Sewer line replacement permits in Los Angeles, CA

General California guidance last updated May 22, 2026 · Los Angeles data verified May 22, 2026

What plumbing contractors need to know about pulling a sewer line replacement permit in Los Angeles (Los Angeles County).

Short answer

In California, replacing a sewer lateral or building drain needs a plumbing permit, pulled by a licensed C-36 (Plumbing) or C-42 (Sanitation) contractor under the California Plumbing Code (Title 24, Part 5). The work often coordinates with the city's wastewater utility, and an encroachment / right-of-way permit is generally required when work extends into the public right-of-way.

Los Angeles accepts submittal through the PermitLA + ePlanLA (LADBS online permits) and has adopted the 2025 California Building Code (LA Building Code, LAMC Chapter IX). Fee details and sources are below.

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

The general picture in California

A sewer-line replacement covers the building's drain from the foundation out to the city main (or septic). The permit covers pipe material (typically ABS, PVC SDR-35, or cast iron for certain conditions), slope, bedding, cleanouts, backwater valve (required by ordinance in many California cities on lateral replacements), and connection to the city main. Trenchless methods — pipe bursting and cured-in-place pipe (CIPP) lining — are common and have their own submittal requirements. Work in the public right-of-way (between the property line and the main) often requires a separate encroachment permit from public works on top of the building permit.

For deeper background that isn't Los Angeles-specific, see the statewide sewer line replacement guide.

Typically needs a permit

Sewer line replacement itself triggers a permit in nearly every California jurisdiction, Los Angeles included. Los Angeles-specific variations are confirmed with the issuing department above.

Usually doesn't (general norm)

  • Clearing a drain stoppage with a snake or hydro-jet
  • Repairing a single broken section of accessible pipe with the same material
  • Camera-inspecting an existing lateral for diagnostics

Documents & plans generally required

Common reasons sewer line replacement applications get bounced

Code-rooted patterns across California — not a Los Angeles-specific rejection rate.

The inspection sequence

A typical order — the number of stops and exact sequence vary by jurisdiction and scope.

  1. 1Pre-cover inspection with the new pipe in place, sloped, supported, and air/pressure-tested
  2. 2Right-of-way / utility inspection at the connection to the city main (when applicable)
  3. 3Final inspection with backfill, restoration, and any required surface work complete

Licensing — who can pull it

Sewer-line replacement in California is generally performed by a C-36 (Plumbing) or C-42 (Sanitation) 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; work in the public right-of-way may also require a separate encroachment-permit filing.

Other verified Los Angeles notes

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a permit to replace a sewer lateral in California?

Yes — replacing the building lateral (from the foundation to the city main) is permitted plumbing work in every California jurisdiction. Work in the public right-of-way usually requires an additional encroachment / right-of-way permit from the city's public works department.

What is a backwater valve and when is it required?

A backwater valve prevents sewer backflow into the building during a main-line surcharge. The California Plumbing Code requires one when any fixture is below the next upstream manhole rim; many California cities require one on every lateral replacement regardless. Check the local ordinance.

Do trenchless methods (pipe bursting, CIPP) need a permit?

Yes — trenchless methods need the same plumbing permit, plus submittal details specific to the method: host-pipe condition, bursting head size or liner thickness, and cure procedure. Inspection sequencing may differ — some jurisdictions verify the lined pipe with a post-install camera inspection.

Who connects to the city main?

The contractor performs the tie-in, but the city's public works or wastewater utility typically inspects (or requires advance notice of) the connection. Encroachment permits cover the work in the right-of-way; some cities require their own crew to perform the actual tap.

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