Plumbing permits in Pasadena, CA

A plain-English starting point for plumbing 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, 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).

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 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 Pasadena 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.

Confirm Pasadena specifics with the issuing department

City of Pasadena Permit Center

Fees, 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 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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