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When a permit is required
Permit triggers and exempt work for St. Helena
St. Helena requires building permits for construction, alteration, improvement, demolition, or repair work that falls under the adopted building codes and local requirements. City-published categories show permits are commonly required for new buildings, additions, interior remodels, commercial tenant improvements, decks, patio covers, retaining walls, signs, fences in listed categories, window and door replacements with structural modification, reroofs, HVAC replacements, water heater replacements, electrical service changes, solar systems, and similar work. Work in the public right-of-way separately requires City encroachment permitting.
- Exempt One-story detached accessory structures 120 square feet or smaller that do not house equipment or utilities
- Exempt Ordinary minor repair and finish work that does not involve structural changes, life-safety systems, or utility work otherwise regulated by code
- Exempt Other narrow building, plumbing, mechanical, or electrical exemptions contained in the adopted California codes
Note: The City does not appear to publish a standalone St. Helena-specific exempt-work handout on its building pages. This exemption summary is an inference from City permit categories and the adopted California code framework, not a City-published exemption list. St. Helena expressly requires permits for many items owners often assume are exempt, including reroofs, HVAC replacement, water heaters, electrical service changes, many signs, fences in listed categories, retaining walls, decks, and kitchen and bath remodels. Confirm any claimed exemption with the Building Division before starting work.
- Building permit application
- Electronic plans uploaded to eTRAKiT
- Applicable City checklists, worksheets, and handouts from the Building Forms & Handouts page
- Additional project-specific supporting documents required by the relevant checklist or review agency
- Fire sprinkler permits, when required, submitted as concurrent but separate applications
- Building code
- Current City checklists for 2026 submittals require plans to state compliance with the 2025 California Residential Code and the St. Helena Municipal Code. California HCD states the 2025 California Building Standards Code became effective January 1, 2026, and applies to permits with application dates on or after January 1, 2026.
- Permit validity
- Permit applications expire 365 days after submission if not pursued in good faith. Issued building and fire permits are valid for 365 days from issuance. A permit expires if work is not started within 365 days, or if work is abandoned or no inspection occurs for more than 365 days. Each approved inspection extends permit life another 365 days. Extensions may be granted at the Chief Building Official's discretion if requested before expiration; the extension request form lists a $77 administrative fee.
- Owner-builder
- Owner-builders must submit the City owner-builder disclosure before permit issuance. The property owner must complete and sign the disclosure and provide identity verification acceptable to the City when the permit is issued. The owner-builder form warns the owner is legally and financially responsible for the work and may have employer and liability obligations.
- Contractor requirements
- Permit applications ask for the California contractor license number and City of St. Helena business license number. The City requires either a signed statement that the applicant is licensed under the Contractors State License Law or a stated basis for exemption. Contractors are required by law to be licensed and bonded in California.
Application process
Typical processing: Over-the-counter permits may be issued at submission if complete. Rapid permits are targeted for up to 14 working days. Standard permits are targeted for up to 28 working days. Tent permits need at least 2 full working days, excluding weekends and holidays.
- 01 Create an eTRAKiT account. Public users set up an account directly; contractors receive portal credentials after registering their contractor license with the City.
- 02 Start the application in eTRAKiT under Permits, upload the building permit application and all required checklists, plans, and supporting documents. St. Helena states it has gone digital and paperless for all permitting and no longer accepts paper applications or plans.
- 03 Staff performs a completeness check. Incomplete applications are not accepted for review.
- 04 After submittal is deemed complete, staff assesses plan check and permit fees and emails instructions for payment in eTRAKiT.
- 05 City departments review the submittal for compliance. Over-the-counter permits are often issued at submission if complete and no plan check is required. Rapid permits are targeted for up to 14 working days for first comments or issuance and up to 14 working days for subsequent review. Standard permits are targeted for up to 28 working days for first comments and up to 28 working days for subsequent review.
- 06 Once approved and fees are paid, the permit is issued through the portal.
- 07 Request inspections through eTRAKiT after issuance.
Typical processing time: Over-the-counter permits may be issued at submission if complete. Rapid permits are targeted for up to 14 working days. Standard permits are targeted for up to 28 working days. Tent permits need at least 2 full working days, excluding weekends and holidays.
Source: City of St. Helena Community Development Department, Building Division ↗
Fee schedule
Effective July 2025
Staff performs a completeness review first, then sends fee instructions. Applicants pay fees through eTRAKiT. No plan review starts until required fees are paid.
Fees change periodically. Confirm at the official fee schedule ↗ (effective July 2025) before budgeting.
Required inspections
Scheduling and sequence
- eTRAKiT (online)
- (707) 967-2779 (phone)
- building@cityofsthelena.gov (email)
- (707) 968-2658 (phone)
- pwpermits@cityofsthelena.gov (email)
- Scheduling deadline
- As of December 31, 2025, the Building Division states all inspection requests must be made through eTRAKiT.
- Inspection hours
- Onsite inspections are offered Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.
- Time windows
- AM window: 9:00 AM-12:00 PM; PM window: 1:00 PM-3:00 PM
Typical sequence: The City does not publish one universal inspection sequence for all project types. Typical sequence depends on scope, but inspections are requested after permit issuance and all permits require a final inspection. Project-specific handouts and checklists may add required stages for foundations, framing, MEP rough-ins, insulation, and final approval.
Source: City of St. Helena Community Development Department, Building Division ↗
Frequently asked
Common questions about St. Helena permits
01 Do I need a building permit in St. Helena, CA? ▸
02 How much does a building permit cost in St. Helena, CA? ▸
03 How do I apply for a building permit in St. Helena, CA? ▸
04 How long does it take to get a building permit in St. Helena, CA? ▸
05 What work is exempt from building permits in St. Helena, CA? ▸
06 How do I schedule a building inspection in St. Helena, CA? ▸
Educational reference. Permit rules and fees change — confirm current requirements directly with City of St. Helena Community Development Department, Building Division before applying. Jaspector is not legal advice.