Plumbing permits in Los Angeles, CA

A plain-English starting point for plumbing 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

In California, water heater replacements, repipes, sewer and water service work, gas lines, and most fixture relocations need a plumbing permit from the local building department, generally pulled by a licensed C-36 contractor. Clearing a stoppage or swapping a faucet/valve like-for-like usually doesn't. The governing code is the California Plumbing Code (Title 24, Part 5).

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

California plumbing work follows the California Plumbing Code (Title 24, Part 5). Water heater replacements, repipes, sewer/water service work, gas lines, and most fixture relocations generally require a permit from the local building department, usually pulled by a licensed C-36 contractor. Document requirements, fees, and inspection scheduling differ by city and are not uniform across the state — verify the specifics with the jurisdiction below.

Typically needs a permit

  • Water heater replacement
  • Repipes
  • Sewer line repair
  • Fixture and gas line work

Usually doesn't (general norm)

  • Clearing a drain stoppage
  • Replacing a faucet, supply stop, or trap like-for-like
  • Replacing a garbage disposal in the same location
  • Minor leak repair on existing pipe with the same material and routing

Documents & plans generally required

Common reasons plumbing applications get bounced

These are general, code-rooted patterns across California — not a Los Angeles rejection rate.

The inspection sequence

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

  1. 1Rough inspection (top-out / underground) with piping pressure-tested before cover
  2. 2Gas test/inspection for new or modified gas piping
  3. 3Final inspection with fixtures set and tested

Licensing — who can pull it

Plumbing work in California is generally performed by a C-36 (Plumbing) licensed contractor; a B general contractor may pull it within a larger project under CSLB rules. The licensed contractor doing the work typically pulls the permit. Licensing rules are set by the CSLB and the local department — not by getPermit.

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

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a permit to replace a water heater in California?

Generally yes. A water heater changeout is permitted plumbing (and often gas/mechanical) work in most California jurisdictions because it involves gas or electrical connections, venting, seismic strapping, and a T&P/expansion device. The exact fee and inspection process are set by the city — confirm with the department below.

Is a permit required to repipe a house?

Yes, generally — a whole-house or partial repipe changes the water distribution system and requires a plumbing permit and inspection in California. Confirm submittal specifics with the AHJ below.

Does a sewer line replacement need a permit?

Generally yes. Sewer lateral and water service replacement is permitted work in California and often carries additional right-of-way or encroachment requirements set by the city or utility. Confirm with the local department below.

Do I need a permit to clear a drain or swap a faucet?

Usually not — drain clearing and like-for-like faucet or valve replacement are generally treated as maintenance across California. This is a general norm, not a guarantee; check the city below.

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