How Long Do Remodeling Permits Take in Pacific Palisades? A Realistic Timeline by Project Type
From a kitchen remodel (4–6 weeks) to a full ADU (8–16 weeks) to a Coastal Commission project (4–6 months) — permit timelines vary dramatically in Pacific Palisades. We share real timelines from recent projects so you can plan accurately from day one.
From a kitchen remodel (4–6 weeks) to a full ADU (8–16 weeks) to a Coastal Commission project (4–6 months) — permit timelines vary dramatically in Pacific Palisades. We share real timelines from recent projects so you can plan accurately from day one.
Why Palisades Permits Take Longer Than Most of LA
In a typical Los Angeles neighborhood, a home remodel or addition involves one agency: LADBS. In Pacific Palisades, depending on your project and lot, you may need approvals from two, three, or four separate agencies — each with their own review timelines, requirements, and staff capacity.
The agencies that may be involved in a Palisades project are LADBS (always), the California Coastal Commission (for most Palisades lots that sit in the Coastal Zone), the LA County Grading Division (for hillside lots requiring grading permits), and your HOA Architectural Review Board (for lots in the Riviera and other community associations). Running these reviews sequentially adds months. Running them in parallel — which a qualified contractor will do — compresses the overall timeline significantly.
Permit Timelines by Project Type — Real Numbers from Real Projects
| Project type | Agencies involved | Realistic permit timeline | What determines the range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kitchen remodel (no structural) | LADBS only | 3–6 weeks | Project valuation; completeness of submission |
| Kitchen remodel with structural work | LADBS (structural review) | 6–10 weeks | Engineering complexity; plan check queue |
| Bathroom remodel | LADBS only | 2–5 weeks | Whether plumbing or electrical is relocated |
| Room addition | LADBS + Coastal (if applicable) + HOA | 8–20 weeks | Coastal Zone; HOA schedule; structural complexity |
| ADU — pre-approved standard plan | LADBS (+ Coastal if applicable) | 1–5 days (LADBS); 60 days (Coastal) | Whether lot is in Coastal Zone |
| ADU — custom plan | LADBS + Coastal + Grading (if hillside) | 10–20 weeks | Coastal Zone; soils report; plan check queue |
| Fire rebuild — standard plan | LADBS + Coastal + Grading + HOA | 6–14 weeks | Lot conditions; all agencies running simultaneously |
| Fire rebuild — custom plan | All applicable agencies | 12–24 weeks | Design complexity; soils; coastal; HOA |
| Full Coastal Commission project | LADBS + full CCC review | 4–18 months | Whether EO suspension applies; project scope |
Timelines assume complete submissions to all applicable agencies simultaneously. Incomplete submissions restart review clocks. Sequential (not parallel) submissions add months. These are realistic ranges, not guarantees.
What Slows Permits Down (And What Speeds Them Up)
What slows permits down
Incomplete applications: The single biggest cause of permit delays is submitting an incomplete application. Missing documents, missing signatures, missing engineering calculations — any of these restart the review clock entirely. A qualified contractor reviews every application for completeness before submission.
Sequential agency submissions: Submitting to LADBS first and waiting for approval before approaching the Coastal Commission is a common mistake that adds 2–4 months to any coastal project timeline. All applicable agencies should receive applications simultaneously.
Late soils report commissioning: On hillside lots, the soils and geology report must be complete before the foundation design is finalized. Contractors who commission the soils report after design is complete add 8–12 weeks of unnecessary wait time.
Plan check corrections: LADBS plan checkers issue corrections — required changes to the submitted drawings — that must be addressed and resubmitted before a permit is issued. Each correction round typically takes 2–4 weeks. An experienced contractor minimizes correction rounds by anticipating common plan checker requirements before submission.
What speeds permits up
Pre-approved standard plans: For ADUs and fire rebuilds, the LADBS Standard Plan Pilot Program offers pre-reviewed designs that can be permitted in 1–5 business days. This is the fastest available pathway for qualifying projects.
Parallel multi-agency submission: Submitting to LADBS, Coastal Commission, Grading Division, and HOA simultaneously compresses the overall timeline by 2–4 months compared to sequential submissions.
Architect self-certification: Under the Mayor's streamlined fire rebuild orders, licensed architects can self-certify certain qualifying designs — eliminating the standard plan check review entirely for those projects.
AB 253 third-party review: If LADBS exceeds 30 business days for plan review on a fire rebuild, homeowners can request a qualified third-party reviewer at no additional cost. This is an underutilized option that can compress plan check timelines significantly.
Real Timeline Examples from Recent Palisades Projects
| Project | Location | Agencies | Permit timeline | Key factor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kitchen + structural beam | Alphabet Streets | LADBS structural review | 7 weeks | Complete structural drawings submitted day one |
| Primary bath remodel | Riviera | LADBS + HOA | 11 weeks | HOA review ran parallel with LADBS |
| ADU — standard plan | Marquez Knolls | LADBS only (non-Coastal) | 4 business days | Pre-approved plan, flat lot, complete submission |
| ADU — Coastal Zone | Castellammare | LADBS + Coastal Commission | 58 days | Complete CCC application submitted simultaneously |
| Fire rebuild — standard plan | Highlands | LADBS + Grading + HOA | 11 weeks | Soils report started day one; parallel submissions |
These are real recent project timelines. Your timeline depends on your specific lot conditions, project scope, and the completeness of your submission.
Our process is built around parallel submissions and complete first applications. We do not add months to your timeline through sequential submissions or incomplete packages. Free consultation. CSLB License #982386.