In Lakewood—one of New Jersey’s fastest-growing municipalities—, building permits are issued by the Township of Lakewood Department of Inspections, enforcing New Jersey’s statewide Uniform Construction Code (UCC) through a Construction Official and the building, electrical, plumbing, and fire-protection subcode officials.
This guide covers what requires a permit, the NJ UCC permit process, fees, trade permits, and inspections — so your Lakewood project stays on track.
The Township of Lakewood — one of New Jersey’s fastest-growing municipalities — runs a high-volume construction office. Given the pace of residential development, plan review and inspection scheduling can be the critical path; clear zoning and any planning-board approvals (prior approvals) early. A Construction Official and the four subcode officials enforce the NJ UCC.
New Jersey enforces a statewide Uniform Construction Code (UCC) (N.J.A.C. 5:23), administered by the Department of Community Affairs (DCA), Division of Codes and Standards. Every project is permitted and inspected by a local construction code enforcing agency — a Construction Official plus Building, Electrical, Plumbing, and Fire Protection subcode officials, all DCA-licensed. New Jersey is fully municipalized — there is no unincorporated land — so building permits are issued at the municipal level by each of the state’s 564 municipalities; where a municipality has no agency of its own, DCA acts as the enforcing agency. The UCC adopts the 2021 IBC, IRC, and IMC, the 2020 National Electrical Code, and the 2021 National Standard Plumbing Code (NSPC) with New Jersey amendments — note that New Jersey uses the NSPC rather than the IPC. The construction official or subcode official must act on a complete application within 20 business days (N.J.A.C. 5:23-2.16), and a permit is not issued until all prior approvals (zoning, planning, health, and the like) are satisfied. Municipalities may not adopt local technical amendments that weaken the statewide code.
What requires a building permit in Lakewood?
Under the New Jersey UCC, a construction permit is required for most construction activities:
Permit required
- New residential and commercial construction, additions, and conversions
- Structural and load-bearing alterations
- Reroofing, siding, windows, and exterior modifications
- Electrical service changes and most wiring work
- HVAC installations, changeouts, and ductwork
- Plumbing alterations, repipes, and water heaters
- Decks, porches, fences, patios, pools, and detached garages
- Change of occupancy or use, and sign installation
Ordinary maintenance / minor work
- Painting, wallpapering, tiling, carpeting, and cabinet installation
- Countertop replacement and similar finish work
- Ordinary repairs that replace existing materials in kind
- Small detached accessory structures below the threshold in N.J.A.C. 5:23 (verify locally)
New Jersey defines “ordinary maintenance” and “minor work” narrowly in N.J.A.C. 5:23. When unsure, confirm with the construction office before starting.
Get the permit issued before starting work. Building without a permit in Lakewood can result in penalties, stop-work orders, and mandatory removal of unpermitted work under the UCC.
Who handles permitting in Lakewood?
The Township of Lakewood Department of Inspections handles plan review, permit issuance, and inspections. A Construction Official coordinates the building, electrical, plumbing, and fire subcode officials, each of whom acts on a complete application within 20 business days under the UCC.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Office | Department of Inspections (Construction), Township of Lakewood |
| Apply | NJ UCC construction permit forms — file with the municipal construction office (online portal where adopted) |
| Government | Township of Lakewood — Lakewood, Ocean County |
| Plan review | Construction official / subcode officials act within 20 business days (N.J.A.C. 5:23-2.16) |
| Licensing | NJ HIC registration + state trade licenses (electrical, master plumber, HVACR) |
| Code | NJ UCC — 2021 IBC/IRC/IMC, 2020 NEC, NSPC 2021 |
Apply on the state UCC forms. Complete the construction permit application and the technical subcode sections (building, electrical, plumbing, fire), satisfy your prior approvals (zoning and the like), confirm your HIC registration and trade-contractor licenses are current, pay fees, and post the permit on site before work begins.
Lakewood building permit cost
New Jersey UCC fees are the sum of the subcode fees set by municipal ordinance, plus a statewide DCA training fee. Plan-review fees are due at submission and credited at issuance.
| Fee component | How it works |
|---|---|
| Building subcode fee | Set by municipal UCC ordinance — by volume, value, or fixtures |
| Electrical / plumbing / fire subcode fees | Separate fee per subcode (by device, fixture, or unit) |
| Plan review | A percentage of the construction fee (e.g., 20% in Newark), paid at submission and credited at issuance |
| State DCA training fee | Statewide surcharge set by N.J.A.C. 5:23-4.19, by volume or value |
| Certificate of Occupancy | Separate CO / CCO fee where applicable |
| Work without a permit | Penalties up to the UCC limit, stop-work orders, and possible removal of unpermitted work |
Want a precise number for a specific Lakewood project? Send us the scope and valuation and we’ll return a fee estimate alongside a filing timeline.
Lakewood trade permits
Electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work each needs its own subcode permit and an appropriately state-licensed contractor.
Electrical permits
Required for service installations, panel upgrades, solar PV, EV chargers, and most wiring alterations. New Jersey licenses electrical contractors statewide through the Board of Examiners of Electrical Contractors — only a licensed electrical contractor (or a permitted owner/exception) may pull the permit. Work is inspected against the 2020 National Electrical Code as adopted by the UCC electrical subcode.
Plumbing & gas permits
Required for new plumbing, repipes, water-heater changeouts, fixtures, backflow, and sewer/gas connections. New Jersey requires a licensed master plumber (State Board of Examiners of Master Plumbers). Work is inspected against the 2021 National Standard Plumbing Code (NSPC) — the plumbing subcode New Jersey uses in place of the IPC.
Mechanical (HVAC) permits
Required for HVAC installations, changeouts, ductwork, and venting. HVACR contractors are licensed statewide by the Board of Examiners of Heating, Ventilating, Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Contractors. Work is inspected against the 2021 IMC and the fuel-gas provisions of the UCC.
Fire protection & specialty
Sprinkler, standpipe, and fire-alarm work falls under the UCC Fire Protection subcode and its subcode official, and requires appropriately licensed contractors. Pools follow the 2021 ISPSC; demolition, sign, and elevator work follow separate UCC tracks.
Verify contractor registration and trade licensing. New Jersey requires every home-improvement contractor to register with the Division of Consumer Affairs (Home Improvement Contractor / HIC registration). Under the Home Improvement and Home Elevation Contractor Licensing Act (P.L. 2023, c. 237), this is transitioning to a full licensing system overseen by the new State Board of Home Improvement and Home Elevation Contractors, with compliance-bond and commercial general liability insurance requirements already in force (CGL minimum $500,000 per occurrence for home-improvement contractors, $1,000,000 for home-elevation contractors). Separately — and unlike many states — New Jersey licenses trades at the state level: electrical contractors (Board of Examiners of Electrical Contractors), master plumbers (Board of Examiners of Master Plumbers), and HVACR contractors (Board of Examiners of Heating, Ventilating, Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Contractors), all under the Division of Consumer Affairs. Verify all credentials before signing a contract.
How to get a building permit in Lakewood
Confirm permit requirement & zoning
Contact Lakewood’s construction office. Confirm zoning approval (a prior approval), identify the correct permit type, and determine which subcodes apply. Verify any flood or environmental requirements before applying.
Prepare your application package
Assemble the state UCC construction permit application with the building, electrical, plumbing, and fire technical subcode sections, drawings sealed by a New Jersey-licensed architect or engineer where required, scope and valuation, prior approvals (zoning and the like), plus your HIC registration and trade-contractor license numbers.
Submit to the enforcing agency
File with Lakewood’s construction office (or its online portal). Pay the plan-review fee at submission; it is credited toward the permit fee at issuance.
Plan review & corrections
The construction official or subcode officials act on a complete application within 20 business days (N.J.A.C. 5:23-2.16). Address any denial or plan-release conditions promptly.
Permit issuance & fees
Once all prior approvals are satisfied and fees (including the state DCA training fee) are paid, the permit is issued. Post it on site. A UCC permit is valid up to its third anniversary, with one-year extensions available.
Subcode inspections & Certificate of Occupancy
Schedule the required subcode inspections (foundation, framing, rough-in electrical/plumbing/mechanical, fire protection, energy, and final) with Lakewood’s construction office. Each subcode official signs off their trade. A Certificate of Occupancy is required before legal occupancy.
Inspections in Lakewood
Schedule inspections through Lakewood’s construction office by subcode. Standard UCC checkpoints include foundation, framing, rough-in electrical/plumbing/mechanical, fire protection, insulation/energy, and final. Each subcode official signs off their trade. A Certificate of Occupancy is required before legal occupancy.
Address correction notices before requesting a re-inspection; a final inspection and Certificate of Occupancy are required before legal occupancy or use.
Official Lakewood permitting resources
- 🏛️ NJ DCA — Uniform Construction Code
- 📝 NJ DCA — Current Construction Codes
- 🪪 NJ Division of Consumer Affairs (HIC registration)
- 📄 NJ DCA — Construction Code Communicator
- 📍 Find your enforcing agency (NJ DCA)
Simplify Lakewood permitting with Alliance Permitting
Lakewood’s permitting process and New Jersey’s statewide Uniform Construction Code reward applicants who prepare complete packages and clear their prior approvals from the start. Alliance Permitting is a permit expediter for Lakewood — our permit expediting services pair AI-driven document review with experts who know the NJ UCC process, so your Lakewood submissions move faster.
Trusted by leading builders and brands — including Dream Finders Homes, Tesla, Verizon, Hyatt, and Sunnova.
Contractors and builders choose Alliance for Lakewood because we deliver:
- Local expertise — we know Lakewood’s construction office, the NJ UCC subcode-official process, and the prior-approval and state trade-licensing requirements.
- Complete oversight — track every permit and inspection across all your jobs in one place.
- Error-free submissions — AI pre-checks plus expert review catch 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 construction office through issuance. We are not a contractor and do not perform licensed plan review or inspections; that work stays with your team and the jurisdiction.
Need a Lakewood building permit?
Get your Lakewood project permitted right. Alliance Permitting handles your NJ UCC applications — so you build, not wait.
More New Jersey permitting guides
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, and processes change; always confirm current details with the municipal construction office (or DCA) before filing. This is not legal advice.