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When a permit is required
Permit triggers and exempt work for Santa Cruz County
A building permit is generally required unless the work is specifically exempted by the California Building Code and Santa Cruz County Code Chapter 12.
- Exempt One-story detached accessory structures <=120 sq. ft. on lots with an existing single-family dwelling or garage
- Exempt Fences <=8 ft for wood or metal and <=6 ft for concrete masonry
- Exempt Interior wall treatments such as painting, papering, and finish work
- Exempt Retaining walls <=3 ft retaining material, subject to surcharge and other limits
- Exempt Detached decks, walks, and platforms <=200 sq. ft. and <=30 in. above grade that do not serve egress
- Exempt Certain temporary or movable items, small prefabricated pools, small prefabricated shelters or canopies, some shading devices, and small water tanks meeting code limits
Note: Exempt work can still require zoning clearance, fire review, or other approvals. Confirm site-specific conditions with county staff before proceeding.
- Residential plans
- Camino guide checklist items and required forms
- Application Requirements for Residential Structures (PLG280) materials
- Owner-Builder Acknowledgment (PLG-220) when no contractor is used
- Building code
- References include the California Building Code, California Residential Code, California Plumbing Code, California Electrical Code, California Mechanical Code, and county building code provisions.
- Permit validity
- Permit is valid for one year from issuance and is extended six months from each approved progress inspection based on the date of the last approved progress inspection.
- Owner-builder
- Owner-builder acknowledgment is required for owners not hiring a contractor.
- Contractor requirements
- In the EZ permit workflow, only qualified property owners or licensed contractors are accepted online, and contractors must have a valid California contractor license and apply within their trade classification limits.
Source: Planning Division / Unified Permit Center - Building Permits & Safety, County of Santa Cruz ↗
Application process
Typical processing: No published fixed processing-time SLA was found on official county pages.
- 01 Research permit history and parcel context, then check zoning and environmental requirements before preparing the application.
- 02 Prepare the application package and fee estimate using the Camino Online Permit Guide and Residential/ADU fee estimator tools.
- 03 Apply through ePlan Review or the appropriate EZ Permit workflow and pay intake fees when required.
- 04 County staff and outside agencies review the project for code compliance.
- 05 Respond to correction comments and resubmit required documents or plan updates if needed.
- 06 After approvals, upload final required documents and pay issuance fees.
- 07 Download approved plans and the permit card before starting work.
- 08 Start construction only after permit issuance.
- 09 Schedule required inspections as work progresses; the permit is extended 6 months for each approved progress inspection.
- 10 Complete the permit after final inspection and clearance of any holds.
Typical processing time: No published fixed processing-time SLA was found on official county pages.
Source: Planning Division / Unified Permit Center - Building Permits & Safety, County of Santa Cruz ↗
Fee schedule
Santa Cruz County building permit fees
Online payment is accepted with a 2.29% convenience fee for credit card or similar electronic payments; electronic check has no convenience fee; payments made after 8:00 PM typically post the next business day.
Fees change periodically. Confirm at the official fee schedule ↗ before budgeting.
Required inspections
Scheduling and sequence
- County Inspection Scheduler (online)
- Scheduling deadline
- Schedule by 3:00 PM at least one county business day before the requested inspection date.
- Inspection hours
- Inspections are scheduled Monday-Friday; inspectors call between 8:00 AM and 9:00 AM to confirm timing.
- Time windows
- Typical inspector arrival window is about 2-3 hours; Friday inspections are AM only and may not include final or complex inspections.
Typical sequence: Typical sequence includes foundation, slab or under-floor, under-floor insulation, roof shear, exterior shear or hold-down inspections, and other project-specific inspections as required.
Source: Planning Division / Unified Permit Center - Building Permits & Safety, County of Santa Cruz ↗
Frequently asked
Common questions about unincorporated Santa Cruz County permits
01 Do I need a building permit in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA? ▸
02 How much does a building permit cost in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA? ▸
03 How do I apply for a building permit in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA? ▸
04 How long does it take to get a building permit in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA? ▸
05 What work is exempt from building permits in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA? ▸
06 How do I schedule a building inspection in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA? ▸
Educational reference. Permit rules and fees change — confirm current requirements directly with Planning Division / Unified Permit Center - Building Permits & Safety, County of Santa Cruz before applying. Jaspector is not legal advice.