Fireplace Permit Requirements in Marin County, CA

Marin County Community Development Agency - Building & Safety Division at 3501 Civic Center Drive Suite 308, San Rafael CA 94903 (415-473-6550) issues building permits for unincorporated Marin County, including Greenbrae, Kentfield, and surrounding unincorporated areas of ZIP 94904. ZIP 94904 also has a partial overlap with the incorporated City of Larkspur (Larkspur Building Division at 400 Magnolia Ave Floor 2, Larkspur CA 94939, 415-927-5038, building@cityoflarkspur.org); parcels inside Larkspur city limits use the city building department. California Building Standards Code (Title 24): the 2025 CBC/CRC/CMC/CPC/CEC and Title 24 Part 6 (Energy Code) and Part 11 (CALGreen) took effect January 1, 2026 (replacing 2022 cycle). Marin County adopts Title 24 with local amendments under County Code Title 19, including CALGreen Tier 1 green building measures and provisions for tiny homes, strawbale, cob, light straw-clay, and 3D-printed structures. Distinctive requirements: (1) ALL new 1- and 2-family dwellings must have automatic fire sprinklers per CRC R313 (NFPA 13D); (2) Most of unincorporated Marin including Greenbrae/Kentfield is in Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone (VHFHSZ) / WUI — Chapter 7A ignition-resistant construction applies, plus PRC § 4291 defensible space (30-150 ft cleared zone, annual Central Marin Fire inspections); (3) State-mandated solar PV on new construction per Title 24 Part 6 § 150.1(c); (4) ADU state preemption (AB 68, AB 881, SB 13, AB 671) — Marin must approve ADUs by-right within 60 days, no minimum lot size, 4-ft setbacks, fee waivers under 750 sq ft; Marin County offers ADU permit fee discounts through 2026; (5) Greenbrae has FEMA flood zones (AE/VE) along Corte Madera Creek — flood insurance and elevation requirements apply; (6) Septic systems regulated by Marin County Environmental Health Services (415-473-6907); (7) Mello-Roos CFD assessments may apply on some parcels. CA Contractors State License Board (CSLB) requires state license for ALL contractors over $500 (B General Building, C-10 Electrical, C-36 Plumbing, C-20 HVAC, etc.). Owner-builder exemption per CSLB requires 1-year prior residence, sale prohibition, max 2 structures in 3 years. CA Climate Zone 3 (coastal temperate); Bay Area is high seismic (SDC D2). Pre-1978 homes: California lead-safe practices required; pre-1980 may have asbestos requiring NESHAP-compliant abatement. BayREN heat pump water heater rebates available.

By Joey, Founder · Last verified April 25, 2026 · How we research →

Population: 262,321 Code: 2025 CRC (Title 24) Verified: 2026-04-25 1 local rules

When you need a Fireplace permit in Marin County

Required·Rule 1

A new fireplace requires a building permit. Bay Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD) Rule 6-3 PROHIBITS new wood-burning fireplaces in new construction (since 2008); only EPA-certified wood stoves, pellet stoves, or natural gas inserts/fireplaces allowed. BAAQMD also issues mandatory no-burn days for existing wood-burners (Spare the Air alerts). Gas units trigger gas-line inspection.

Typical Timelineabout 2 weeks
SourceMarin County CDA / 2025 CRC Chapter 10 / BAAQMD Rule 6-3 · view source

Fireplace Permit Costs: Marin County vs. Nearby

CityEstimated Fee
Marin County N/A
Los Angeles $75 – $800
Sacramento County $75 – $800
San Diego $75 – $800

Fees shown are estimates based on local building code data. Actual fees may vary based on project scope and valuation. See all Marin County permit costs →

Real Fireplace Permit Data for Marin County

From our own dataset of permits filed in Marin County over the last 3 years.

69
fireplace permits filed
35
avg days to approval

Most-active contractor: Owner with 13 permits filed.

These figures reflect actual permits issued in Marin County, not state averages or estimates. Your project may differ based on scope, valuation, and the specific work proposed.

Zoning & HOA Considerations

Zoning

Fireplace and wood stove installations rarely trigger zoning review. Many California air quality districts (SCAQMD, BAAQMD) prohibit NEW wood-burning fireplaces in new construction. Chimney height requirements must comply with IRC R1003.9 (3 ft above roof penetration, 2 ft above any point within 10 ft horizontally).

HOA Communities

If you live in an HOA community: hOAs in some communities prohibit wood-burning appliances entirely due to smoke and air quality concerns. Gas fireplaces are usually permitted. Chimney caps and exterior venting may face aesthetic review.

Estimated Project Timeline in Marin County

Here's a typical timeline for a fireplace project in Marin County, CA:

Week 1
Get quotes & finalize design
Contact licensed contractors, get 3+ quotes, finalize project scope and drawings (plan drawings required).
Week 2
Prepare permit documents
Contractor prepares site plan, construction drawings, and permit application. Gather required documents per your city's checklist.
Week 3
Submit permit application
Your contractor submits the application to Marin County's building department, apply online here.
Week 4-5
Plan review & approval
Typical processing time in Marin County: about 2 weeks. Plan review examiner checks drawings for code compliance.
Week 6+
Construction & inspections
Post the permit card on site. Work begins. Schedule inspections at required stages (varies by project). Final inspection required before closing the permit.

Timeline is based on Marin County's typical about 2 weeks permit processing time. Actual timelines vary by project complexity, completeness of application, and current department workload.

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Building Department Contact

NameMarin County Community Development Agency - Building & Safety Division
Address3501 Civic Center Drive Suite 308, San Rafael, CA 94903
HoursMonday-Thursday 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM; Friday 8:00 AM - 12:00 PM

Frequently Asked Questions

Contact Marin County's building department for current Fireplace permit fee information. Fees typically vary based on project scope and valuation.

It depends on the specifics of your project. Some smaller Fireplace projects may be exempt from permit requirements, while larger ones typically require a permit. Use our free lookup tool to check your specific situation.

Working without a required permit in Marin County can result in fines, stop-work orders, being required to remove completed work, and complications when selling your home. It's always best to check first.

Typical approval time for Fireplace permits in Marin County is about 2 weeks. More complex projects may take longer if plan review is required.

If you live in an HOA community, you may need architectural review approval in addition to a building permit. HOA rules and city building codes are separate, you may need to satisfy both. Review your CC&Rs and submit to your HOA's architectural review committee before starting work.

Learn More About Fireplace Permits

Read our complete guide covering permit requirements, costs, common exemptions, and the application process.

Read Fireplace Guide →

Estimate your permit fees →

Disclaimer: This information was last verified on 2026-04-25. Building permit requirements may change. Zoning requirements (setbacks, lot coverage, height limits) are separate and vary by location. Always confirm with your local building and planning departments before starting your project. PermitMint provides general guidance, not legal advice.