In Cuyahoga County — Ohio’s second-most-populous county, home to Cleveland (county seat: Cleveland) — building permits in unincorporated areas and in townships served by the county come from the Cuyahoga County building department, certified by the Ohio Board of Building Standards. Cities and villages that operate their own certified department issue their own permits.
This guide covers what requires a permit, the Ohio permit process, fees, trade permits, and inspections — so your Cuyahoga County project stays on track.
Cuyahoga County — Ohio’s second-most-populous county, home to Cleveland, seat Cleveland — is almost entirely incorporated. Its BBS-certified county building department issues permits in the county’s unincorporated areas and in townships served by the county; cities, villages, and townships with their own certified departments issue their own. Cuyahoga County is almost entirely incorporated, so most permits come from each city’s own certified building department. Confirm which department governs a specific address before you file.
Ohio enforces a statewide building code set by the Ohio Board of Building Standards (BBS), within the Ohio Department of Commerce’s Division of Industrial Compliance (DIC). Ohio’s defining feature is its certified-building-department model: the BBS certifies municipal, county, and township building departments to enforce the state code, and only a certified department (or the state) may approve plans and issue permits. Commercial, industrial, and public buildings follow the Ohio Building Code (OBC); one-, two-, and three-family dwellings follow the Residential Code of Ohio (RCO). Where no certified local department exists, the DIC’s Ohio Building Code Compliance regional office performs commercial plan review and inspection — but residential code enforcement is handled only by certified local departments. Effective March 1, 2024, the OBC, OMC, and OPC are based on the 2021 I-Codes (IBC / IMC / IPC) with Ohio amendments; the 2023 National Electrical Code applies, with the 2021 IECC and ASHRAE 90.1-2019 for energy. Ohio has regulated construction at the state level since 1911 — one of the earliest statewide building codes in the nation. Local departments may add stricter requirements but cannot fall below the state minimum.
What requires a building permit in Cuyahoga County?
Under the Ohio Building Code and Residential Code of Ohio, a 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, doors, decks, porches, and ramps
- Finishing basements and attics
- Electrical service changes and most wiring work
- HVAC installations, changeouts, and ductwork
- Plumbing alterations, repipes, and water heaters
- Detached garages, sheds above the local threshold, fences, pools, and signs
Ordinary maintenance / minor work
- Painting, wallpapering, tiling, carpeting, and cabinet installation
- Minor repairs and finish work that replace materials in kind
- Gutters and downspouts (in many jurisdictions)
- Small accessory structures below the local size threshold (verify locally)
Thresholds vary by certified department. When unsure, confirm with the building department before starting.
Get the permit issued before starting work. Building without a permit in Cuyahoga County can result in penalties, stop-work orders, and (in many jurisdictions) doubled fees or mandatory correction.
Who handles permitting in Cuyahoga County?
Cuyahoga County is almost entirely incorporated. The county runs a BBS-certified building department that issues permits and inspects work under the OBC and RCO in the county’s unincorporated areas and in townships and communities that use county service. If your property sits inside a city or village (or a township) that operates its own certified building department, that local department issues your permit instead. Cuyahoga County is almost entirely incorporated, so most permits come from each city’s own certified building department. Use the BBS building-department lookup to confirm which department has authority over a specific address.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Permits issued by | The Cuyahoga County building department (unincorporated areas + served townships) — or the municipal/township department where one is certified |
| County seat | Cleveland |
| Apply | OBC / RCO permit application — file with the department that has authority over the address |
| Code authority | Ohio Board of Building Standards (BBS) — certifies the enforcing department |
| Commercial fallback | Where no certified department serves, the DIC reviews commercial plans; residential is enforced only by certified local departments |
| Code | Ohio BBS — 2024 OBC/OMC/OPC (2021 ICC), 2023 NEC, RCO (1–3 family) |
Apply on the OBC / RCO forms. Complete the building permit application with construction documents, confirm zoning approval, verify your contractor registration and OCILB trade licenses are current, pay fees, and post the permit on site before work begins.
Cuyahoga County building permit cost
Ohio permit fees are set by each certified department’s adopted fee schedule — typically by square footage or valuation — plus a statewide BBS assessment on commercial permits. Plan-review fees are generally due at submission.
| Fee component | How it works |
|---|---|
| Plan review fee | By square footage or valuation, set by the certified department (e.g., Cleveland charges $20 per 1,000 sq ft, $20 minimum, for homes, garages, sheds, fences, and pools) |
| Building permit fee | Set by the local certified department’s adopted fee schedule (larger cities publish an annual schedule) |
| Trade permit fees | Separate electrical, plumbing, and mechanical permit fees by device, fixture, or unit |
| State BBS assessment | A statewide fee added to commercial building-permit fees that funds the Board of Building Standards |
| Certificate of Occupancy | Separate CO fee where applicable |
| Work without a permit | Penalties, stop-work orders, and (in many jurisdictions) doubled or investigation fees |
Want a precise number for a specific Cuyahoga County project? Send us the scope and valuation and we’ll return a fee estimate alongside a filing timeline.
Cuyahoga County trade permits
Electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work each needs its own permit and an appropriately licensed contractor.
Electrical permits
Required for service installations, panel upgrades, solar PV, EV chargers, and most wiring alterations. On commercial work the electrical contractor must hold an OCILB state electrical license; most certified departments also require a local registration. Work is inspected against the 2023 National Electrical Code as adopted by the BBS.
Plumbing & gas permits
Required for new plumbing, repipes, water-heater changeouts, fixtures, backflow, and sewer/gas connections. Commercial plumbing requires an OCILB state plumbing license. Work is inspected against the 2024 Ohio Plumbing Code (OPC) — Ohio’s adaptation of the 2021 IPC with Ohio amendments.
Mechanical (HVAC) permits
Required for HVAC installations, changeouts, ductwork, and venting. Commercial HVAC, hydronics, and refrigeration contractors are licensed statewide by the OCILB. Work is inspected against the 2024 Ohio Mechanical Code (OMC), based on the 2021 IMC.
Fire protection & specialty
Sprinkler, standpipe, and fire-alarm work falls under the OBC fire-protection provisions and is coordinated with the State Fire Marshal where applicable; appropriately licensed contractors are required. Pools, demolition, signs, and elevators follow separate OBC tracks.
Verify contractor licensing and registration. Ohio takes a split approach. The Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board (OCILB) — within the Division of Industrial Compliance — issues statewide commercial licenses in five trades: electrical, HVAC, hydronics, plumbing, and refrigeration (ORC 4740). A valid OCILB license is required before a building or health department issues a commercial permit in those trades, and OCILB licensees carry at least $500,000 in liability coverage. Ohio has no statewide general-contractor license, and residential contractors are regulated locally — each city or county sets its own registration and trade rules. Separately, anyone performing residential home-construction or home-improvement work on contracts over $25,000 must register under the Home Construction Service Suppliers Act (ORC 4722), administered by the Ohio Attorney General. Confirm the state OCILB license (commercial trades) and any local registration before signing a contract.
How to get a building permit in Cuyahoga County
Confirm which department has authority
Use the BBS building-department lookup (or call the Cuyahoga County building department) to confirm whether your address is served by the county department or by a city, village, or township department with its own certification.
Confirm permit requirement & zoning
Contact that department. Confirm zoning approval, the correct permit type, and whether the OBC (commercial) or RCO (one-, two-, or three-family) governs. Verify any flood or environmental requirements first.
Prepare your application package
Assemble the building permit application with construction documents — sealed by an Ohio-licensed architect or engineer where required — plus scope, valuation, zoning approval, and your contractor registration and OCILB trade-license numbers.
Submit & pay plan-review fees
File with the department that has authority over the property and pay the plan-review fee at submission.
Plan review & permit issuance
Plans examiners review for code compliance; once plans are approved, zoning is satisfied, and fees are paid, the permit is issued. Approved plans are valid if work commences within 12 months (one 12-month extension, OBC 105.6).
Inspections & Certificate of Occupancy
Schedule inspections (foundation, framing, rough-in MEP, energy, final) with the issuing department. A Certificate of Occupancy is required before legal occupancy of new or changed-use space.
Inspections in Cuyahoga County
Schedule inspections through whichever certified department issued your permit. Standard checkpoints include foundation, framing, rough-in electrical/plumbing/mechanical, insulation/energy, and final. A Certificate of Occupancy is required before legal occupancy of new or changed-use space.
Address correction notices before requesting a re-inspection; a final inspection and Certificate of Occupancy are required before legal occupancy or use.
Official Cuyahoga County permitting resources
- 🏛️ Ohio Board of Building Standards (BBS)
- 📍 BBS — Find the building department for your address
- 🪪 OCILB — Commercial trade licensing
- 📝 Ohio Attorney General — Home improvement (ORC 4722)
- 📄 BBS — Find the building department for your address
Simplify Cuyahoga County permitting with Alliance Permitting
Cuyahoga County’s permitting process and Ohio’s certified-building-department system reward applicants who prepare complete packages, confirm the right department, and clear zoning from the start. Alliance Permitting is a permit expediter for Cuyahoga County — our permit expediting services pair AI-driven document review with experts who know the Ohio process, so your Cuyahoga County submissions move faster.
Trusted by leading builders and brands — including Dream Finders Homes, Tesla, Verizon, Hyatt, and Sunnova.
Contractors and builders choose Alliance for Cuyahoga County because we deliver:
- Local expertise — we know Ohio’s certified-department model, how to confirm which department has authority over a parcel, and the OCILB state-licensing and local-registration 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 building department 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.
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More Ohio 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 certified building department (or the Ohio Division of Industrial Compliance) before filing. This is not legal advice.