A straightforward reference for homeowners working through residential renovation permit applications, provincial building code requirements, and on-site inspection processes across Canada.
Structural changes, new electrical circuits, plumbing modifications, and additions over a threshold square footage all typically require municipal approval before work begins. Skipping that step can delay future property sales and lead to costly remediation orders.
Read the permit guideLatest articles
Permits
A step-by-step walkthrough of the municipal permit application process, from determining whether a permit is required to passing the final inspection.
Building Codes
An overview of how the National Building Code translates into provincial and territorial requirements, and what that means for renovation projects in different regions.
Inspections
A detailed look at how municipal building inspectors review renovation work at each stage, what they examine, and how to prepare for each visit.
Key topics
Which projects require permits, how to submit an application, what documentation to prepare, and typical approval timelines by municipality.
How each province adopts and amends the National Building Code, and which local amendments affect common renovation types like decks, additions, and basement finishes.
From footing inspections on new additions to electrical rough-in and final occupancy checks — when inspectors visit and what they verify at each stage.
What licensed contractors are required to provide, how to verify their credentials, and what documentation homeowners should keep after work is complete.
The consequences of work done without a permit, how municipalities handle retroactive permit applications, and what disclosure requirements apply at resale.
Notable differences between permit requirements in Ontario, British Columbia, Alberta, Quebec, and Atlantic Canada that affect residential renovation planning.
While the National Building Code of Canada provides a baseline, provinces like Ontario, British Columbia, and Quebec maintain their own building codes with additional requirements. A deck addition that clears approval in one province may face different setback or structural rules in another.
Read the building codes overviewInspection process
Building inspectors typically review work at multiple points: before concrete is poured, after framing is complete, before drywall closes the walls, and at final completion. Missing a required inspection stage can mean opening walls back up.
Inspection guide
This reference covers common permit and inspection questions. For project-specific advice, contact your local municipal building department.
Get in touch