The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Building refers to the headquarters and major facilities of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in Washington, DC. DHS oversees critical national security operations including immigration, border security, cybersecurity, emergency management, and more.
Many people search for the DHS headquarters address, main phone number, visitor access procedures, and information about the different campuses such as the Nebraska Avenue Complex and the St. Elizabeths Campus.
This 2026 guide provides clear, practical details to help you contact DHS, understand visitor policies, and locate the main facilities.
Department of Homeland Security Building Contact Information 2026
- Main Operator Phone: (202) 282-8000
- Comment Line: (202) 282-8495
- Mailing Address (General): U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Washington, DC 20528
- One Key Headquarters Location: 3801 Nebraska Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20016 (Nebraska Avenue Complex)
- Another Key Location: 2707 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave SE, Washington, DC 20528 (St. Elizabeths Campus)
- Hours (General Inquiries): Monday–Friday, business hours (specific office hours vary by component)
Official Website: U.S. Department of Homeland Security (dhs.gov)
Visitor Information & Access 2026
DHS facilities are secure federal government buildings. Public access is limited and typically requires advance approval, appointments, or official business. Visitors must follow strict security screening procedures. For media inquiries or official visits, contact the appropriate DHS component or use the main operator line (202) 282-8000. Emergency situations should be reported to local law enforcement by calling 9-1-1.
DHS Major Facilities & Campuses
- Nebraska Avenue Complex (NAC): 3801 Nebraska Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20016 – One of the primary headquarters locations.
- St. Elizabeths Campus: 2707 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave SE, Washington, DC 20528 – A major consolidated headquarters campus.
- Additional component offices (FEMA, TSA, CBP, ICE, etc.) are located across the National Capital Region and nationwide.
DHS facilities management and construction projects are handled internally through the Department’s Office of the Chief Administrative Officer and procurement processes. Public building permits for DHS projects follow federal procedures rather than local municipal building departments.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the main phone number for the Department of Homeland Security building?
The main operator number is (202) 282-8000.
Where is the DHS headquarters located?
DHS has multiple locations in Washington, DC, including the Nebraska Avenue Complex at 3801 Nebraska Avenue NW and the St. Elizabeths Campus at 2707 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave SE.
Can the public visit the Department of Homeland Security building?
Access is restricted to authorized personnel and approved visitors. Advance coordination is required. For emergencies, call 9-1-1.
How do I contact DHS for general inquiries?
Call the main operator at (202) 282-8000 or visit dhs.gov/contact-us for component-specific contacts.
Does the Department of Homeland Security handle its own building permits?
Yes. As a federal agency, DHS manages facilities and construction through internal processes and federal procurement rather than local municipal building departments.
Official Resources
Updated April 2026 using only official U.S. Department of Homeland Security sources. For emergencies, always call 9-1-1. Contact the main operator at (202) 282-8000 for general inquiries.

Khushboo Bobade is a public records researcher and editorial writer specializing in government service documentation and construction permit systems.
Her research focuses on explaining building permits, inspection procedures, zoning regulations, and public permit records maintained by local government building departments across the United States.
Professional profile: View LinkedIn Profile
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.
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.
Before starting work, check whether your project needs building, zoning, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, right-of-way, or HOA approval.
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.