HVAC permits in Pasadena, CA
A plain-English starting point for HVAC contractors working in Pasadena (Los Angeles County). This is general California guidance — it does not replace the requirements published by the city.
Short answer
In California, HVAC equipment changeouts (AC, furnace, heat pump), new mini-splits, and ductwork generally need a mechanical permit, and most changeouts also trigger Title 24 energy-compliance documentation and sometimes third-party HERS verification. Like-for-like thermostat or filter work usually doesn't. The governing codes are the California Mechanical Code and the Title 24 energy standards.
Pasadena-specific fees, forms, and timelines are set by City of Pasadena Permit Center. We don't publish Pasadena numbers we haven't verified.
The general picture
California HVAC work is governed by the California Mechanical Code and California's Title 24 energy standards. Equipment changeouts (AC, furnace, heat pump), new mini-splits, and ductwork generally require a mechanical permit, and many changeouts trigger Title 24 energy-compliance documentation. The exact forms, energy paperwork, fees, and review process are set per city and are not standardized statewide — confirm with the jurisdiction below before filing.
Typically needs a permit
- AC / furnace changeouts
- Heat pump installs
- Mini-split systems
- Ductwork and Title 24 docs
Usually doesn't (general norm)
- Replacing a thermostat like-for-like
- Routine maintenance, cleaning, or filter changes
- Repairing a unit with the same components (no equipment change)
Documents & plans generally required
- Mechanical permit application
- Contractor license and city registration
- Equipment specs / AHRI certificate for the new unit
- Title 24 / CF compliance documentation, including HERS-required measures
- Load calc (Manual J/D or equivalent) and duct layout for new or significantly changed systems
- Gas line and venting details where applicable
Common reasons HVAC applications get bounced
These are general, code-rooted patterns across California — not a Pasadena rejection rate.
- Missing or incomplete Title 24 / HERS documentation for a changeout that requires it
- Equipment efficiency below current Title 24 minimums
- No load calc or duct design for a new system
- AHRI match not provided
- Gas, venting, or condensate details missing
The inspection sequence
A typical order — the number of stops and exact sequence vary by jurisdiction and scope.
- 1Rough inspection for new ductwork or refrigerant lines before cover
- 2HERS verification by a third-party rater where required (separate from city inspection)
- 3Final inspection with the system installed, charged, and operating
Licensing — who can pull it
HVAC work in California is generally performed by a C-20 (Warm-Air Heating, Ventilating and Air-Conditioning) licensed contractor; a B general contractor may pull it within a larger project under CSLB rules. Many changeouts also require an independent HERS rater — that's separate from the contractor and the city inspector.
Confirm Pasadena specifics with the issuing department
City of Pasadena Permit CenterFees, accepted submittal formats, and review timelines are set by Pasadena and vary by project. We don't publish Pasadena-specific numbers we haven't verified — that's exactly the gap getPermit closes for the cities we map in depth.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a permit to replace an AC or furnace in California?
Generally yes. An equipment changeout is permitted mechanical work in most California jurisdictions, and it usually triggers Title 24 energy-compliance documentation and sometimes third-party HERS verification. The exact fee and process are set by the city — confirm with the department below.
What is HERS verification and do I need it?
HERS (Home Energy Rating System) verification is independent field verification of certain Title 24 measures — commonly duct leakage and refrigerant charge on changeouts. It's performed by a certified HERS rater, separate from the city inspection. Whether it applies depends on the scope and the energy code.
Does a mini-split install need a permit?
Generally yes — a new ductless mini-split adds equipment, electrical, and refrigerant work and is permitted mechanical (and often electrical) work in California. Confirm the local process with the AHJ below.
Is a thermostat swap permitted?
Usually not — a like-for-like thermostat replacement is generally treated as maintenance across California. This is a general norm, not a guarantee; check the city below.
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