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County building permits

Unincorporated Santa Cruz County

How to apply for a building permit in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, California. Permit authority, application steps, fees, and inspection requirements.

Last verified
April 2026
On this page 6
§ 01

Permit authority

Planning Division / Unified Permit Center - Building Permits & Safety, County of Santa Cruz

Street address
701 Ocean St., 4th Floor, Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Coverage
County planning and building records and permits are maintained for projects in the unincorporated areas of Santa Cruz County.
Online portal
ePlan Review
ePlan Review
§ 02

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.

One-story detached accessory structures <=120 sq. ft. on lots with an existing single-family dwelling or garage
Fences <=8 ft for wood or metal and <=6 ft for concrete masonry
Interior wall treatments such as painting, papering, and finish work
Retaining walls <=3 ft retaining material, subject to surcharge and other limits
Detached decks, walks, and platforms <=200 sq. ft. and <=30 in. above grade that do not serve egress
Certain temporary or movable items, small prefabricated pools, small prefabricated shelters or canopies, some shading devices, and small water tanks meeting code limits
  • 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.

Required documents
  • 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 ↗

§ 03

Application process

Typical processing: No published fixed processing-time SLA was found on official county pages.

  1. 01
    Research permit history and parcel context, then check zoning and environmental requirements before preparing the application.
  2. 02
    Prepare the application package and fee estimate using the Camino Online Permit Guide and Residential/ADU fee estimator tools.
  3. 03
    Apply through ePlan Review or the appropriate EZ Permit workflow and pay intake fees when required.
  4. 04
    County staff and outside agencies review the project for code compliance.
  5. 05
    Respond to correction comments and resubmit required documents or plan updates if needed.
  6. 06
    After approvals, upload final required documents and pay issuance fees.
  7. 07
    Download approved plans and the permit card before starting work.
  8. 08
    Start construction only after permit issuance.
  9. 09
    Schedule required inspections as work progresses; the permit is extended 6 months for each approved progress inspection.
  10. 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 ↗

§ 04

Fee schedule

Santa Cruz County building permit fees

Fee type
Amount
01
Plan check fee
Included in intake fees as Building Plan Review.
02
Permit fee formula
Intake, plan-check, processing, permit, and impact fees are graduated and based on project size, type, complexity, structure evaluation, and area-specific requirements.
03
Reinspection fee
Reinspection fees may be charged when the site is not ready or required documents, representatives, or corrections are missing.

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.

§ 05

Required inspections

Scheduling and sequence

How to schedule
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 ↗

§ 06

Frequently asked

Common questions about unincorporated Santa Cruz County permits

01 Do I need a building permit in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA?
A building permit is generally required unless the work is specifically exempted by the California Building Code and Santa Cruz County Code Chapter 12.
02 How much does a building permit cost in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA?
Building permit fees in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA are set by the local building department and vary by project type and valuation. Fees are calculated as: Intake, plan-check, processing, permit, and impact fees are graduated and based on project size, type, complexity, structure evaluation, and area-specific requirements.. Plan check fee: Included in intake fees as Building Plan Review..
03 How do I apply for a building permit in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA?
To apply for a building permit in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA, follow these steps: 1. Research permit history and parcel context, then check zoning and environmental requirements before preparing the application. 2. Prepare the application package and fee estimate using the Camino Online Permit Guide and Residential/ADU fee estimator tools. 3. Apply through ePlan Review or the appropriate EZ Permit workflow and pay intake fees when required. 4. County staff and outside agencies review the project for code compliance. 5. Respond to correction comments and resubmit required documents or plan updates if needed. 6. After approvals, upload final required documents and pay issuance fees. 7. Download approved plans and the permit card before starting work. 8. Start construction only after permit issuance. 9. 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.
04 How long does it take to get a building permit in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA?
Building permit processing times in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA typically run No published fixed processing-time SLA was found on official county pages.. Timelines can vary based on project complexity and current department workload.
05 What work is exempt from building permits in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA?
Not all construction work requires a permit in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA. The following work is generally exempt: One-story detached accessory structures <=120 sq. ft. on lots with an existing single-family dwelling or garage; Fences <=8 ft for wood or metal and <=6 ft for concrete masonry; Interior wall treatments such as painting, papering, and finish work; Retaining walls <=3 ft retaining material, subject to surcharge and other limits; Detached decks, walks, and platforms <=200 sq. ft. and <=30 in. above grade that do not serve egress; 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. When in doubt, confirm with the local building department before starting work.
06 How do I schedule a building inspection in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA?
Once your permit is issued and work reaches an inspection milestone, you can schedule a building inspection in unincorporated Santa Cruz County, CA via: County Inspection Scheduler. Schedule by 3:00 PM at least one county business day before the requested inspection date..
last verified April 2026 source Planning Division / Unified Permit Center - Building Permits & Safety, County of Santa Cruz ↗ entry id permits/california/santa-cruz/unincorporated

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.