Planning a construction project in Santa Monica, through Plan Review and Permit Services
Santa Monica has its own Plan Review, its own Permit Services Center, and its own standards for setbacks, coverage, and coastal conditions. A construction project here benefits from treating the city's process as the primary framework from day one. This guide walks through the end-to-end sequence — from first survey to final Certificate of Occupancy — and where right-of-way, utility, coastal, and waste rules fit in.
How construction planning in Santa Monica actually works
Santa Monica is dense, tightly regulated, and partly within the Coastal Zone. Plan Review handles the building permit path. The Permit Services Center is the owner-facing front door. Public Works controls the right-of-way and streetscape. Construction waste moves through a city-coordinated hauler program. Every one of those conversations has to happen in the right order.
Multiple workstreams run in parallel
The building permit is one workstream. Coastal review (when it applies), right-of-way permits, and waste-hauler coordination are separate. Sequence them together rather than one at a time.
Coastal Zone status is the first big question
Some Santa Monica parcels sit inside the Coastal Zone. Confirming coastal status early keeps that review layer inside the project schedule rather than outside of it.

Step-by-step: the full Santa Monica planning and construction sequence
The order below is what the city's how-to-submit guide implicitly expects. Each step maps to a specific department or portal.
Define scope and goals
Get the scope honest before design or records. Is this an addition, ADU, remodel, or new build? Budget and review layers all depend on it.
Commission a licensed land survey
A current boundary and topographic survey from a California-licensed surveyor is the baseline document. Verify the surveyor through the California BPELSG license lookup.
Pull title and property records
Preliminary title reports reveal easements, CC&Rs, and legacy conditions. Shared driveways and rear utility easements are common on Santa Monica lots.
Zoning, coastal, and parcel lookup via the city
Confirm zone, setbacks, coastal status, and overlays with Santa Monica Plan Review. Coastal status directly affects the review path.
Pull prior permit history
Review permit history through the Permit Services Center. Unpermitted legacy structures must be resolved before a new permit issues.
Schematic design and plan development
Turn survey, title, and zoning inputs into a schematic, then into a full permit drawing set: site plan, floor plans, elevations, structural, Title 24 energy, and MEP.
Planning approvals / how-to-submit review
Use the city's how-to-submit guide to confirm the package meets submission requirements. For coastal parcels or discretionary scope, coordinate the additional approvals in this phase.
Permit application and Plan Review submission
File through Santa Monica Plan Review. Address corrections completely — half-answers add the most time to the cycle.
Utility coordination
Water, sewer, power, and gas service changes have their own lead times. Open the utility conversations once the MEP strategy is locked, not at framing.
Permit issuance and sub-permits
Once Plan Review clears and fees are paid, the building permit issues. The contractor pulls separate electrical, plumbing, and mechanical sub-permits.
Right-of-way permits (Public Works)
Dumpsters, pods, scaffolding, fencing, and sidewalk or curb work require a separate permit from Santa Monica Public Works. Apply in advance.
Construction waste and C&D diversion
Santa Monica requires Construction and Demolition debris to move through the city's hauler program with documented recycling and diversion. Arrange the hauler before demolition begins and keep the receipts for closeout.
Construction hours, neighbor notice, and site logistics
The city's noise ordinance restricts construction hours. Written neighbor notice before demolition and framing reduces complaints and keeps inspectors informed.
Inspections during construction
Expect inspections for foundation, framing, rough MEP, insulation, drywall, and trade sign-offs. Santa Monica inspectors schedule independently; a dedicated project-side coordinator keeps the calendar tight.
Final inspection and Certificate of Occupancy
Once all trades pass final and Title 24 verification clears, Santa Monica issues final sign-off. For projects that change habitable area, a Certificate of Occupancy closes the record for rental and resale.
Construction logistics owners often underestimate in Santa Monica
These items drive most avoidable delays on Santa Monica projects. Build them into the plan from the beginning.
Waste disposal & C&D diversion
C&D debris must leave through the city's hauler program with documented diversion. Keep the receipts in the project file.
Dumpster & right-of-way permits
Dumpsters, pods, scaffolding, and fencing on the public right-of-way need a Public Works permit. Apply ahead of the need.
Coastal, hours, and neighbors
Coastal status adds a review layer on qualifying parcels. The noise ordinance restricts construction hours. Written neighbor notice before loud phases helps.
Official resources: Santa Monica
The authoritative starting points for each phase of a Santa Monica construction project.
Plan Review & Permit Services
The overall plan review path, how-to-submit guide, and Permit Services Center.
Service guides for Santa Monica projects
The service-specific guides below apply this same planning process to particular project types in Santa Monica. Use this page for the end-to-end process; use the links below for project-specific detail.
ADU & JADU planning — Santa Monica
ADU and JADU planning with Santa Monica Plan Review, coastal considerations, and the Permit Services Center.
Home addition planning — Santa Monica
Home addition planning with Santa Monica Plan Review, coastal review, and the Permit Services Center.
Whole-home remodel planning — Santa Monica
Whole-home remodel planning with full systems replacement, coastal considerations, and Plan Review.

Common mistakes when starting a Santa Monica construction project
The recurring patterns that cost time. Each is avoidable with better planning.
Filing to the wrong jurisdiction
Santa Monica is not LA. Filing to ePlanLA or using LADBS guidance for a Santa Monica project causes real rework. Plan Review is the correct route from day one.
Missing the coastal question
Assuming a by-right path on a parcel near the coast without confirming coastal zone status is how timelines slip. Check at the zoning stage, not during Plan Review.
Frequently asked questions
The questions Santa Monica owners ask most often when first planning a project.
Through Santa Monica Plan Review at the Permit Services Center. The city’s how-to-submit guide details the submission requirements.
On some parcels, yes. Confirm coastal status during the early zoning lookup.
Yes — Public Works issues right-of-way permits for anything on the street or sidewalk.
Through the city’s hauler program with documented C&D diversion. Keep the receipts.
Under the noise ordinance — typically weekday daytime with tighter limits on weekends and holidays.