AC changeout permits in Irvine, CA
General California guidance last updated May 22, 2026 · Irvine data verified May 22, 2026
What HVAC contractors need to know about pulling a ac changeout permit in Irvine (Orange County).
Short answer
In California, replacing a central AC condenser, coil, or furnace needs a mechanical permit (and often electrical for the condenser circuit), pulled by a licensed C-20 contractor. The work is governed by the California Mechanical Code (Title 24, Part 4) and the California Energy Code (Title 24, Part 6), and most residential replacements require third-party HERS testing for duct leakage and refrigerant-charge verification.
Irvine accepts submittal through the Irvine Ready! (online permit portal) and has adopted the 2025 California Building Standards Code (with Irvine amendments). Fee details and sources are below.
Irvine permit data
Sourced from public City of Irvine documents — every field carries the source URL and verification date.
- Permit portal
- Irvine Ready! (online permit portal)
verified May 22, 2026 · source · Irvine Ready! handles plan-review submittals (grading, new construction, residential additions, tenant improvements, signs, solar); PermitsDIRECT! (powered by Symbium) issues instant minor permits for eligible residential/commercial projects
- Adopted code edition
2025 California Building Standards Code (with Irvine amendments)
verified May 22, 2026 · source · Adopted Oct 28, 2025; effective Jan 1, 2026; local amendments in Title 5, Division 9 of the Irvine Municipal Code. All plan review applications submitted on or after Jan 1, 2026 must comply.
- Fee schedule
- City of Irvine Community Development Fee Schedule — building plan check and permit issuance fees
verified May 22, 2026 · source
The general picture in California
An HVAC changeout is permitted mechanical work in nearly every California jurisdiction. California's Title 24 Part 6 energy standards require third-party HERS verification on most residential AC and furnace replacements — typically duct-leakage testing, refrigerant-charge verification, and airflow when ducts are altered. Replacements may also require updating combustion air, condensate drainage, condenser disconnects and clearances, and a smart thermostat under some prescriptive packages. Heat-pump replacements add electrical-load and circuit considerations.
For deeper background that isn't Irvine-specific, see the statewide ac changeout guide.
Typically needs a permit
AC changeout itself triggers a permit in nearly every California jurisdiction, Irvine included. Irvine-specific variations are confirmed with the issuing department above.
Usually doesn't (general norm)
- Replacing a thermostat with a like-for-like (non-smart) unit
- Replacing a capacitor, contactor, or fan motor on the existing condenser (repair, not replacement)
- Cleaning coils, replacing filters, or relighting the pilot
Documents & plans generally required
- Mechanical permit application (and electrical permit when the condenser circuit is replaced or upsized)
- Contractor license and city business registration
- Cut sheets for the new equipment (condenser, coil, furnace/air handler) with AHRI match
- Title 24 Part 6 compliance documentation (CF1R, plus CF2R/CF3R from the HERS rater)
- Refrigerant type and line-set details (especially R-410A → R-454B / A2L transitions)
- Condensate drainage route and termination
- Electrical disconnect and condenser-circuit details if changed
Common reasons ac changeout applications get bounced
Code-rooted patterns across California — not a Irvine-specific rejection rate.
- Missing Title 24 Part 6 documentation or HERS registration
- AHRI match certificate missing or doesn't match the proposed condenser + coil combination
- Refrigerant type / line-set compatibility not addressed (A2L compliance for new installs)
- Condenser placement clearances not shown (NEC 110.26 + manufacturer's clearance + setback ordinances)
- Condensate drainage to an unapproved location or without a secondary safety drain/switch
- No detail on duct-leakage testing or refrigerant-charge verification on a duct-altered system
The inspection sequence
A typical order — the number of stops and exact sequence vary by jurisdiction and scope.
- 1Rough/in-progress not typically required for like-for-like equipment swaps
- 2HERS verification (third-party rater) for duct leakage and refrigerant charge as applicable
- 3Final inspection with the equipment installed, energized, and tested; HERS certificates filed
Licensing — who can pull it
HVAC changeouts in California are generally performed by a C-20 (Warm-Air Heating, Ventilating and Air-Conditioning) licensed contractor; a B (General Building) contractor may pull within a larger project under CSLB rules. The licensed contractor doing the work typically pulls the permit.
Other verified Irvine notes
Permit Processing Counter phone: (949) 724-6313. Plan check fees are paid at submittal; permit fees at issuance.
verified May 22, 2026 · source
PermitsDIRECT! (powered by Symbium) automatically checks code compliance and issues permits in real time for residential solar/energy storage and select minor maintenance/replacement projects.
verified May 22, 2026 · source
Permit tracking and inspection scheduling at https://permits.cityofirvine.org/irvinepermits/ — separate from Irvine Ready! submittal.
verified May 22, 2026 · source
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a permit for a like-for-like AC changeout in California?
Generally yes. Even a like-for-like AC condenser or furnace replacement triggers a mechanical permit and Title 24 Part 6 compliance (HERS testing for duct leakage and refrigerant charge) in nearly every California city. Repairs to existing equipment generally don't.
What is HERS verification and why is it required?
Title 24 Part 6 requires third-party HERS (Home Energy Rating System) raters to verify specific measures on residential replacements — most commonly duct leakage and refrigerant charge. The rater's CF2R/CF3R certificates are filed with the permit; missing HERS documentation is a top reason for rejection or failed final.
Do I need an electrical permit too?
If the condenser circuit, disconnect, or breaker is replaced or upsized, yes — that's electrical work. Most jurisdictions bundle it under the mechanical permit but require electrical scope on the application. Heat-pump conversions almost always need an electrical permit.
How does the A2L refrigerant transition affect permits?
New systems shipped after the EPA's 2025 A2L transition use mildly-flammable refrigerants (R-454B, R-32) requiring listed line sets, leak-detection where applicable, and updated installation practices. The application and cut sheets should reflect the refrigerant type; some jurisdictions are still updating their checklists.
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