🌞 California — State Guide
California Window Replacement Permit Requirements
California follows the Title 24 (2022) for energy compliance. Window replacement permit requirements are locally controlled — your city or county building department is the authoritative source for whether a permit is required for your specific project.
Like-for-Like Replacement Rules
In most California jurisdictions, replacing a window with the same size in the same rough opening does not require a building permit. This exemption is found in the state's adopted building code under provisions for ordinary repairs and maintenance. However, any of the following will typically require a permit:
- Changing the rough opening size (even slightly)
- Adding a window where none previously existed
- Any window in a basement sleeping room (egress requirements)
- Properties in locally designated historic districts
- Local amendments adopted by specific municipalities
Energy Code Requirements
California has adopted the Title 24 (2022). When a permit is required, replacement windows must meet these minimum performance standards:
| Climate Zone | Max U-Factor | Max SHGC |
|---|---|---|
| Zone 3–6 | See Title 24 | See Title 24 |
Use the Climate Zone Lookup tool to confirm your specific zone and requirements. Multi-zone states may have different requirements by county.
Egress Window Requirements
California adopts the IRC, which requires egress windows in all sleeping rooms including basement bedrooms. The IRC R310 minimums apply: 5.7 sq ft net clear opening area, 24" minimum height, 20" minimum width, 44" maximum sill height. Egress window projects always require a permit in all California jurisdictions.
Use the free Egress Calculator to check if your window meets requirements.
Historic District Considerations
California has numerous locally designated historic districts in its major cities and historic communities. If your property is in a locally designated historic district, you will need a Certificate of Appropriateness from the local preservation commission before obtaining a building permit for window replacement. See the complete historic district guide.
How to Verify Your Local Requirements
Contact your city or county building department directly. Most have online permit portals and will answer basic questions by phone or email. Ask: "Do I need a permit to replace windows with the same size in the same openings at [your address]?"
Frequently Asked Questions
Contractor licensing requirements vary by project type and jurisdiction. Most states require licensed contractors for permitted work. Owner-builder exemptions are available in most jurisdictions for homeowners doing their own work, but typically restrict resale of the property within one year. Check with your local building department for owner-builder rules in your jurisdiction.
For Zone 3–6, you need windows with a whole-window U-factor of See Title 24 or lower (lower numbers = better insulation). The SHGC requirement is See Title 24. Always verify the NFRC label on the window — the U-factor should be the whole-window rating, not the center-of-glass rating.
For simple residential window replacement, most California jurisdictions process permits within 1–5 business days. Larger cities may take longer. Egress permits with structural components may require 5–14 business days. Online submission is available in most jurisdictions and is faster than in-person. Historic district projects requiring review board approval take 4–8 weeks minimum.