Start Here
Most common situations — find yours and jump straight to the answer.
The Permit Process, Step by Step
What to bring, who to call, what inspectors look for, and how long it takes.
→When You Don't Need a Permit
Like-for-like replacement rules explained — and the exceptions that catch homeowners off guard.
→Egress Window Requirements
Basement bedroom windows have federal minimum dimensions. Find out if yours comply.
→Adding a Window to an Existing Wall
This always requires a permit. Here's what the structural review involves.
→Energy Code & U-Factor Requirements
Your climate zone determines the minimum efficiency your new windows must meet.
→Historic District Rules
Different process, different approval board. What to expect if your home is in a historic district.
→Free Tool
Egress Window Compliance Calculator
Enter your rough opening dimensions. The calculator checks your window against IRC Section R310 requirements for egress compliance — the federal baseline used in all 50 states.
Open Calculator →IRC R310 Minimums at a Glance:
| Net clear opening area | 5.7 sq ft (20.4 sq ft grade floor) |
| Minimum clear height | 24 inches |
| Minimum clear width | 20 inches |
| Maximum sill height | 44 inches from floor |
Window Permit Requirements by State
Permitting is locally controlled. Select your state for specific rules, common exemptions, and links to local building departments.
Egress Windows
Energy Codes
Special Cases
Frequently Asked Questions
Not always. Most jurisdictions allow like-for-like window replacement — swapping an old window for a new one of the same size in the same rough opening — without a permit. The logic is that you're not changing the structure. However, exceptions apply if you're in a historic district, if your building code requires energy compliance documentation, or if your municipality has adopted stricter local rules. If you're changing the window size, moving it, or adding a new window where none existed, a permit is almost always required.
The consequences vary by municipality but are genuinely serious. You may be required to remove and redo the work after obtaining a retroactive permit. Fines range from $100 to several thousand dollars depending on the jurisdiction and how long the work has been unpermitted. More significantly, unpermitted work appears as a liability during home sale — a buyer's inspector or their lender may flag it, requiring you to either remediate or disclose and accept a price reduction. Some homeowner insurance policies also limit coverage for damage related to unpermitted structural work.
An egress window is any window in a sleeping room that serves as an emergency escape and rescue opening. The IRC (International Residential Code) establishes minimum dimensions: 5.7 square feet of net clear opening, at least 24 inches tall, at least 20 inches wide, and a maximum sill height of 44 inches from the floor. Because egress windows directly affect fire safety and rescue access, they always require a permit and inspection — even in jurisdictions that allow other window replacements without permits. The inspector verifies the opening meets code before the installation is approved.
Verify independently before proceeding. Contractors sometimes advise against permits to avoid the time cost and inspection overhead — but the legal and financial consequences fall on you as the homeowner, not the contractor. Call your local building department directly (a 5-minute call) or check their website. In most cases, basic like-for-like replacement genuinely doesn't require a permit, and your contractor is correct. But if work involves any structural change, egress, or energy code documentation, confirm before proceeding.
For standard residential window permits, most jurisdictions issue them over the counter or within 1–3 business days. Some larger cities (Los Angeles, Chicago, New York) have longer queues for in-person submissions, but many now offer online permit applications that can be approved in 24–48 hours for simple window work. Egress window permits that require structural review may take 5–10 business days. Historic district projects require review board approval, which typically meets monthly — plan for 4–8 weeks minimum.