A plain-English 2026 guide to remodeling permits across DFW — when you need one, what it costs, and the typical review timeline in each city, from Plano and Frisco to Dallas. Built from UHS Remodeling’s permit experience across 20+ DFW cities.

In Dallas–Fort Worth, cosmetic work usually does NOT need a permit — paint, flooring, cabinet and countertop swaps, and like-for-like fixture replacement. You do need a permit whenever you change the structure or core systems of the home:
Removing or modifying load-bearing walls, adding square footage, second-story additions, decks, patios, and balconies.
Relocating or adding plumbing lines — not a like-for-like fixture swap, but moving where water goes.
New HVAC systems or ductwork, electrical panel upgrades, and new wiring runs.
Garage-to-living-space conversions and any project that adds conditioned square footage.
Rule of thumb: if you’re only changing finishes, you’re usually fine; if you’re changing the bones or the systems, you need a permit. UHS pulls and manages every permit as part of the project — homeowner-pulled permits are a red flag we won’t work around.
Typical first-review windows for a residential remodel or addition that triggers full plan review. These are practitioner estimates as of mid-2026 — always confirm current turnaround with each city’s building department, and note that resubmittals after correction comments add another cycle.
| City | Typical first review | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Dallas | 1–3 days (simple) · 10–15 days (complex) | New DallasNow online portal (replaced POSSE in 2025). Express review available. |
| Addison | Up to 10 business days | Minor permits (re-roof, emergency repairs) ~24 hours. Each resubmittal restarts the 10-day clock. |
| Plano | ~1–15 business days (by trade) | Electrical 3–5, plumbing 5–7, HVAC 5–10, structural 10–15 days. Start within 180 days. |
| Garland | 14 business days (published target) | Remodel fee $4.50 per $1,000 of valuation ($140 minimum) + 25% processing fee. |
| Carrollton | ~2–3 weeks (full review) | Single-trade permits often over-the-counter same day. Day-count not officially published. |
| Richardson | ~1–3 weeks | eTRAKiT portal. Express 3-business-day track for qualifying small/commercial projects. |
| Rockwall | ~2–4 weeks | Separate packets for new-construction vs remodel/finish-out. Confirm current turnaround. |
| Frisco | ~15 business days | One of the slower suburban timelines. No expedited review. Resubmittals +10–15 days. |
| McKinney | 14–21 business days | Processed in the order received. Comparable to Frisco. |
| Allen | 15–30 days (additions) · 5–10 (simple) | Online Citizen Self-Service (ePermits) portal. Plan-review fees scale with valuation. |
Fastest end: Dallas (simple work), Addison, and Garland. Slowest end: Frisco, McKinney, and Allen additions. Building review time into the project schedule up front is how UHS keeps a fixed timeline.
Most cities issue minor, single-trade, and like-for-like permits same-day or within 24–48 hours with no plan review — a water heater, an HVAC swap, a same-material re-roof, or replacement windows and doors. The timelines in the table above apply to projects that trigger full plan review: kitchen and bath remodels that touch structure or MEP, whole-home renovations, and additions. Knowing which bucket your project lands in is the difference between a permit in a day and a permit in three weeks.
Every timeline above is for the first review cycle. If the city returns correction comments, each resubmittal starts a new review clock — often the same 10–15 business days, and in some cities (like Addison) the clock literally restarts from day one when revised plans are uploaded. A clean, complete, code-compliant plan set on the first submittal is the single biggest factor in a fast permit. This is exactly why a homeowner-pulled permit on a complex remodel so often stalls: the plans bounce. UHS prepares the full plan set and handles every correction cycle as part of the build.
Many DFW master-planned communities — especially in Plano, Frisco, McKinney, Allen, and The Colony — require Architectural Control Committee (ACC) review and written approval for any exterior change: home additions, detached garages, sunrooms and patio covers, exterior color or material changes, and fence work. ACC review commonly adds 2–6 weeks on top of the city timeline and runs in parallel, not after. Always check your deed restrictions and CC&Rs before designing an addition — an approved city permit does not override your HOA.
Permit fees are typically tied to the project’s construction valuation — for example, Garland charges $4.50 per $1,000 of valuation with a $140 minimum, plus a processing fee. Beyond the permit fee, a permitted remodel requires city inspections at key stages: rough-in/framing, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, and final. Expect roughly 2–5 inspector visits depending on scope, with per-visit fees that commonly start around $50. A final inspection — and, for additions, a Certificate of Occupancy in some cities — is required before the new space is legally usable.
Permits also expire: in most DFW cities a permit lapses if construction does not begin within 180 days (6 months) of issuance, or if work is abandoned for a prolonged period. Pull the permit close to your actual start date.
Straight answers on permits across Dallas–Fort Worth. For your specific project, book a free estimate — we handle the permits.
Timelines and requirements come from UHS Remodeling’s permit experience across 20+ Dallas–Fort Worth cities, cross-checked against each city’s building-inspection department (City of Dallas Development Services, City of Plano, City of Frisco, City of McKinney, City of Allen, and others) as of mid-2026. Municipal review times fluctuate with department workload — treat these as typical first-review windows and confirm current turnaround with your city before scheduling. Last updated June 2026.
Citing this guide? Please credit “UHS Remodeling — DFW Remodeling Permit Guide 2026” and link to this page. Planning the budget too? See our DFW remodeling cost study.
UHS pulls every permit, prepares the plan set, manages corrections, and schedules inspections — built into your fixed timeline, anywhere in Dallas–Fort Worth.
