Whole-home remodel planning in Santa Monica, coastal details included
A whole-home remodel in Santa Monica is a coordination exercise: Plan Review handles the permit, coastal zoning applies on some parcels, and the city expects complete submissions. Owners who resolve coastal status, title conditions, and prior-permit history in week one end up with far cleaner timelines. This guide walks through the whole sequence.
Why whole-home remodel planning in Santa Monica takes a specific approach
Santa Monica's older housing stock carries legacy systems, partial upgrades, and — on coastal parcels — additional review. A whole-home remodel is the right moment to rebuild the systems fully, but the planning phase decides whether that rebuild moves through Plan Review cleanly or gets stuck in correction cycles.
Systems are usually at end-of-life
Legacy electrical panels, galvanized plumbing, and undersized HVAC are common. A whole-home remodel is the moment to replace them together.
Coastal status changes the review path
On coastal parcels, additional review applies. Confirm coastal status during the early zoning lookup before design locks in.
What Santa Monica owners typically rebuild
Whole-home projects in the city tend to follow two patterns.
Full interior reset with exterior restraint
New floor plan, new kitchen and baths, new electrical/plumbing/HVAC, new insulation, refinished or replaced windows in original pattern. Exterior stays consistent with the block.
Interior reset plus a rear addition
When the lot allows, a rear addition runs alongside the remodel. The addition is planned behind the original massing so the street facade stays intact.

Step-by-step: how a Santa Monica whole-home remodel actually unfolds
The sequence owners should expect, each step tied to a specific department or portal.
Licensed land survey
Begin with a current boundary and topographic survey. Verify the surveyor through the California BPELSG license lookup.
Title and property records
Pull a preliminary title report. Santa Monica parcels often carry recorded easements that affect what can be rebuilt and where.
Zoning, coastal, and parcel lookup
Confirm zone, setbacks, coastal status, and overlays with Santa Monica Plan Review.
Prior permit history
Pull the permit record through the Permit Services Center. Layered prior work is common and must be reconciled.
Schematic design and plan development
Turn survey, title, and zoning into schematic design, then into a full permit set: site plan, floor plans, elevations, sections, structural, Title 24 energy, and full MEP. Whole-home scope means full system replacement.
Pre-submittal / how-to-submit review
Use the city's how-to-submit guide to confirm the package meets submission standards.
Permit application and Plan Review
File through Santa Monica Plan Review. Complete corrections responses shorten the total cycle.
Permit issuance and sub-permits
After plan check clears and fees are paid, the permit issues. The contractor pulls separate electrical, plumbing, and mechanical sub-permits.
Inspections during construction
Expect inspections at demolition, foundation, framing, rough MEP, insulation, drywall, and trade sign-offs. Whole-home remodels have more inspection touchpoints than additions.
Final inspection and Certificate of Occupancy
Once all trades pass final and Title 24 verification clears, the city issues final sign-off. For remodels that change habitable area, a Certificate of Occupancy closes the record.
What makes a Santa Monica whole-home remodel feel cohesive
The best remodels in the city feel familiar from the street and fully resolved inside.
Exterior restraint, interior reinvention
Keep the exterior close to its original composition and give the interior a full modern rebuild. That contrast, handled well, is what makes the result feel truly resolved.
Integrate systems with design
MEP routing, lighting strategy, and millwork should resolve together during design, not piecemeal during construction.
Jurisdiction resources: Santa Monica
For the full step-by-step sequence, start with the Santa Monica construction planning-process guide. Santa Monica is its own jurisdiction — use Plan Review and the Permit Services Center for any whole-home remodel inside city limits.
Santa Monica Plan Review
Overall plan review process, how-to-submit guide, and Permit Services Center.

Common mistakes Santa Monica owners make on whole-home remodels
Most painful stories come from missing the coastal question or skipping system upgrades.
Ignoring coastal status until Plan Review
Assuming by-right on a coastal parcel is how projects slip months. Check at the zoning stage.
Treating systems upgrades as optional
Skipping panel, plumbing, or HVAC replacement during a whole-home remodel creates bigger bills two to five years later.
Frequently asked questions
What Santa Monica owners ask most often before committing to a whole-home remodel.
Yes — a building permit plus electrical, plumbing, and mechanical sub-permits.
On coastal parcels, yes. Confirm coastal status early.
Usually no. Plan temporary housing from day one.
Several months is typical. Coastal or discretionary approvals add time.
Renovation alone typically doesn't; added square footage is reassessed at the added value.