
Written by Jayson Elliott · Attorney, Bay Legal PC · CA Bar No. 332479 · Last reviewed April 2026
12 min read · Last reviewed April 2026
A permit violation occurs when construction, renovation, or repair work is performed without the required building permits from your local jurisdiction. In California, most structural work, electrical modifications, plumbing changes, and significant renovations require permits from the city or county building department.
Permit violations can surface in several ways: a neighbor files a complaint, a city inspector notices unpermitted work during a routine check, a home inspection during escrow reveals undisclosed modifications, or a code enforcement officer identifies visible changes that don't match the permit record.
California law protects property owners from arbitrary enforcement. When you receive a violation notice, you have several fundamental rights:
Right to Notice: The city or county must provide written notice of the alleged violation, including the specific code sections at issue and the deadline to respond or cure the violation.
Right to a Hearing: Before any penalties can become final, you are entitled to a hearing before an administrative body or hearing officer. You can present evidence, call witnesses, and argue that the alleged violation does not exist or has been corrected.
Right to Cure: In most cases, you have the right to correct the violation before penalties are imposed. This may mean applying for an after-the-fact permit, making corrections to bring the work up to code, or in some cases, removing the non-conforming work entirely.
Right to Appeal: If you disagree with the outcome of an administrative hearing, you generally have the right to appeal to a higher administrative body or, in some cases, to court.
If a licensed contractor performed work on your property without pulling the required permits, they may be in violation of California Business and Professions Code §7090 and related contractor licensing requirements. A contractor who fails to obtain permits may be liable to you for:
As the property owner, you are ultimately responsible for ensuring that work on your property is properly permitted. This is true even if you hired a contractor who promised to handle the permits. However, your responsibility does not eliminate the contractor's separate legal obligations.
If you performed the work yourself (owner-builder), or if you hired an unlicensed handyman for work that required a licensed contractor, you bear primary responsibility for the permit violation.
Depending on the circumstances, you may have defenses to a permit violation enforcement action:
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Jayson Elliott, Bay Legal PC · Palo Alto, California
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