City Building Permits

Tallahassee, FL Building Permit Guide

How to apply for a building permit in Tallahassee, Florida. Permit authority, application steps, fees, and inspection requirements.

Florida Leon County Updated March 2026

Permit Authority

All properties within the incorporated City of Tallahassee limits.

Department
Growth Management Department, Building Inspection Division
Address
435 N. Macomb Street, Tallahassee, FL 32301
Phone
(850) 891-7001

Online Permit Portal

Platform: Customer Permit Portal / ePlan Review • Account required: Yes • Submission: Online only

Application Process

  1. Confirm the parcel is located inside Tallahassee city limits rather than unincorporated Leon County.
  2. Determine whether the project requires a Land Use Compliance Certificate (LUCC), which is the first official step in the development process in Tallahassee.
  3. Create an account in the City's permit portal and submit the appropriate building or trade permit application.
  4. Upload required affidavits, plans, and supporting documents including Notice of Commencement, owner-builder disclosure, ownership affidavit, and project-specific checklists.
  5. Respond to plan-review comments in ePlan Review if corrections are required. Upload revised documents until all comments are resolved.
  6. Pay the invoice for remaining permit fees after approval. Approved plans and permit placard are provided after fees are paid in full.
  7. Schedule inspections through the permit portal or IVR as applicable and obtain final approval, certificate of occupancy, or certificate of completion before use.

Typical processing time: Commercial building permits: 7 workdays (expedited) to 21 workdays (standard). Residential permits: 7 workdays (Residential Guarantee Program), 5 workdays (minor projects under $25,000), 14 workdays (major projects over $25,000).

Source: Growth Management Department, Building Inspection Division

General Requirements

A permit is required for any new construction, addition, alteration, or repair with an estimated labor-and-material cost greater than $2,500, or for structural work. Replacement of windows or doors is considered structural and requires a permit. Roofing permits are required for work over 100 square feet. Electrical permits are required when new circuits are added, extended, or service is changed. Plumbing permits are required for new piping, repiping, or added fixtures. Mechanical permits are required when HVAC equipment is extended, relocated, or changed out.

Required Documents

  • Permit application
  • Ownership affidavit
  • Owner-builder disclosure affidavit (where applicable)
  • Florida construction lien-law acknowledgement
  • Notice of Commencement
  • Contractor-of-record acknowledgement
  • Contractor license and insurance registration documents
  • Site plan and construction plans
  • Project-specific checklists (generators, pools/spas, retaining walls, change of occupancy, etc.)
Permit validity
Confirm the current expiration language shown on the issued permit and in the live permit portal, as permit-expiration rules follow the statewide Florida Building Code framework. Permit extensions and reactivation workflows are available.
Building code
2023 Florida Building Code, 8th Edition (effective January 1, 2024); Florida Fire Prevention Code, 8th Edition; National Electrical Code, 2020 Edition
Owner-builder
Owner-builders must submit an Owner Builder Disclosure Affidavit and are the responsible party of record on the permit.
Contractor requirements
Contractors must hold a State of Florida contractor license, current liability insurance, workers' compensation coverage or exemption, and must set up a portal account before permit issuance. A designated agent is allowed if supported by a notarized contractor authorization.

Fees

Minimum permit fee
$100.69 (application fee)
Permit fee formula
Varies by occupancy and project type. Examples: 1- and 2-family construction $0.25-0.30 per square foot plus application fee; reinspection and discipline-specific fees also apply.
Reinspection fee
Included in fee schedule; varies by trade

Fees change. Verify current amounts at the official fee schedule (effective October 1, 2025).

Work That Does NOT Require a Permit

Contact the Growth Management Department, Building Inspection Division to confirm whether your project requires a permit before starting work.

Inspections

How to Schedule

Time windows
Morning, afternoon, or all-day windows

Typical inspection sequence: Mechanical, gas, and fire permit inspections are scheduled using the Customer Permit Portal. Fire, commercial mechanical, commercial gas, residential mechanical change-out, and gas meter set inspections must use the portal.

Additional Resources

Information on this page was last verified: March 2026. Permit rules and fees change — confirm current requirements directly with the Growth Management Department, Building Inspection Division before applying.

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Important: This page is an educational resource provided by jaspector.com. It is not legal advice, and it does not substitute for official guidance from the permit authority listed above. Permit requirements, fees, and processes change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with the issuing department before beginning any construction project. Use of this page does not create an attorney-client relationship. Jaspector assumes no liability for any outcomes arising from reliance on this information.

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