Whole-house repipe permits in Sacramento, CA
General California guidance last updated May 22, 2026 · Sacramento data verified May 22, 2026
What plumbing contractors need to know about pulling a whole-house repipe permit in Sacramento (Sacramento County).
Short answer
In California, a whole-house repipe needs a plumbing permit, pulled by a licensed C-36 contractor under the California Plumbing Code (Title 24, Part 5). The permit covers replacing existing supply (and sometimes drain/waste/vent) piping; common drivers include failing galvanized or polybutylene supply, slab leaks, low-pressure complaints, and pinhole leaks in copper.
Sacramento accepts submittal through the Sacramento Citizen Portal (Accela ACA) and has adopted the 2025 California Building Standards Code. Fee details and sources are below.
Sacramento permit data
Sourced from public City of Sacramento documents — every field carries the source URL and verification date.
- Permit portal
- Sacramento Citizen Portal (Accela ACA)
verified May 22, 2026 · source · Online permit submittal, inspection scheduling, and fee payment via Accela Citizen Access
- Adopted code edition
2025 California Building Standards Code
verified May 22, 2026 · source · Ordinance 2025-0031 (adopted Dec 2, 2025) — adopts 2025 California Building, Plumbing, Residential, Existing Building, and Green Building Standards Codes with local amendments
- Fee schedule
- City of Sacramento Building Fees — current fee tables, fee estimator, and forms
verified May 22, 2026 · source
The general picture in California
A repipe replaces the hot/cold supply distribution throughout a structure — most commonly converting galvanized or polybutylene to PEX or copper. The permit covers pipe material, sizing, routing, fastening, insulation, manifold or trunk-and-branch layout, and pressure testing. Drain/waste/vent repipes add slope, venting, and cleanout requirements. Drywall and finish repairs are out of scope of the plumbing permit but may require their own permits if structural framing is altered.
For deeper background that isn't Sacramento-specific, see the statewide whole-house repipe guide.
Typically needs a permit
Whole-house repipe itself triggers a permit in nearly every California jurisdiction, Sacramento included. Sacramento-specific variations are confirmed with the issuing department above.
Usually doesn't (general norm)
- Replacing an exposed section of supply pipe with the same material and routing (repair)
- Replacing a fixture supply line, angle stop, or stop valve
- Tightening or replacing a single fitting on existing pipe
Documents & plans generally required
- Plumbing permit application
- Contractor license and city business registration
- Pipe material, size, and manufacturer (PEX-A vs. PEX-B, copper type, fitting system)
- Routing plan — trunk-and-branch vs. manifold, with pipe sizes per fixture group
- Pressure-test procedure and the test pressure to be held
- Penetration and fire-stopping details where lines pass through rated assemblies
- Listing/approval for any non-traditional pipe (specific PEX listings, fitting systems)
Common reasons whole-house repipe applications get bounced
Code-rooted patterns across California — not a Sacramento-specific rejection rate.
- Pipe sizing not matching the fixture-unit load (undersized branches feeding multiple fixtures)
- Pipe material or fitting system not listed for potable water use in California
- No pressure-test procedure or insufficient hold pressure shown
- Missing penetration / fire-stopping detail at rated walls and floor assemblies
- Hot-water line insulation not specified per Title 24 Part 6
- DWV scope missing slope, cleanouts, or venting where the repipe includes drainage
The inspection sequence
A typical order — the number of stops and exact sequence vary by jurisdiction and scope.
- 1Rough/cover inspection with new piping exposed, pressure-tested, and supported
- 2Insulation inspection for Title 24 hot-water-line insulation where applicable
- 3Final inspection with fixtures reconnected, pressure restored, and the system tested
Licensing — who can pull it
Repipes in California are performed by a C-36 (Plumbing) 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.
Other verified Sacramento notes
Permit Center: 300 Richards Blvd., 3rd Floor, Sacramento, CA 95811. Help line (916) 264-5011.
verified May 22, 2026 · source
Commercial-permit base fee: $866 for project valuations $0–$99,999; an additional $0.005553 per dollar over $100,000 (graduated rates apply at higher valuations).
verified May 22, 2026 · source · Source: City of Sacramento Commercial Building Permit Fees and Charges handout (CDD-0216)
Statewide & city add-ons applied to most permits: Strong Motion Fee (valuation × 0.00028, $0.50 minimum); Green Building Fee ($1 per $25,000 of valuation); General Plan Fee ($2.60 per $1,000 of valuation, capped at $38,200); City Business Operations Tax (valuation × 0.0004, capped at $5,000/year).
verified May 22, 2026 · source
Online plan submittal, inspection scheduling, and fee payment go through the Accela Citizen Portal — registration required for first-time applicants.
verified May 22, 2026 · source · Source: City of Sacramento Online Permitting Registration Guide (Version 5)
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a permit for a whole-house repipe in California?
Yes — replacing supply (and/or DWV) piping throughout a structure is permitted plumbing work in every California jurisdiction. The permit covers material, sizing, routing, and pressure testing; the inspector typically signs off at rough (pre-cover) and at final.
Is PEX allowed throughout California?
Yes — PEX has been approved statewide for potable water under the California Plumbing Code for over a decade. Some jurisdictions still require specific listings or limit certain fitting types; the listing should be shown on the permit submittal.
Do I need a separate permit for drywall repair?
The plumbing permit covers the pipe work only. Drywall and finish repair are typically follow-up work and don't require a separate permit unless structural framing is altered. Inspectors will require pipe access (open walls or strategic cuts) at the rough inspection.
Can a repipe be done in an occupied home?
Generally yes — most residential repipes are done with the occupants in place, with water shut off for short periods. The permit doesn't restrict occupancy; sequencing is a contractor/owner decision.
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