San Jose Home Additions permits — what San Jose Building Division requires
Every home additions project in San Jose runs through San Jose Building Division. Below: what the permit actually needs, which inspections are scheduled, where projects most often get rejected, and how long San Jose plan check really takes in 2026. This guide is field experience — not screenshots from a state PDF.
Does San Jose require a permit?
Yes — San Jose Building Division reviews this scope.
home additions in San Jose is permit-required. San Jose Building Division reviews the package; the building permit covers the work, additional overlays may add CDP, fire, hillside, or historic review on top.
What San Jose Building Division actually reviews.
San Jose Building Division runs plan check on every home additions project at this scope. Full plan-check cycle (2–3 rounds of corrections is typical) — expect 6–14 weeks from submittal to issued permit.
San Jose treats home additions as standard permitted work — the permit set scope follows the project scope and the San Jose Building Division fee schedule.
Estimated review timeline: 6–14 weeks to issued permit, including San Jose Building Division plan check.
Documents the home additions permit package needs.
- Stamped architectural plan set (site, floor, elevations, sections)
- Structural calcs and details signed by a CA-licensed engineer
- Title 24 energy compliance forms (CF1R / CF2R)
- Site plan with setbacks, lot coverage, and easements called out
- San Jose Building Division permit application + owner authorization
- Soils / geotechnical report (required on most lots)
- Demolition permit + haul-route map
Inspection sequence in San Jose.
- Setback / form-board inspection before foundation pour
- Foundation rebar + post-tension inspection
- Underfloor rough plumbing + electrical
- Framing + shear inspection with structural observation
- Rough MEP (electrical, plumbing, mechanical) before insulation
- Insulation + envelope inspection (Title 24 verification)
- Drywall nailing inspection
- Final inspection + Certificate of Occupancy
Common correction risks
- ×Incomplete Title 24 forms — most common single-issue rejection
- ×Site plan missing setbacks, easements, or existing tree protection
- ×Structural calcs not matching the architectural set
San Jose-specific delay risks
- ⏱San Jose Building Division plan check queues run 4–8 weeks in busy seasons (spring/summer submittals).
- ⏱Utility-service requests (water tap, electrical service upgrade) routinely run 8–16 weeks — open them with the permit, not after.
Verify with San Jose's permitting authorities.
Permit questions.
- Do I need a permit for home additions in San Jose?
- Yes — San Jose Building Division runs plan check on every home additions project at this scope.
- How long does San Jose Building Division take to issue a San Jose home additions permit?
- For a San Jose home additions project, 6–14 weeks to issued permit, including San Jose Building Division plan check.
- Who can pull the home additions permit on my San Jose project?
- Alpha Dream Construction pulls every San Jose permit in our license (CSLB #1145233). You stay off the line as contractor of record — we handle San Jose Building Division plan check, corrections, and inspections through close-out.
- What gets rejected most often on San Jose home additions plan checks?
- On San Jose home additions submittals to San Jose Building Division, the three most common rejection causes are: Incomplete Title 24 forms — most common single-issue rejection; Site plan missing setbacks, easements, or existing tree protection; Structural calcs not matching the architectural set. Catching them on day one shaves 4–8 weeks off the typical cycle.
- Can I start the home additions job before the San Jose permit is issued?
- No — California law prohibits starting permitted work before permit issuance, and San Jose Building Division can issue a stop-work order plus penalty fees of 2–4× the permit cost. We schedule mobilization the same week permit issues, never before.
- Does San Jose require a separate inspection for home additions?
- Yes — 8 inspections are typical: Setback / form-board inspection before foundation pour; Foundation rebar + post-tension inspection; Underfloor rough plumbing + electrical; Framing + shear inspection with structural observation; and final.
Plan the rest of the San Jose project.
Check what San Jose Building Division will require before you spend on drawings.
We pre-screen overlays, setbacks, and plan-check risk for San Jose so the permit path is known before contract.
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