Municipal Guide Arkansas Pulaski County

Pulaski County Building Permit Guide

How to get a building permit in Pulaski County, Arkansas - local AHJ routing, Arkansas Fire Prevention Code, county and city permits, fees, inspections, and closeout. 2026 guide.

Authority: Pulaski County local city, county, floodplain, and state specialty permitting authoritiesUpdated: June 2026Population: 404,611
Jurisdiction
Pulaski County
Population
404,611
Permit authority
Pulaski County local city, county, floodplain, and state specialty permitting authorities
Updated
June 2026
Alliance Permitting
Permit expediting, document preparation, and jurisdiction coordination

This guide summarizes the practical permitting path for projects in Pulaski County, Arkansas, with a focus on jurisdiction selection, documentation, plan-review coordination, Arkansas Fire Prevention Code compliance, inspections, and closeout.

Arkansas county guides should not assume one uniform countywide building-permit workflow. Confirm whether the parcel is inside a city, town, or unincorporated area, then route the application to the city building department, county planning/building safety office, floodplain administrator, fire marshal, health department, utility, or state agency that controls the scope. Pulaski County includes Little Rock, North Little Rock, Sherwood, Jacksonville, Maumelle, and unincorporated areas. The county Planning and Development Department publishes planning, land-use, floodplain, stormwater, watershed, and application-form resources, while incorporated cities run separate building-code divisions and permit workflows.

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Confirm the local AHJ before filing. Arkansas projects can split among city, county, floodplain, fire, health, environmental, driveway, utility, planning, zoning, and state trade reviewers depending on parcel and scope.

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State versus local jurisdiction matters. Arkansas permitting is split between local jurisdictions and state specialty oversight. Cities such as Little Rock, Fayetteville, Fort Smith, Springdale, and Jonesboro maintain their own building, planning, portal, inspection, or plan-review processes. County and unincorporated-area routing varies: Benton County publishes building safety permit instructions for unincorporated areas, Pulaski County publishes planning and permit resources, Washington County notes that general building permits or inspections are not required in some unincorporated contexts unless requested, and Faulkner County emphasizes floodplain permitting before development in covered areas.

Do not file a Pulaski County project until the exact city-limit and county jurisdiction are confirmed. Little Rock, North Little Rock, Sherwood, Jacksonville, Maumelle, and unincorporated Pulaski County can route through different offices and forms.

What requires a building permit in Pulaski County?

Under local permitting procedures, the Arkansas Fire Prevention Code, zoning ordinances, floodplain rules, specialty trade requirements, and the issuing authority's administrative procedures, permits are typically required before construction, alteration, repair, demolition, relocation, occupancy changes, and regulated trade work begins.

Permit required

  • New homes, additions, garages, carports, decks, porches, structural repairs, interior alterations, change of use, demolition, accessory structures, pools, signs, solar, generators, and major exterior work
  • Commercial tenant improvements, restaurants, retail, offices, warehouses, industrial, multifamily, institutional, assembly, mixed-use, and certificate of occupancy projects
  • Electrical, plumbing, mechanical, fuel gas, fire alarm, sprinkler, hood suppression, septic, sign, driveway, right-of-way, utility, and specialty trade work when regulated by the AHJ
  • Zoning, subdivision, floodplain, stormwater, erosion control, health, environmental, food service, fire, public works, sewer, water, access, and planning approvals when triggered

Usually exempt or limited

  • Painting, flooring, cabinets, countertops, trim, and similar cosmetic finish work with no structural, life-safety, trade, egress, or occupancy changes
  • Minor like-for-like repairs only when the local AHJ confirms no permit is required
  • Small accessory work that qualifies for a local exemption, zoning clearance, or limited review instead of a full permit
  • Emergency work only to the extent allowed by the AHJ, followed by required permit, inspection, or documentation

Exemptions are narrow and local. Confirm before starting work.

Get the permit before work begins. Starting early can trigger stop-work orders, penalty fees, correction notices, inspection delays, and issues with insurance, financing, resale, or occupancy.

Who handles permitting in Pulaski County?

The primary authority path for this guide is Pulaski County local city, county, floodplain, and state specialty permitting authorities. The normal online or agency-directed filing path is Pulaski County Planning and Development for county-controlled reviews, or the municipal building department for projects inside city limits.

For a Pulaski County project, first confirm whether the site is inside an incorporated city or in an unincorporated area. Then use Pulaski County Planning and Development for county-controlled reviews, or the municipal building department for projects inside city limits. Depending on scope, projects can also require state contractor licensing, trade permits, health, floodplain, stormwater, fire, utility, driveway, or environmental approvals.

Before submitting, identify the parcel, address, municipality, zoning district, floodplain status, state code triggers, contractor and trade documentation, utility providers, driveway or right-of-way jurisdiction, and whether fire, health, environmental, planning, or stormwater review applies.

Step-by-step application process

Confirm the authority having jurisdiction

Verify the exact parcel, county, municipality, zoning district, floodplain status, utility providers, and whether Pulaski County local city, county, floodplain, and state specialty permitting authorities is the correct permit authority for this scope.

Check Arkansas and local review

Arkansas permitting is split between local jurisdictions and state specialty oversight. Cities such as Little Rock, Fayetteville, Fort Smith, Springdale, and Jonesboro maintain their own building, planning, portal, inspection, or plan-review processes. County and unincorporated-area routing varies: Benton County publishes building safety permit instructions for unincorporated areas, Pulaski County publishes planning and permit resources, Washington County notes that general building permits or inspections are not required in some unincorporated contexts unless requested, and Faulkner County emphasizes floodplain permitting before development in covered areas.

Screen zoning, floodplain, stormwater, health, fire, and public way

Check local zoning, subdivision, floodplain, stormwater, erosion control, septic, plumbing, electrical, driveway, sewer, water, utilities, fire prevention, planning, health, environmental, and right-of-way requirements before finalizing drawings.

Build a complete submittal package

Prepare signed drawings, site plan, structural and energy documentation, Arkansas Fire Prevention Code notes, contractor and trade information, owner authorization, valuation, fire or health documents, and supporting engineering or agency approvals.

Submit through the official permit path

Use Pulaski County Planning and Development for county-controlled reviews, or the municipal building department for projects inside city limits or the official instructions from Pulaski County local city, county, floodplain, and state specialty permitting authorities. Track intake completeness, plan review, corrections, fee invoices, inspection scheduling, and final closeout.

Respond, inspect, and close out

Upload revisions, correction letters, product documentation, agency signoffs, and inspection results. Do not conceal regulated work before inspection approval, and obtain final approval or certificate documentation when required.

Documents checklist for a Pulaski County permit

Requirements vary by AHJ and project type, but a complete Arkansas package usually starts with these items.

  • Completed city, county, portal, floodplain, or state permit application and parcel information
  • Owner authorization, applicant information, contractor and trade details, valuation, scope of work, and construction type
  • Site plan with property lines, setbacks, easements, floodplain boundaries, utilities, driveways, grading, drainage, erosion control, and proposed structures
  • Construction drawings, structural details, energy code documentation, Arkansas Fire Prevention Code notes, engineered elements, product data, and fire/life-safety details
  • Zoning, planning, floodplain, stormwater, health, environmental, septic, plumbing, electrical, driveway, sewer, water, utility, fire, or public works approvals when required
  • Inspection plan, special inspection documentation, certificate of occupancy request, and closeout documents where applicable

Fees, review timelines, and inspections

Fees: Fees are set by the city, county, or state agency and can include building, plan review, zoning, floodplain, stormwater, trade, fire, health, driveway, right-of-way, sewer, water, reinspection, technology, and certificate charges.

Timelines: Simple residential permits may move faster when the local filing package is complete. Commercial, floodplain, subdivision, utility, fire, health, environmental, and multi-agency projects should expect longer review and correction cycles.

Inspections: Schedule inspections through the issuing city, county, or portal. Keep approved plans, permit card, trade approvals, floodplain or fire documents, correction responses, and inspection records available until final closeout.

Common review triggers to confirm early

  • Confirm city limits, county jurisdiction, floodplain status, zoning, subdivision, stormwater, driveway, utility, fire, health, and environmental triggers before choosing the filing path.
  • Check whether the local AHJ requires a building permit, planning approval, floodplain development permit, trade permit, or requested inspection even if the county does not run a broad general-permit program.
  • Prepare owner authorization, drawings, site plan, valuation, contractor license information, trade credentials, engineering, energy, fire, septic, and utility documentation as applicable.
  • Use the official city, county, portal, or agency process for intake, plan review, fees, inspections, corrections, and certificate or final approval.

Arkansas code, local review, and state agency coordination

Arkansas uses the Arkansas Fire Prevention Code as the statewide code framework. The Arkansas Department of Labor and Licensing states that the Arkansas Building Code is adopted by the State Fire Marshal office as part of the Fire Prevention Code, and that the code applies statewide, including rural and unincorporated areas. The code is organized into fire, building, and residential volumes based on the International Fire, Building, and Residential Codes with Arkansas amendments.

Arkansas permitting is split between local jurisdictions and state specialty oversight. Cities such as Little Rock, Fayetteville, Fort Smith, Springdale, and Jonesboro maintain their own building, planning, portal, inspection, or plan-review processes. County and unincorporated-area routing varies: Benton County publishes building safety permit instructions for unincorporated areas, Pulaski County publishes planning and permit resources, Washington County notes that general building permits or inspections are not required in some unincorporated contexts unless requested, and Faulkner County emphasizes floodplain permitting before development in covered areas.

Arkansas permit submittals should identify the owner, applicant, design professionals, contractor, and regulated trade contractors. The Arkansas Contractors Licensing Board and Residential Committee license contractors for applicable commercial and residential work. Plumbing, electrical, HVAC, fuel gas, fire protection, septic, environmental, driveway, utility, and other specialty scopes can require separate state, local, or utility approvals in addition to the building permit.

Inspections: Schedule inspections through the city, county, floodplain administrator, or portal named by the permit authority. Keep approved plans, permit cards, trade approvals, fire documents, floodplain records, and correction responses on site.

Official Pulaski County permit resources

Use these official sources to verify current filing requirements, forms, fees, portals, codes, inspection procedures, state-versus-local jurisdiction, specialty permit requirements, and contact information before starting work.

How Alliance Permitting helps in Pulaski County

Alliance Permitting handles permit documentation, jurisdiction research, application setup, portal filing, plan-review tracking, correction response coordination, state and trade permit coordination support, and inspection-readiness support for residential, commercial, renewable energy, retail, restaurant, telecom, utility, and multi-site programs.

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  • Jurisdiction accuracy - we confirm the correct city, county, state, fire, health, environmental, utility, and special-agency path before submittal.
  • Complete oversight - we track application status, fees, comments, revisions, inspections, and closeout tasks.
  • Error-free submissions - AI pre-checks plus expert review catch missing forms, credentials, drawing issues, state-review gaps, and documentation issues before they become correction cycles.

Alliance Permitting is a permit documentation and submission company: we prepare your paperwork, file it correctly, and coordinate with the approving authority through issuance. We are not a contractor and do not perform licensed plan review or inspections; that work stays with your licensed team and the jurisdiction.

Need a Pulaski County building permit?

Get your Arkansas project permitted right. Alliance handles applications, plan check responses, and inspection coordination - so you build, not wait.

Frequently asked questions

Who issues building permits in Pulaski County?

The primary permit authority path is Pulaski County local city, county, floodplain, and state specialty permitting authorities. Arkansas permits normally route by exact parcel address, city limits, county jurisdiction, and state or specialty review triggers.

What is the first step before filing?

Confirm the parcel jurisdiction, city limits, county route, zoning district, floodplain status, contractor licensing, trade credentials, and whether fire, health, environmental, stormwater, utility, or right-of-way review applies.

Can Alliance handle the submittal?

Yes. Alliance prepares the permit package, confirms the correct AHJ, coordinates portal filing, tracks comments and fees, and helps move the permit from intake through issuance and inspection readiness.

Are these requirements the same across Arkansas?

No. Arkansas has a statewide code framework, but permit intake, fees, portals, inspection processes, local ordinances, county requirements, floodplain processes, and specialty approvals vary by jurisdiction. Always verify current requirements with the issuing authority before filing.

This guide is provided by Alliance Permitting for general informational purposes and reflects publicly available information believed accurate as of June 2026. Permit requirements, fees, codes, portals, and review timelines change; always confirm current details with the local permit authority and applicable Arkansas state agencies before filing. This is not legal advice.

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