ADU permits in Los Angeles, CA
A plain-English starting point for ADU contractors working in Los Angeles (Los Angeles County). This is general California guidance — it does not replace the requirements published by the city.
Short answer
Yes — every ADU (new construction, garage conversion, or a JADU within the existing home) requires building permits in California. State law (Government Code §65852.2) constrains how cities may regulate ADUs and sets a mandatory review period for a complete application, but each jurisdiction still sets its own development standards, fees, and submittal format. ADUs are generally permitted and built under a B (General Building) contractor coordinating the trades.
Los Angeles-specific fees, forms, and timelines are set by Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS). Verified data — portal, fee schedule, adopted code — is sourced below.
The general picture
An Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) is a project type rather than a single trade — it bundles building, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work, so it always requires permits from the local building department. California state law (Government Code §65852.2, and §65852.22 for Junior ADUs) sets a baseline framework that limits how local agencies may regulate ADUs and requires them to act on a complete ADU permit application within a state-mandated review period; the specific local development standards, fees, and submittal format are still set by each city or county. Confirm those specifics with the jurisdiction below before you file.
Typically needs a permit
- New detached ADU
- Garage or accessory-structure conversion
- Junior ADU (JADU) within the existing home
- Attached / addition-style ADU
Usually doesn't (general norm)
- There is effectively no no-permit path for an ADU — by definition it creates a dwelling unit and requires permits
- Only minor cosmetic work inside an already-permitted, legal ADU is treated like any existing dwelling
- Anything that creates or converts living space requires a permit
Documents & plans generally required
- Site plan showing the existing dwelling, the ADU footprint, setbacks, and parking
- Floor plans and elevations
- Structural plans/calcs for new construction or conversions
- Title 24 energy documentation
- Electrical, plumbing, and mechanical plans for the new unit
- School/impact fee and utility-connection forms where applicable
Common reasons ADU applications get bounced
These are general, code-rooted patterns across California — not a Los Angeles rejection rate.
- Site plan missing required setbacks, dimensions, or the existing structure
- A local ordinance that conflicts with state ADU law and hasn't been updated — resolve with the AHJ
- Incomplete structural or Title 24 documentation
- Fire-separation or egress details missing for a conversion
- Utility/sewer capacity or connection details not addressed
The inspection sequence
A typical order — the number of stops and exact sequence vary by jurisdiction and scope.
- 1Foundation / underground rough for new construction
- 2Framing, then rough electrical/plumbing/mechanical before cover
- 3Insulation and Title 24 / HERS verification where required
- 4Final inspections across trades and a final building sign-off before occupancy
Licensing — who can pull it
An ADU is generally built under a licensed B (General Building) contractor who coordinates the C-10 (electrical), C-36 (plumbing), and C-20 (HVAC) subtrades. State ADU law is statewide; the local building department is still the Authority Having Jurisdiction for the permit itself.
Los Angeles permit data
Sourced from public City of Los Angeles documents — every field carries the source URL and verification date.
- Permit portal
- PermitLA + ePlanLA (LADBS online permits)
verified May 22, 2026 · source · PermitLA (https://permitla.lacitydbs.org) handles express permits that do not require plan review; ePlanLA (https://eplanla.lacity.org) handles permits that require plan check. Both require a free Angeleno account.
- Adopted code edition
2025 California Building Code (LA Building Code, LAMC Chapter IX)
verified May 22, 2026 · source · Per Council File 25-1217 (ordinance amending LAMC Chapter IX, December 2025); LA adopts the 2025 California Building Code and 2025 California Residential Code with local amendments
- Fee schedule
- LADBS Fee Schedules — building permit valuation table, plan check fees, and per-trade fee tables
verified May 22, 2026 · source
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a permit to build an ADU in California?
Yes, always. An ADU creates a dwelling unit and requires building, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical permits. State law (Gov. Code §65852.2) limits how cities may regulate ADUs and sets a mandatory review period for a complete application, but the city is still the permitting authority. Confirm local standards with the department below.
Does a garage conversion to an ADU need a permit?
Yes. Converting a garage or accessory structure into living space is an ADU and requires permits, including fire separation, egress, and Title 24 compliance. Confirm the local process with the AHJ below.
How long does an ADU permit take in California?
California law requires local agencies to act on a complete ADU application within a state-mandated review period set by statute. The clock depends on the application being complete and on local process — confirm current timing and completeness requirements with the city's building department below. getPermit does not publish city-specific timelines it hasn't verified.
What is a JADU?
A Junior ADU (JADU) is a smaller unit, size-capped by state law, created within the walls of an existing single-family home with its own entrance. It still requires a permit and has its own state-law rules (Gov. Code §65852.22). Confirm local specifics with the department below.
Other trades in Los Angeles
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