City Of Las Vegas Building Department | Permits, Inspections & Official Contact

Updated 2026 • Official Las Vegas links manually reviewed

City of Las Vegas Building Department: Permits, Inspections, Fees, Codes and Official Contact

Before you apply for a building permit in Las Vegas, the first real question is not “which form do I need?” It is “is this property inside the City of Las Vegas jurisdiction?” The Las Vegas valley has multiple building departments, and using the wrong jurisdiction can waste days. This guide explains how to use official City of Las Vegas Building & Safety resources for permits, plan review, inspections, fee estimates, code information, permit status and contact help in one practical place.

702-229-6251Customer Service
702-229-1081Permit Technicians
702-229-6914Dispatch
495 S. MainCity Hall
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Check jurisdiction

Confirm the property is inside City of Las Vegas jurisdiction before applying.

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Citizen Portal

Use the CLV Dashboard to apply for, manage, pay and update building permit records.

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Electronic plans

New commercial, residential and civil plans must be submitted electronically.

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Permit status

Use the official permit status route to search permits, check status and print permit cards.

Official City of Las Vegas Building & Safety Links

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City of Las Vegas Building & Safety contact 702-229-6251

Permit Technicians: 702-229-1081. Dispatch: 702-229-6914. City Hall: 495 S. Main St., Las Vegas, NV 89101. For self-disclosing unpermitted residential work, the city lists BuildingInfo@LasVegasNevada.gov.

Editorial review note: This guide was manually reviewed against official City of Las Vegas resources before publication, including Building & Offsite Permits, CLV Dashboard, Online Building Permits, Schedule Inspections, Permit & Application Status, Building & Safety Resources, fee information and code/resource pages.
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Independent guide: Building-Department.org is not the City of Las Vegas. This page explains official public resources in simple language. Permit applications, inspections, plan review decisions, fee payments, approvals and enforcement actions must be handled through the City of Las Vegas or its official systems.

Permit basics

What the City of Las Vegas Building & Safety Department Handles

City of Las Vegas Building & Safety helps with building and offsite permits, plan review, inspections, fee estimates, permit status, building codes, forms, procedures, valuations, fee schedules and building records.

The city’s official permit page makes one point very clear: before the building process, there may be planning, development, zoning, aesthetic review, variances, permit approval and engineering review. That means a building permit may not be the only approval needed for your project.

Building permits

Used for construction, residential work, commercial work, repairs, additions, remodels, trade-related work and other regulated projects.

Offsite permits

Used for public right-of-way, civil, subdivision, engineering or offsite improvement-related work where city engineering review may apply.

Inspections

Required inspections confirm that approved work matches plans, codes and permit conditions before the project moves forward or closes.

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First check jurisdiction: The official City of Las Vegas permit page tells users to make sure they are within city jurisdiction. Do this before starting an application because Clark County, Henderson, North Las Vegas and other authorities may handle nearby properties.
Citizen Portal

City of Las Vegas Dashboard: Apply, Manage, Pay and Update Permits

The City of Las Vegas Dashboard is the official citizen portal for several permit and licensing tasks. The city recommends using Google Chrome when creating an account or logging in.

Dashboard task
What it helps with
Practical tip
Building permit
Apply for, manage, pay and update building permit records.
Use a consistent applicant email and keep your record number saved.
Fire permit
Apply for or manage fire-related permit records where needed.
Commercial projects may involve fire review in addition to building review.
Offsite permit
Manage offsite permit applications and related activity.
Engineering and civil plan review may be involved.
Planning and zoning application
Submit or manage planning and zoning applications.
Check zoning early if use, setbacks, aesthetics, variances or site layout may apply.
Payments and updates
Pay or update records through official city systems.
Save payment confirmations and permit receipts.

Open the City of Las Vegas Dashboard

Step-by-step

How to Apply for a City of Las Vegas Building Permit

A clean permit application starts with the right jurisdiction, the right permit type and the right submittal route.

Step 1: Confirm city jurisdiction

Use the city jurisdiction check before applying. If the property is outside city limits, another building department may be responsible.

Step 2: Estimate permit fees

Use the official fee estimator or fee schedule to understand potential building, plan review and development permit costs.

Step 3: Choose plans or no plans

The city separates permits that do not require plans from permits requiring electronic plan submittal.

Step 4: Apply online

Use the City of Las Vegas Dashboard or official building permit application route for the correct permit type.

Step 5: Respond to comments

If reviewers request corrections, answer each item clearly and keep revised documents consistent with the approved scope.

Step 6: Inspect and close

After permit issuance, schedule required inspections and keep final approval or permit closure proof in your project file.

Permit types

Common Las Vegas Building Permit Questions Users Search

Permit requirements depend on the project type, location, valuation, zoning, planning review, building code and whether work affects structure, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, fire or site conditions.

Project or question
What to check
Helpful next step
Residential owner-builder permit
Whether you own the residential property and will act as your own contractor.
Use the official online permit route and owner-builder selection where applicable.
Commercial construction
Nevada contractor licensing, electronic plans, zoning and commercial code review.
The city says only a Nevada licensed contractor may obtain a commercial building permit.
Solar / photovoltaic
Current solar application route.
The city notice says photovoltaic applications should be submitted by signing into the CLV Dashboard.
Re-roofing or exterior upgrades
Online permit list, product details, scope and inspection needs.
Use the official Online Permits List to confirm the correct category.
Planning or zoning issue
Zoning, aesthetic review, variances, site conditions and development requirements.
Contact Customer Service at 702-229-6251 before submitting if the path is unclear.
Inspections

City of Las Vegas Building Inspections: Scheduling and Dispatch

After permit issuance, inspections are required at the correct stages. The work should be ready, accessible and match the approved permit documents before inspection is requested.

Use official scheduling

Start from the City of Las Vegas Schedule Inspections page or the official permit record route.

Have permit details ready

Keep the permit number, address, inspection type and contact person ready before scheduling.

Call dispatch when needed

The Building & Offsite Permits page lists Dispatch at 702-229-6914.

Do not cover work early

Do not cover framing, electrical, plumbing, mechanical or other work that needs rough inspection.

Fix corrections fully

If an inspector issues corrections, fix the exact items before requesting reinspection.

Keep final proof

Save inspection approvals, permit cards and final documentation for future property sale or records.

Open City of Las Vegas Schedule Inspections

Codes and electronic plans

City of Las Vegas Building Codes, Electronic Plans and Plan Review Delays

The City of Las Vegas Building & Offsite Permits page states that the 2021 International Building Code and 2021 International Fire Code were adopted in September 2022, with an effective date of March 23, 2023. The city also says all new commercial, residential and civil building plans must be submitted electronically.

Code or review topic
Why it matters
Practical tip
2021 IBC and IFC
Plans and inspections are checked against adopted codes.
Confirm your design team is using the current adopted city code package.
Electronic plan submittal
New commercial, residential and civil building plans must be submitted electronically.
Prepare clean PDF plans, bookmarks, sheet names and supporting documents.
Setbacks
Improper setbacks are listed by the city as a common plan check delay.
Confirm zoning and site plan dimensions before submitting.
Plan consistency
The city lists inconsistent plans and plans not matching approved elevations as delay causes.
Coordinate architectural, structural, civil, MEP and elevation sheets before upload.
Fire walls and exiting
Fire wall, fire barrier and exiting problems are common review issues.
Check life safety, egress and fire-resistance details before plan review.
Accessibility routes
The city lists missing accessibility routes as a plan check delay.
Commercial and public projects should show accessible routes clearly.

Open City of Las Vegas Building & Safety Resources

Fees and payments

City of Las Vegas Building Permit Fees, Fee Estimator and Express Review

Permit cost depends on project type, valuation, plan review, civil review, offsite work and other applicable fee rules. Always check the official fee estimator and fee schedule before budgeting.

Fee or review item
Official detail
Practical meaning
Permit fee estimator
The Building & Offsite Permits page links users to estimate permit fees.
Use it before submitting or signing a construction contract.
Fee schedule
The Building & Safety Resources page includes a Building & Fee Table.
Review official fee tables for current city calculations.
Building Express Plan Review
The city lists a non-refundable $550 administrative fee and hourly review charges above regular fees.
Express review can help, but it is not free and should be planned carefully.
Civil Express Plan Review
The city lists application, admin, minimum plan check and hourly meeting charges.
Civil plans must be well prepared before express review can save time.
Payment route
The city provides an official development permit fee payment route.
Avoid unofficial payment links and save receipts.
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Budget tip: Do not budget only for permit fees. Depending on project scope, you may also face plan review, civil review, express review, valuation, offsite, inspection or development-related fees.

Pay City of Las Vegas Development Permit Fees

Homeowner amnesty

City of Las Vegas Amnesty Program for Unpermitted Home Work

The City of Las Vegas Building & Offsite Permits page describes a year-round amnesty program that allows homeowners to self-disclose non-permitted or non-code-compliant work in their homes without penalties for the required plan review and permit fees.

Who should care

Homeowners who discover previous unpermitted work, especially before selling, refinancing, remodeling or applying for another permit.

How to ask

The city directs users to email BuildingInfo@LasVegasNevada.gov or call 702-229-6251 for amnesty program details.

What to prepare

Prepare the property address, work description, approximate date, photos, contractor details if known and whether work is visible.

Do not ignore it

Unpermitted work can create issues during sale, insurance, refinance, future permits or safety review.

Permit status

How to Check City of Las Vegas Permit Status

Permit status search helps property owners, contractors, real estate agents and buyers confirm whether a permit is applied, issued, pending, corrected, inspected or closed.

Search by permit or project

Use the official Permit & Application Status route or dashboard to find permit records and current application status.

Print permit card

The Building & Offsite Permits page links to manage existing permits and print permit card information.

Check dashboard updates

For ePlan submittals and existing permit management, use the official dashboard and permit record tools.

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Buyer and seller tip: Before buying or selling a property in Las Vegas, search permit status for recent work and ask for proof that required final inspections were completed.

Open City of Las Vegas Permit & Application Status

Avoid delays

Why City of Las Vegas Building Permits Get Delayed

The city lists several typical plan check delay issues, and many are preventable before submittal.

Common delay
What it usually means
How to avoid it
Wrong jurisdiction
Property may not be inside the City of Las Vegas.
Check city jurisdiction before applying.
Improper setbacks
The structure location may not meet zoning or site requirements.
Confirm setbacks and site plan dimensions before uploading plans.
Plans do not match elevations
Architectural sheets conflict with approved elevations or other plan sheets.
Coordinate all plan sheets before submission.
Missing truss calculations
Structural roof/framing information is incomplete.
Include proper truss calculations and layout where required.
Fire-resistance details incomplete
Fire walls, barriers or assembly details are not clear.
Show rated assemblies and fire/life-safety details clearly.
Accessibility not shown
Accessible route details are missing or incomplete.
Clearly show accessible paths, entries, parking and routes where applicable.
Best habit: Keep one project folder with jurisdiction proof, permit application, fee estimate, plan files, dashboard login, comments, revised plans, payment receipt, inspection results and final approval documents.
Homeowners

Las Vegas Homeowner Building Permit Checklist

Homeowners often search after work has already started. It is safer to check permit requirements before hiring, buying materials or covering work.

Homeowner situation
What to check
Practical step
Owner-builder work
Whether you are eligible to act as your own contractor on residential property.
Use the official Residential Owner-Builder route if applicable.
Unpermitted previous work
Whether amnesty self-disclosure is appropriate.
Email BuildingInfo@LasVegasNevada.gov or call 702-229-6251.
Sheds, water heaters or ceiling fans
City guidance notes common household projects may need permits if inside city limits.
Ask before assuming small work is exempt.
Residential plans
Whether electronic plans are required.
Prepare clear digital plans if plan review is needed.
Final inspection
Whether the permit is closed and final approval exists.
Save final inspection proof for resale, refinance or insurance.
Contractors

Contractor Tips for City of Las Vegas Building Permits

Contractors can reduce delays by confirming city jurisdiction, licensing requirements, plan quality, fee expectations and inspection timing before mobilizing work.

Confirm licensed contractor rules

Commercial construction permits must be obtained by a Nevada licensed contractor under city guidance.

Prepare clean electronic plans

Use clear file names, coordinated sheets, current code assumptions and complete supporting calculations.

Check plan delay list

Review common delay causes such as setbacks, truss calculations, fire barriers, exiting, IECC and accessibility.

Use dispatch correctly

For inspection questions, the city lists Dispatch at 702-229-6914.

Contact and map

City of Las Vegas Building Department Phone Number, Address and Map

Use the official contact routes below for building permits, offsite permits, plan review, permit fees, inspection scheduling, dispatch and general Building & Safety questions.

Building & Safety contact numbers

Customer Service: 702-229-6251

Permit Technicians: 702-229-1081

Dispatch: 702-229-6914

City main phone: 702-229-6011

Amnesty program email: BuildingInfo@LasVegasNevada.gov

City Hall address

City of Las Vegas
Las Vegas City Hall
495 S. Main St.
Las Vegas, NV 89101

Map shows Las Vegas City Hall, 495 S. Main St., Las Vegas, NV 89101. For building permits, start with the official Building & Offsite Permits page or the City of Las Vegas Dashboard before visiting in person.

Open official City of Las Vegas Building & Offsite Permits

FAQ

City of Las Vegas Building Department FAQs

These FAQs focus on the most common user searches around City of Las Vegas building permits, inspections, permit status, fees, codes, electronic plans, jurisdiction and official contact details.

QHow do I contact the City of Las Vegas Building Department?

City of Las Vegas Building & Safety can be reached through Customer Service at 702-229-6251. The city also lists Permit Technicians at 702-229-1081 and Dispatch at 702-229-6914. City Hall is located at 495 S. Main St., Las Vegas, NV 89101.

QWhere do I apply for a City of Las Vegas building permit online?

Use the official City of Las Vegas Dashboard or the Building & Offsite Permits page. The dashboard is used to apply for, manage, pay and update building permits and other city applications.

QDo I need to check city jurisdiction before applying?

Yes. The City of Las Vegas official permit page tells users to make sure the property is within city jurisdiction first. Nearby properties may fall under Clark County, North Las Vegas, Henderson or another authority.

QCan a commercial owner pull a City of Las Vegas building permit?

The City of Las Vegas Building & Offsite Permits page states that only a Nevada licensed contractor may obtain a building permit for commercial construction.

QDoes Las Vegas have an amnesty program for unpermitted home work?

Yes. The city describes a year-round amnesty program allowing homeowners to self-disclose non-permitted or non-code-compliant work in their homes without penalties for the required plan review and permit fees. The city directs users to BuildingInfo@LasVegasNevada.gov or 702-229-6251.

QHow do I schedule a City of Las Vegas building inspection?

Use the official Schedule Inspections page or the inspection route connected to the permit record. The Building & Offsite Permits page lists Dispatch at 702-229-6914.

QHow do I check City of Las Vegas permit status?

Use the official Permit & Application Status page or the City of Las Vegas Dashboard to search for permits, check status, manage an existing permit or print a permit card.

QWhat building codes does the City of Las Vegas use?

The City of Las Vegas states that the 2021 International Building Code and International Fire Code were adopted in September 2022, with an effective date of March 23, 2023. Check the Building & Safety Resources page for current code listings.

QAre City of Las Vegas building plans submitted electronically?

Yes. The city states that effective January 1, 2020, all new commercial, residential and civil building plans must be submitted electronically.

QWhere can I pay City of Las Vegas development permit fees?

Use the official Pay Development Permit Fees route or payment tools linked from the city’s building permit pages. Save your receipt and permit record number after payment.

QWhat causes City of Las Vegas plan review delays?

The city lists common plan check delay issues such as improper setbacks, plans not matching approved elevations, missing truss calculations, inconsistencies between plans, fire wall and fire barrier problems, exiting problems, IECC calculation issues and missing accessibility routes.

QIs Building-Department.org the official City of Las Vegas website?

No. Building-Department.org is an independent guide. Official permit applications, inspections, payments, plan review decisions, approvals and enforcement actions must be handled through the City of Las Vegas and its official systems.

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Final takeaway: For City of Las Vegas building permits, first confirm city jurisdiction, then use the official Building & Offsite Permits page or CLV Dashboard, choose the correct permit route, submit electronic plans when required, pay fees through official channels, schedule inspections on time and keep proof of final approval.
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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