Most renovation work in unincorporated Riverside County requires a building permit. Cosmetic work like painting, flooring, and cabinet replacement is exempt. Any work involving structural changes, electrical, plumbing, or mechanical systems requires permits. Roof repairs over 25% of the total area require a permit.
Riverside County requires building permits for most renovation work that goes beyond purely cosmetic changes. Exempt projects include: painting, wallpapering, tiling, carpeting, installing flooring, replacing cabinets, installing counter tops, and other finish work that does not involve changes to walls, plumbing, mechanical, or electrical systems. All of the following require permits: structural modifications (removing or adding walls, enlarging openings), electrical work (adding circuits, upgrading panels, new outlets), plumbing work (moving or adding fixtures, water heater replacement), mechanical work (HVAC installation or replacement), re-roofing when more than 25% of total roof area is affected, window or door replacement that changes the size of the opening, and adding square footage (room additions). Riverside County Building and Safety accepts permit applications online through their portal or at counter locations. Plan review timelines vary: simple residential projects may be approved over the counter, while more complex renovations requiring plan check typically take 2β4 weeks. Inspections are required at various stages of construction. In the Coachella Valley and other desert areas, energy efficiency requirements under California Title 24 are particularly stringent due to extreme heat, affecting window, insulation, and HVAC specifications for renovations.
Performing permitted work without a permit is a violation of Riverside County Building Code (Title 15). Penalties include stop-work orders, double permit fees for retroactive permits, and administrative citations. Unpermitted work may need to be exposed for inspection, increasing costs. Unpermitted renovations can complicate property sales and insurance claims.
Corona, CA
Corona Municipal Code Title 6 prohibits dogs from barking, howling, or making noise that disturbs neighbors for sustained or repeated periods. Riverside Coun...
Corona, CA
Corona regulates leaf blowers under its general noise ordinance in Corona Municipal Code Chapter 9.36, restricting use during early morning, evening, and nig...
Corona, CA
Corona allows wood, vinyl, masonry block, wrought iron, tubular steel, and stucco fences in residential zones. Barbed wire, razor wire, electric fences, and ...
Corona, CA
Corona requires dogs to be on a leash no more than 6 feet long when off the owner's property, in public spaces, and in city parks. Off-leash areas are limite...
Corona, CA
Corona generally restricts chickens and livestock to agricultural and equestrian zones, with limited allowances in some single-family residential zones depen...
Corona, CA
Corona property owners must maintain 100 feet of defensible space around structures under California Public Resources Code Β§4291, enforced locally by Riversi...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Riverside County.
See how other cities in Riverside County handle renovation permits.
See how Corona's renovation permits rules stack up against other locations.
Quick Compare
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.