St Pete Beach Building Department | Permits, Inspections & Official Contact

Updated 2026 • Official links manually reviewed

St. Pete Beach Building Department: Permits, Inspections, Digital Plans and Official Contact

Building in St. Pete Beach is different from many inland cities because most projects must consider digital plan upload, FEMA flood maps, substantial improvement or substantial damage review, Notice of Commencement timing, contractor licensing and code-compliant inspections. This guide brings the official city resources together in simple language so homeowners, contractors, real estate buyers and business owners can apply correctly, schedule inspections properly and avoid costly permit delays.

permits@Permit assistance
Digital plansRequired upload
NOC neededBefore first inspection
155 Corey AveCity Hall
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Office

St. Pete Beach City Hall, 155 Corey Avenue, St. Pete Beach, FL 33706.

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City phone

City Hall contact page lists 727-367-2735 for St. Pete Beach city contact.

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Permit help

Email permits@stpetebeach.org for assistance with Building & Permitting.

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Digital plans

Digital plans are required and must be uploaded through the permitting portal.

Official St. Pete Beach Building & Permitting Links and Resources

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St. Pete Beach Building & Permitting contact 727-367-2735

City Hall: 155 Corey Avenue, St. Pete Beach, FL 33706. For building permit help, the official Building & Permitting page directs users to permits@stpetebeach.org. For contractor license/complaint checks, the city’s contractor information page lists 727-363-9241.

Editorial review note: This St. Pete Beach Building Department guide was manually reviewed against official city resources before publication, including Building & Permitting, Permits & Forms, Inspections, Building Codes, Online Services, Community Development, substantial improvement/substantial damage resources and contractor consumer guidance.
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Independent guide: Building-Department.org is not the City of St. Pete Beach. This page explains official public resources in simple language. Permit applications, inspections, payments, approvals, floodplain determinations, substantial improvement reviews and code decisions must be handled through the City of St. Pete Beach or its official systems.

Permit basics

What the St. Pete Beach Building & Permitting Division Does

The Building & Permitting Division reviews building plans, oversees the city permit issuance process and performs inspections at different stages of construction. It also helps confirm that development proposals comply with building codes, ordinances, regulations and standards.

Because St. Pete Beach is a coastal community, permit review often includes extra attention to flood maps, FEMA rules, exterior components, Notice of Commencement timing, pool and seawall requirements, roof documentation, nonconversion agreements and substantial improvement or substantial damage review.

Building permits

Use official forms and the online permit application route for building, repair, alteration, roofing, pool, seawall and other permit-required work.

Digital plan review

Digital plans are required and must be uploaded through the city’s permitting portal.

Inspections and CO

Inspections help confirm code compliance before work is covered, occupied or finalized.

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Important: Do not assume a coastal repair project is simple. Storm damage, flood elevation, exterior openings, seawalls, roofs, pools and occupancy changes may require extra documentation or review.
Step-by-step

How to Apply for a St. Pete Beach Building Permit

A complete permit package is the fastest way to avoid correction notices. Start with the official permit forms page, then upload digital plans through the city’s permitting portal.

Step 1: Confirm permit type

Use the official Permits & Forms page to find the building permit application, owner-builder affidavit, Notice of Commencement, roof affidavit, seawall requirements or other project form.

Step 2: Prepare digital plans

Digital plans are required. Prepare clear files, product approvals, installation details, site plans and supporting documents before upload.

Step 3: Check FEMA/flood rules

All new residential and commercial plans must be designed to comply with the FEMA maps adopted August 24, 2021.

Step 4: Add subcontractors

The city says all subcontractors must sign onto the prime contractor’s permit before permit issuance.

Step 5: Record NOC

The recorded Notice of Commencement is required before scheduling the first inspection and must be on the job site.

Step 6: Schedule inspections

After permit issuance, schedule the correct inspections and do not cover work before approval.

Open official St. Pete Beach Permits & Forms

Forms and documents

St. Pete Beach Building Permit Forms and Documents

The official Permits & Forms page includes common forms for building applications, owner-builder projects, pool work, seawalls, roof affidavits, permit extensions, reinstatements, lien searches and resubmittals.

Official form or resource
Common use
Practical guidance
Building Permit Application
Main building permit application route for contractors and subcontractor sign-on.
Make sure subcontractors sign onto the prime contractor’s permit before issuance.
Owner-Builder Statement / Affidavit
Owner-builder permit situations.
Use only if you understand owner-builder legal responsibility and eligibility.
Notice of Commencement
Required recorded document before first inspection.
Have the recorded NOC ready before trying to schedule the first inspection.
Roof Affidavit
Roof-related permit documentation.
Keep product approvals and roof documents ready for plan review and inspection.
Seawall Permitting Requirements
Seawall construction or repair requirements.
Coastal and waterfront work may need extra engineering, environmental or agency review.
Nonconversion Agreement
Floodplain or enclosed-area compliance situations.
Read carefully before signing because it may limit future use of enclosed areas.
Resubmittal Cover Sheet
Responding to plan review comments.
Answer each correction clearly and identify changed sheets/documents.
Permit Extension or Reinstatement
Permits needing more time or reactivation.
Act before expiration causes extra problems or re-review.
Permit Lien Search Form
Property sale, due diligence, open permit or lien research.
Useful before buying or selling property in St. Pete Beach.
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Form tip: Always download the form fresh from the city website. Coastal permit rules and storm recovery documents can change after new FEMA, floodplain or state-code updates.
Inspections

St. Pete Beach Building Inspections and Certificate of Occupancy

Inspections are required to confirm that work matches approved plans and code requirements. The city’s Inspections page also explains Certificate of Occupancy rules.

Inspection topic
Official meaning
Practical step
First inspection
Recorded Notice of Commencement is required before scheduling the first inspection.
Record the NOC and keep it on the job site.
Building inspection
Inspections check construction activity by someone knowledgeable in building codes and trades.
Do not cover work before required inspections are approved.
Certificate of Occupancy
No building may be used or occupied, and no change in occupancy classification may be made, until the Building Official has issued a Certificate of Occupancy and fees are paid.
Do not occupy or change use before CO requirements are satisfied.
Certificate contents
The CO contains building address, permit number, description of the area, owner name/address, Building Official signature and compliance statement.
Save the CO with property records.
Planning inspection
The forms page links to online scheduling for both Building and Planning inspections.
Choose the correct inspection type when scheduling online.
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Inspection warning: Do not cover framing, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, roofing, flood-related or exterior component work until the required inspection has passed. Covered work can delay closeout or require reopening work.

Open St. Pete Beach Inspections

Building codes

St. Pete Beach Building Codes and Plan Review Standards

The official Building Codes page lists the codes used by the City of St. Pete Beach for plan review and permit issuance.

Code or standard
Official listing
Practical meaning
Florida Building Code
2023 8th Edition Florida Building Code
Plans submitted after the effective date must comply with the current listed Florida Building Code.
National Electric Code
NEC 2020
Electrical plans and work should follow the listed NEC edition and local requirements.
Pinellas County Local Technical Amendments
Listed by the city as part of applicable review standards.
Local technical amendments can affect design and inspection requirements.
Flood resistant design
Florida Flood Resistant Design & Construction ASCE 24-14
Floodplain and coastal construction may need elevation and flood-resistant design compliance.
Fire prevention
Florida Fire Prevention Code 8th Edition 2023
Commercial and certain residential projects may need fire-code coordination.
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Design tip: If your architect, engineer or contractor uses old code references, update the drawings before submitting. Old code references can trigger plan-review comments.

Open St. Pete Beach Building Codes

Flood and FEMA

St. Pete Beach FEMA Flood Maps, Substantial Improvement and Substantial Damage Review

Floodplain compliance is one of the biggest user-intent areas for St. Pete Beach permits. The Building & Permitting page says all new residential and commercial plans must be designed to comply with FEMA maps adopted August 24, 2021.

Flood-related item
Why it matters
Practical step
Adopted FEMA maps
New residential and commercial plans must be designed to comply with adopted FEMA maps.
Confirm flood zone and elevation requirements before finalizing drawings.
Substantial improvement
Large renovation or repair value can trigger FEMA 50% rule review.
Use the city’s SI/SD packet and valuation forms when applicable.
Substantial damage
Storm damage can trigger floodplain compliance review before repairs move forward.
Do not begin major repairs without checking SI/SD requirements.
Exterior components
The SI/SD package references Florida Product Approval information for exterior building components and cladding.
Collect product approvals and installation specs for doors, windows, roofing and exterior systems.
Nonconversion agreement
Enclosed areas in flood-prone construction may have restricted future use.
Understand the agreement before signing and before designing enclosed areas.
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Coastal property warning: For St. Pete Beach storm repairs, additions, major remodels or elevated construction, check FEMA and SI/SD rules before you spend money on plans. Flood compliance can change the entire design path.

Open St. Pete Beach Substantial Improvement/Substantial Damage Packet

Online services

How to Apply, Check Permit Status and Use St. Pete Beach Online Services

The official Online Services page links users to Building Permit Application, Check Permit Status, temporary use applications, parking permits, report-a-problem services and code enforcement issue reporting.

Apply for building permit

Use the official online services link or Permits & Forms page to start the building permit application route.

Check permit status

Use the official online services permit-status route to follow application review and permit activity.

Report city issues

Online Services also links to report-a-problem and code enforcement issue reporting for city concerns.

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Buyer and seller tip: Before buying or selling a St. Pete Beach property, check permit status, lien search forms and SI/SD history. Coastal repairs and storm-related work can affect insurance, financing and closing.

Open St. Pete Beach Online Services

Contractors

St. Pete Beach Contractor Tips and Consumer Protection

The city’s consumer information page recommends checking contractor experience, references, communication, licensing and complaint history before hiring.

Check city licensing

The contractor guidance page says users can call 727-363-9241 to check whether a contractor is licensed with the city and has previous complaints.

Ask for similar-project references

The city recommends asking whether you can view past work or contact owners with similar work experience.

Confirm communication

Good communication matters because permit corrections, inspections and flood documentation may need quick responses.

Watch storm-repair pressure

After hurricane or flood damage, avoid rushed contractor decisions and confirm permits before work begins.

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Owner protection tip: Put permit responsibility in writing. Confirm who uploads plans, who records the Notice of Commencement, who schedules inspections, and who provides final closeout proof.

Open St. Pete Beach Consumer Information – Contractors

Avoid mistakes

Why St. Pete Beach Building Permits Get Delayed

Most delays happen because plans are incomplete, flood documentation is missing, product approvals are not included, subcontractors are not signed on, the Notice of Commencement is not recorded, or SI/SD review is not addressed early.

Common delay
What it usually means
How to avoid it
Missing digital plans
Required plan files were not uploaded through the permitting portal.
Prepare complete PDFs and upload through the official portal.
Subcontractor not signed on
Subcontractors have not signed onto the prime contractor’s permit.
Handle subcontractor sign-on before expecting permit issuance.
NOC not recorded
First inspection cannot be scheduled properly.
Record the Notice of Commencement and keep it on the job site.
Flood map issue
Plans do not clearly show compliance with adopted FEMA maps.
Check flood map requirements before plan submission.
SI/SD review missing
Repair or improvement value may trigger substantial improvement/damage review.
Use the city’s SI/SD packet before major repair or remodel filing.
Outdated code basis
Plans were designed to an old code edition.
Use the city’s Building Codes page and current Florida Building Code edition.
Best habit: Keep one project folder with permit application, digital plans, product approvals, flood documents, NOC, subcontractor sign-ons, resubmittal cover sheets, inspection results, CO and final closeout proof.
Homeowners

St. Pete Beach Homeowner Building Permit Checklist

Homeowners in St. Pete Beach should be especially careful after storm damage, roof work, window/door replacement, flood repairs, pool work, seawall work and major remodels.

Homeowner project
What to check
Practical step
Roof work
Roof affidavit, Florida Product Approval, installation details and inspection requirements.
Use current city forms and keep approved product documents available.
Window or door replacement
Exterior component approvals, flood/wind requirements and installation specs.
Collect Florida Product Approval information before submission.
Storm damage repair
Substantial damage/substantial improvement package and FEMA 50% rule concerns.
Do not start large repairs until SI/SD review path is clear.
Pool, spa or hot tub
Pool contractor notice, safety act form and inspection requirements.
Confirm barrier, electrical and inspection rules before installation.
Seawall work
Seawall permitting requirements, engineering, coastal conditions and possible agency coordination.
Use the official seawall permitting requirements before hiring.
Contact and map

St. Pete Beach Building Department Phone Number, Email, Address and Map

Use the official City of St. Pete Beach contact details below for building permits, inspections, forms, digital plan upload help, flood map questions and contractor guidance.

Building & Permitting contact

City phone: 727-367-2735

Permit assistance email: permits@stpetebeach.org

Contractor license/complaint check: 727-363-9241

City Hall hours: Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

City Hall address

City of St. Pete Beach
155 Corey Avenue
St. Pete Beach, FL 33706

Use official online forms and the permitting portal where possible before visiting in person.

Map shows St. Pete Beach City Hall, 155 Corey Avenue, St. Pete Beach, FL 33706. For building permit assistance, use permits@stpetebeach.org and the official Building & Permitting page.

Open the official St. Pete Beach Building & Permitting page

FAQ

St. Pete Beach Building Department FAQs

These FAQs focus on the most common user searches around St. Pete Beach building permits, digital plans, inspections, Notice of Commencement, building codes, FEMA flood maps, contractor checks and official contact details.

QHow do I contact the St. Pete Beach Building Department?

St. Pete Beach Building & Permitting is part of Community Development. City Hall is listed at 155 Corey Avenue, St. Pete Beach, FL 33706, and the city phone is 727-367-2735. For building permit help, email permits@stpetebeach.org.

QWhere do I apply for a St. Pete Beach building permit?

Use the official St. Pete Beach Permits & Forms page or Online Services page. These city pages link to the building permit application, inspection scheduling, permit status and other official online services.

QAre digital plans required for St. Pete Beach building permits?

Yes. The official Building & Permitting page says digital plans are required and must be uploaded through the permitting portal.

QWhat email should I use for St. Pete Beach permit assistance?

The official Building & Permitting page says users needing assistance should email permits@stpetebeach.org.

QIs a Notice of Commencement required before St. Pete Beach inspections?

Yes. The official Building & Permitting page states that the recorded Notice of Commencement is required before scheduling the first inspection and must be on the job site.

QWhat building codes does St. Pete Beach use?

The official Building Codes page says all submitted plans must comply with the 2023 8th Edition Florida Building Code. It also lists NEC 2020, Pinellas County Local Technical Amendments, ASCE 24-14 and Florida Fire Prevention Code 8th Edition 2023.

QDo St. Pete Beach building plans need FEMA flood map compliance?

Yes. The official Building & Permitting page states that all new residential and commercial plans must be designed to comply with FEMA maps adopted August 24, 2021.

QCan I occupy a building before a Certificate of Occupancy is issued?

No. The official Inspections page says no building shall be used or occupied, and no change in occupancy classification shall be made, until the Building Official has issued a Certificate of Occupancy and appropriate fees have been paid.

QWhere can I find St. Pete Beach permit forms?

Use the official Permits & Forms page. It includes building permit application, owner-builder affidavit, Notice of Commencement, roof affidavit, seawall permitting requirements, resubmittal cover sheet, permit lien search, permit extension and reinstatement forms.

QHow can I check if a contractor is licensed with St. Pete Beach?

The city’s Consumer Information – Contractors page says users can call 727-363-9241 to check whether a contractor is licensed with the city and has any previous complaints.

QDoes St. Pete Beach have substantial improvement or substantial damage forms?

Yes. The city provides a Substantial Improvement or Substantial Damage review package and related forms for projects that may be subject to FEMA floodplain review, including storm damage and major improvement work.

QIs Building-Department.org the official City of St. Pete Beach website?

No. Building-Department.org is an independent guide. Official permit applications, inspections, payments, approvals, floodplain determinations and code decisions must be handled through the City of St. Pete Beach or its official systems.

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Final takeaway: For St. Pete Beach building permits, start with official Building & Permitting resources, upload complete digital plans, confirm FEMA flood-map and SI/SD requirements early, record the Notice of Commencement before the first inspection, keep approved documents on site and save final closeout proof for property records.
Free Building Permit & Inspection Assistant

Check Permit Type, Estimate Fees, Prepare Inspections and Find Official Building Department Links

Use this free tool before applying for a building permit, booking an inspection, checking zoning rules, or searching permit records. It helps homeowners, contractors, landlords, buyers, and business owners understand the next step before visiting the official building department portal.

Start Permit Helper
8 toolsPermit finder, fee estimate, inspection checklist, zoning pre-check, and official searches.
All citiesWorks sitewide on city, county, village, and regional building department pages.
No loginNo address, permit number, email, or private data is required to use the tool.
Mobile-firstBuilt for visitors checking permits and inspections from a phone.

What building department task do you need help with?

Choose your goal. The tool will suggest the right next step, what to prepare, and which official page to check.

Homeowner tip

Before starting work, check whether your project needs building, zoning, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, right-of-way, or HOA approval.

Contractor tip

Many portals require contractor registration, license details, insurance, plans, owner authorization, and inspection scheduling access.

Building Permit Type Finder

Select the project type to understand which permits or reviews are commonly required. Always confirm with the official local building department.

Permit Fee Estimate Calculator

Estimate a rough permit fee using project value and common percentage-based review assumptions. Local minimum fees, technology fees, impact fees, reinspection fees, and trade fees can change the final amount.

Inspection Readiness Checklist

Use this before scheduling framing, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, roofing, final, or certificate-related inspections.

Zoning and Setback Pre-check

Use this before applying for a permit when your project may affect land use, setbacks, lot coverage, height, parking, signs, fences, accessory structures, or business use.

Plan Review Timeline Estimator

Estimate how complex your review may be. Local staffing, incomplete plans, corrections, holidays, fire review, zoning review, and outside agency review can change timing.

Permit Records Search Helper

Use this if you are trying to find old permits, inspection history, certificate of occupancy details, open permits, or code-related records.

Official Building Department Resource Finder

Enter city/county and state to create safe searches for official permit portals, inspection scheduling, building codes, zoning maps, forms, fees, and contact pages.

Building Department vs Planning/Zoning

  • Building Department: permits, plan review, inspections, code compliance, certificates.
  • Planning/Zoning: land use, setbacks, height, lot coverage, signs, parking, variances.

Best sitewide placement

Place this tool after the first main guide section or before FAQs. It turns a normal article into a practical permit-preparation page.

Important note

This tool gives educational guidance only. Final permit requirements, fees, inspections, forms, and deadlines must be confirmed with the official local building department.

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