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When a permit is required
Permit triggers and exempt work for Hemet
Hemet's Building & Safety handout says permits and inspections are required for many residential and commercial projects, including new buildings, patio covers, enclosed patios, garage conversions, additions and alterations, pools and spas, sheds/storage buildings over 120 square feet, carports/garages/barns/accessory buildings, fire sprinklers and alarms, electrical/plumbing/mechanical/structural repairs, reroofing of 100 square feet or more, and windows. The City notes the list is not complete.
- Exempt One-story detached accessory structures used as tool or storage sheds, playhouses, and similar uses where floor area does not exceed 120 square feet and zoning setbacks are met.
- Exempt Certain fences of approved materials not over 7 feet high, subject to the City's local limitations described in its code-adoption comparison materials.
- 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 Ordinary repairs that do not remove structural elements, affect egress, or involve plumbing, gas, electrical, mechanical, or other work affecting public health or safety.
Note: Hemet's current permit handout says its permit-required list is not complete and applicants should verify with Building & Safety. The exempt-work bullets above come from City code-adoption comparison materials and may be narrowed by zoning, fire, or other local requirements, so project-specific confirmation is still advisable.
- Typical submittals include a permit application, site/plot plan, construction plans, structural calculations if required
- Title 24 energy forms, soils report where applicable, contractor/owner information, and any required outside-agency approvals. Hemet's residential checklist also requires project-specific items such as grading-plan references, planning approvals, and utility/septic information where applicable.
- Building code
- Hemet's current residential submittal requirements cite the 2022 California Building, Residential, Electrical, Mechanical, Plumbing, Fire, and Energy Codes, plus Hemet adoption and amendments.
- Permit validity
- Hemet's May 2024 expired-permit bulletin states permits become invalid unless work is commenced within 365 days, and permits also lapse if no inspection of significant progress is obtained for 180 days. Demolition/moving permits are limited to 60 days. A written extension may be granted for up to 180 days for good cause; renewals within 180 days of expiration are generally charged at 50% of a new permit, and older expirations are charged as a new permit.
- Owner-builder
- Hemet FAQ says a homeowner pulling the permit must provide a grant deed showing ownership and a current driver's license. If someone else will pull the permit on the owner's behalf, the City requires a notarized authorization letter with those items.
- Contractor requirements
- Hemet FAQ says contractors must hold a valid California Contractors State License, a City of Hemet business license, and a notarized authorization letter if the person obtaining the permit is not the license holder.
Application process
Application → plan check → issuance → inspection → final
- 01 Confirm scope with Building & Safety and any related City divisions. Hemet's residential submittal guide says applicants should check with Fire, Engineering/Public Works, and Planning before submitting because separate approvals, fees, or outside-agency clearances may be required.
- 02 Prepare the application package. For over-the-counter permits, the City says the applicant completes a permit application and submits required plans/documents by email, in person, or through the portal if eligible. For plan-review projects, Hemet requires electronic submittal through eTRAKiT and project-specific plan sets and supporting documents.
- 03 Submit plans digitally through eTRAKiT for portal-based projects. Hemet's Building & Safety page states paper plans are no longer accepted for plan review and that this procedure started October 1, 2024. Small projects may still qualify for over-the-counter plan check.
- 04 Respond to corrections and resubmit electronically if required. The Plan Review page directs applicants to resubmit corrected plans through eTRAKiT with responses to plan-check comments.
- 05 After departmental approval, provide any remaining outside-agency releases and pay invoiced fees. Hemet lists examples such as Health Department clearances, school-fee receipts, and TUMF receipts.
- 06 Obtain the issued permit, job card, and approved plans before starting work. Hemet warns that work performed before City notification is treated as work without a permit and may trigger a special investigation fee.
- 07 Schedule inspections by portal or phone as the project progresses. Contractors can schedule online through eTRAKiT after registration, and Building & Safety also maintains an automated inspection request line.
- 08 Processing time estimate if available: Hemet publishes an approximately 2-week delay for emailed over-the-counter permit submittals. Small projects may qualify for same-day over-the-counter review; the City does not publish a single standard turnaround for full plan-review permits.
- 09 Source URL: https://www.hemetca.gov/976/Plan-Review ; https://www.hemetca.gov/977/Permit-Issuance ; https://www.hemetca.gov/68/Building-Safety ; https://www.hemetca.gov/DocumentCenter/View/10284/Submittal-Requirements-Single-Family-Residential
Fee schedule
Hemet building permit fees
Permit technicians calculate fees and issue an invoice. Permit issuance occurs after payment and any outstanding releases are provided. The FY 2025-26 schedule includes a 3% credit-card transaction processing fee. The online portal materials describe payments as limited/rolling, so applicants should follow current City invoice instructions.
Fees change periodically. Confirm at the official fee schedule ↗ before budgeting.
Required inspections
Scheduling and sequence
- https://cohchcrwweb.cityofhemet.org/eTRAKiT3/ (online)
- (951) 765-2428 (phone)
- Scheduling deadline
- Building inspections are generally performed Monday through Friday between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. The Scheduled Daily Inspection List is updated daily and inspection times should be posted by about 8:30 a.m. Hemet FAQ also states inspection requests left by 3:00 p.m. are inspected the following business day.
Typical sequence: Hemet does not publish one universal sequence on the main permit pages, but inspections follow construction progress and approved plans; applicants should keep the City-issued job/inspection card and approved plans on site and provide access to the inspection area.
Frequently asked
Common questions about Hemet permits
01 Do I need a building permit in Hemet, CA? ▸
02 How much does a building permit cost in Hemet, CA? ▸
03 How do I apply for a building permit in Hemet, CA? ▸
04 What work is exempt from building permits in Hemet, CA? ▸
05 How do I schedule a building inspection in Hemet, CA? ▸
Educational reference. Permit rules and fees change — confirm current requirements directly with City of Hemet Building & Safety Division before applying. Jaspector is not legal advice.