On this page 6
When a permit is required
Permit triggers and exempt work for Costa Mesa
Costa Mesa says building permits are generally required for structures, additions, alterations, retaining walls, and most miscellaneous structures. The city specifically notes that reroofing requires a permit, swimming-pool enclosures require plan review/permits/inspection, and electrical, plumbing, and mechanical permits are required for new construction, alterations to existing systems, and most repairs.
- Exempt Costa Mesa says exemptions are very limited and applicants should check with the Building Division before starting work.
- Exempt Wood, steel, vinyl, or iron fences not over 6 feet high.
- Exempt Stucco, concrete, brick, masonry, or block fences not over 3 feet high.
- Exempt Other work exempt under the adopted California Building Code/California Residential Code Section 105.2 or R105.2 may still need zoning, planning, fire, public works, or utility approvals.
Note: Permit exemptions do not authorize work that violates other laws or local requirements. Costa Mesa also imposes separate construction-and-demolition waste diversion requirements on permitted building projects.
- TESSA application plus project-specific plans and supporting documents required by the applicable city handout. Depending on scope, this can include site plans, architectural/structural plans, scope of work, owner information, structural calculations, Title 24/HERS documents, special inspection/structural observation forms, and utility or outside-agency items. Costa Mesa publishes separate submittal packages for new residential, additions/remodels, commercial TI, reroof, solar, pools/spas, grading, demolition, ADUs, signs, and similar scopes.
- Building code
- Ordinance No. 2025-08 adopted the 2025 California Building Standards Code, with local amendments, effective January 1, 2026, and also adopts the Orange County Grading and Excavation Code and associated supplements.
- Permit validity
- Costa Mesa adopted the 2025 California Building Standards Code effective January 1, 2026. Under the current California code baseline, permits generally expire if work is not commenced within 12 months or if work is suspended/abandoned for 12 months, unless extended by the building official. Costa Mesa also provides a plan check extension request form.
- Owner-builder
- Property owners may pull permits as owner-builders, but the city directs owners to review and sign Owner Builder Information/Verification before doing so. Owners using an authorized agent must use the city authorization process; agents for contractors must submit a notarized declaration.
- Contractor requirements
- Costa Mesa states that property owners and licensed contractors may obtain building permits. The city links applicants to the California Contractors State License Board and advises owners to review owner-builder risks before authorizing others to pull permits. Contractors can also obtain or renew Costa Mesa business licenses when obtaining permits.
Application process
Application → plan check → issuance → inspection → final
- 01 Review Costa Mesa permit types and the applicable submittal handout for the project scope.
- 02 Create a TESSA account or log in with an existing profile.
- 03 Start the application in TESSA, select the permit type, complete the 7-step workflow, and upload plans and supporting documents.
- 04 A building technician is assigned to coordinate the project; the application moves through completeness review and plan check, with corrections/rechecks as needed.
- 05 Pay invoiced fees in TESSA after approval. Standard review is listed at about 5-30 working days depending on permit type; accelerated review is listed at about 5-10 working days; rechecks usually take about half the original review time.
- 06 After permit issuance, schedule inspections in TESSA and complete required finals before occupancy/final sign-off where applicable. Insta-Permits are available for limited scopes and the city says they can often be issued in 20 minutes or less once the required standard forms are uploaded.
Source: City of Costa Mesa Economic and Development Services, Building Safety Division ↗
Fee schedule
Costa Mesa building permit fees
TESSA supports online invoice payment. The city master fee schedule lists a 2.70% credit card transaction processing fee.
Fees change periodically. Confirm at the official fee schedule ↗ before budgeting.
Required inspections
Scheduling and sequence
- Schedule inspections through TESSA. Costa Mesa also publishes a daily inspection list at https (online)
- (714) 925-7325 (phone)
- (714) 656-8158 (phone)
- (949) 554-4793 (phone)
- (949) 629-5399 (phone)
- (714) 754-5273 (phone)
- Inspection hours
- Inspectors can be called between 7 a.m. and 3 p.m. City Hall/Building Safety hours are Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with alternating Fridays closed.
Typical sequence: Varies by permit type and approved plans. For most building work this typically progresses from foundation/underground work to rough framing and rough trade inspections, then insulation/lath or similar intermediate inspections where applicable, and finally final inspection. Insta-Permit standard plans are reviewed in the field by the inspector.
Frequently asked
Common questions about Costa Mesa permits
01 Do I need a building permit in Costa Mesa, CA? ▸
02 How much does a building permit cost in Costa Mesa, CA? ▸
03 How do I apply for a building permit in Costa Mesa, CA? ▸
04 What work is exempt from building permits in Costa Mesa, CA? ▸
05 How do I schedule a building inspection in Costa Mesa, CA? ▸
Educational reference. Permit rules and fees change — confirm current requirements directly with City of Costa Mesa Economic and Development Services, Building Safety Division before applying. Jaspector is not legal advice.