, and project-type application sets for items such as additions, new dwellings, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, roofing, remodels, grading and grubbing, fences, patios, detached structures, and demolition.
Building code
At its February 24, 2026 meeting, the California City Council agenda materials show second-reading adoption of Ordinance No. 25-830 to adopt the 2025 California Building Code series (12 parts), plus the 1997 Uniform Code for the Abatement of Dangerous Buildings and the 2024 International Property Maintenance Code. Applicants should confirm the ordinance's effective date with the city when filing new applications.
Permit validity
I did not locate a current California City public webpage or posted municipal-code section on the city site stating building permit expiration timelines. Applicants should confirm the active expiration and extension rules with the Building Official before filing.
Owner-builder
I did not locate a California City-specific owner-builder handout on the public pages reviewed here. Applicants proposing owner-builder permits should confirm whether the city requires California's standard owner-builder declaration and related disclosures as part of the application set.
Contractor requirements
California City links applicants to the California Contractors State License Board and states all work in commercial locations requires a permit. The city's public pages reviewed here do not separately restate CSLB licensing thresholds, but applicants using contractors should expect California state licensing rules to apply and should verify licensure through CSLB.

Source: City of California City Building & Safety Division, Public Works Department ↗

§ 03

Application process

Typical processing: The iWorQ portal says submitted applications are reviewed within 2 to 3 business days. The city also publishes project processing buckets of same-day over-the-counter review for certain minor trade permits, 5 to 10 working days for listed fast-track residential projects, and about 4 weeks for larger or planning-dependent projects.

  1. 01
    Confirm the property is inside incorporated California City and check planning requirements first. The city states plans must be prepared and submitted to the Planning Department for zoning review before building construction can occur.
  2. 02
    Identify the permit type and design criteria. California City posts separate residential and commercial permit/form libraries plus 2026 residential and commercial design criteria links.
  3. 03
    Prepare the application package. The iWorQ portal instructs applicants to fill out all required fields and upload all plans and related documents needed for the permit application.
  4. 04
    Submit online. The city directs applicants to use SolarAPP+ for residential solar or battery energy storage permits, and the California City iWorQ portal for all other residential and commercial building permits.
  5. 05
    Respond to staff review and corrections if requested. The portal says applications will be reviewed within the next 2 to 3 business days, while the Building Division page gives broader project-processing buckets by project type.
  6. 06
    Pay required permit and plan review fees before issuance, including any state surcharges and project-specific fees.
  7. 07
    After permit issuance, complete construction in accordance with approved plans and request inspections at required stages.

Typical processing time: The iWorQ portal says submitted applications are reviewed within 2 to 3 business days. The city also publishes project processing buckets of same-day over-the-counter review for certain minor trade permits, 5 to 10 working days for listed fast-track residential projects, and about 4 weeks for larger or planning-dependent projects.

Source: City of California City Building & Safety Division, Public Works Department ↗

§ 04

Fee schedule

California City building permit fees

Fee type
Amount
01
Minimum permit fee
$56.00
02
Plan check fee
Unless otherwise noted, plan review fees are based on 65% of the building permit fee; review of master plan sets is 16.75% of the building permit fee; the fee schedule also lists a separate plan check fee of $65.00 per hour and warns that additional outsourced structural review costs may apply
03
Permit fee formula
Valuation-based for building permit fees, based on the city's most recent adopted ICC Building Valuation Data; plus flat application fees and state surcharges where applicable
04
Reinspection fee
Reinspection fee $70.00; construction without permit penalty is $500.00 or double the permit fee for residential work, and $1,000.00 or double the permit fee for commercial work, whichever is greater; expired permit reissue minimum is $120.00 plus $46.00 application fee plus SB 1473 fee
05
Penalty (no permit)
Reinspection fee $70.00; construction without permit penalty is $500.00 or double the permit fee for residential work, and $1,000.00 or double the permit fee for commercial work, whichever is greater; expired permit reissue minimum is $120.00 plus $46.00 application fee plus SB 1473 fee

The fee schedule reviewed here lists permit, plan review, deposit, and state surcharge amounts, but I did not locate a city-posted online payment instruction page or card-processing note for building permits. Applicants should confirm accepted payment methods with Building staff.

Fees change periodically. Confirm at the official fee schedule ↗ before budgeting.

§ 05

Required inspections

Scheduling and sequence

How to schedule
Inspection hours
Inspections are Monday through Thursday, 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. or 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.; no inspections on Fridays

Typical sequence: California City publishes trade and building inspection cards/checklists for stages including residential foundation, framing, shear wall, roof nailing, rough plumbing, underground plumbing, residential mechanical, electrical service, insulation, drywall, exterior lath, final plumbing, reroofing, pool, solar, wall furnace, water heater, copper water, HVAC FAU, masonry wall, and temp power pole. Required sequence depends on the approved permit scope.

Source: City of California City Building & Safety Division, Public Works Department ↗

§ 06

Frequently asked

Common questions about California City permits

01 Do I need a building permit in California City, CA?
California City says no residential permit is required only for a short exempt list; otherwise permits are required for most construction and trade work. The city specifically lists over-the-counter permits for electrical, plumbing, and mechanical upgrades or repairs, reroofing, fireplace installation, and portable spas; fast-track permits for garages, storage buildings, decks, carports, patio covers, additions to single-family dwellings, minor structural repair, foundation replacement or repair, conventional light-frame single-family dwellings, and residential pools and spas; and normal processing for major alterations, major additions, structural upgrades, second-story additions, and projects requiring planning review. The city also states all work in commercial locations requires a building permit.
02 How much does a building permit cost in California City, CA?
Building permit fees in California City, CA are set by the local building department and vary by project type and valuation. The minimum permit fee is $56.00. Fees are calculated as: Valuation-based for building permit fees, based on the city's most recent adopted ICC Building Valuation Data; plus flat application fees and state surcharges where applicable. Plan check fee: Unless otherwise noted, plan review fees are based on 65% of the building permit fee; review of master plan sets is 16.75% of the building permit fee; the fee schedule also lists a separate plan check fee of $65.00 per hour and warns that additional outsourced structural review costs may apply.
03 How do I apply for a building permit in California City, CA?
To apply for a building permit in California City, CA, follow these steps: 1. Confirm the property is inside incorporated California City and check planning requirements first. The city states plans must be prepared and submitted to the Planning Department for zoning review before building construction can occur. 2. Identify the permit type and design criteria. California City posts separate residential and commercial permit/form libraries plus 2026 residential and commercial design criteria links. 3. Prepare the application package. The iWorQ portal instructs applicants to fill out all required fields and upload all plans and related documents needed for the permit application. 4. Submit online. The city directs applicants to use SolarAPP+ for residential solar or battery energy storage permits, and the California City iWorQ portal for all other residential and commercial building permits. 5. Respond to staff review and corrections if requested. The portal says applications will be reviewed within the next 2 to 3 business days, while the Building Division page gives broader project-processing buckets by project type. 6. Pay required permit and plan review fees before issuance, including any state surcharges and project-specific fees. 7. After permit issuance, complete construction in accordance with approved plans and request inspections at required stages.
04 How long does it take to get a building permit in California City, CA?
Building permit processing times in California City, CA typically run The iWorQ portal says submitted applications are reviewed within 2 to 3 business days. The city also publishes project processing buckets of same-day over-the-counter review for certain minor trade permits, 5 to 10 working days for listed fast-track residential projects, and about 4 weeks for larger or planning-dependent projects.. Timelines can vary based on project complexity and current department workload.
05 What work is exempt from building permits in California City, CA?
Not all construction work requires a permit in California City, CA. The following work is generally exempt: Cosmetic work such as carpeting, painting, trim, and wall covering; One-story detached accessory buildings not on a permanent foundation, such as a shed, not exceeding 120 square feet, shell only; Platforms, walkways, and driveways no more than 30 inches above ground, at least 10 feet from the curb face, and not over a basement or story below; Window awning projects no more than 54 inches. Note: California City says these are the only listed residential exemptions on its page. The city also warns that any work done without a permit is subject to penalties, and all work in commercial locations requires a building permit. When in doubt, confirm with the local building department before starting work.
06 How do I schedule a building inspection in California City, CA?
Once your permit is issued and work reaches an inspection milestone, you can schedule a building inspection in California City, CA via: (760) 338-8387, by email at tcarter@californiacity-ca.gov, permit status/search through iWorQ at.
last verified April 2026 source City of California City Building & Safety Division, Public Works Department ↗ entry id permits/california/kern/california-city

Educational reference. Permit rules and fees change — confirm current requirements directly with City of California City Building & Safety Division, Public Works Department before applying. Jaspector is not legal advice.