How it works

Permitting,
without the guesswork.

A clear path you can follow, and a disciplined workflow we run behind it. You always know what's happening with your permit — and what's next.

Your path

Four steps from idea to issued permit.

01

Consultation

We learn your project, pull your parcel, and map the realistic permit path and timeline — before you commit to drawings.

02

We Prepare

We assemble the drawings, code documentation, and city forms your submittal needs, sized to the exact permit type.

03

Submit & Manage

We file with SDCI (or your jurisdiction), track the review, and answer every correction so the project keeps moving.

04

Approved

We carry it through issuance and into the inspection sequence, so your builder is never the one waiting on paperwork.

Behind the scenes

The six-step workflow we run for you.

1

Project review

We read your goals against what the code actually permits, and flag the decisions that will drive cost and time.

2

Feasibility check

Zoning, lot coverage, FAR, setbacks, environmental overlays — confirmed against your specific parcel.

3

Drawing preparation

Site, floor, elevation, and section drawings prepared to SDCI standards, or coordinated with your architect.

4

Package assembly

Forms, energy-code docs, and supporting reports assembled into a complete, review-ready submittal.

5

Submittal

Filed online, intake-screened, and logged — with you kept in the loop on the review clock.

6

Correction management

We answer every reviewer comment and resubmit until the permit is issued. Revisions are part of the job, not an upcharge.

How we charge for it.

Flat-fee, not hourly

One number up front for the service scope — no meter running during city review.

Revisions until approved

Correction cycles are part of the engagement, never a surprise upcharge.

City fees at cost

Jurisdiction permit fees are passed through transparently — never marked up.

Start with a
permit-path consultation.

We'll pull your parcel, map the steps, and give you a realistic timeline — before any drawings begin.