Patio Permit Requirements in Temple City, CA

Temple City is an incorporated LA County contract city that issues building permits under its own name through the City Community Development Department's Building & Safety Division at City Hall. Day-to-day building official, plan check, inspection, and permit-counter services are contracted to a private firm, Transtech Engineers, Inc., which has provided these services since 2012, so inspections are contracted but the AHJ is the city. Plan check and permit fees (except encroachment) are set at 120 percent of the County of Los Angeles fee schedule and the city directs applicants to LA County Public Works for the base amounts. California enforces statewide Title 24, currently the 2025 California Residential Code (based on the 2024 IRC) effective January 1, 2026.

By Joey, Founder · Last verified June 4, 2026 · How we research →

Code: 2024 IRC (2025 CRC) Verified: 2026-06-04 1 local rules

When you don’t need a Patio permit

Exempt·Rule 1

CA (ZIP 91780), an at-grade open patio slab is generally exempt from a building permit, but adding a patio cover, roof, or screen enclosure creates a structure requiring a building permit from the City of Temple City Building & Safety Division under the 2024 IRC (2025 California Residential Code). Verify setbacks for covered patios with the City.

SourceCity of Temple City Building & Safety (Transtech) / 2025 California Residential Code (2024 IRC, Title 24) · view source

Patio Permit Costs: Temple City vs. Nearby

CityEstimated Fee
Temple City N/A
Los Angeles $150 – $750
Sacramento County $150 – $750
San Diego $150 – $750

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

Zoning Considerations

Zoning

Patios contribute to impervious surface coverage on your lot. Many cities cap total impervious coverage at 40–60% of lot area. Check with your planning department before adding large hardscape areas.

Estimated Project Timeline

Here's a typical timeline for a patio project:

Week 1
Get quotes & finalize design
Contact licensed contractors, get 3+ quotes, finalize project scope and drawings.
Week 2
Submit permit application
Your contractor submits the application to Temple City's building department, apply online here.
Week 3-4
Plan review & approval
Processing time varies, contact Temple City's building department for current turnaround times.
Week 5+
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.

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Building Department Contact

NameCity of Temple City Community Development Department, Building & Safety Division
Address9701 Las Tunas Drive, Temple City, CA 91780
HoursPermit Technicians: Mon-Thu 8:00-11:30 AM & 1:30-4:30 PM; Plan Checkers: Mon & Wed 8:00-11:30 AM; Inspection requests (626) 656-7327, inspections Mon-Thu

Frequently Asked Questions

Contact the building department for current Patio permit fee information. Fees typically vary based on project scope and valuation.

It depends on the specifics of your project. Some smaller Patio 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 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.

Contact the building department for current processing times. Timelines vary based on project complexity and whether plan review is required.

Learn More About Patio Permits

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

Read Patio Guide →

Estimate your permit fees →

Disclaimer: This information was last verified on 2026-06-04. 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.