Site Plan for Permit in Your City
Permit-ready site plans for fences, pools, decks, sheds, ADUs, garages, and commercial projects — drawn to what your city reviewer expects.
What Is a Site Plan and Why Do You Need One for a Permit?
A site plan is a scaled property drawing that shows the existing lot layout and the proposed work you want approved. Many building departments ask for a site plan before they can review a fence permit, pool permit, deck permit, shed permit, ADU permit, garage permit, building permit, or commercial improvement.
In your city, the reviewer needs to understand where the project sits on the property, how far it is from lot lines, whether it affects easements or access areas, and whether the application includes enough information to approve or continue review. A weak sketch, missing setback label, unclear proposed work area, or incomplete title block can slow down the permit process.
Permit For Site Plan prepares permit-ready site plans, plot plans, and permit drawings for homeowners, residential contractors, builders, remodelers, pool companies, fence installers, deck builders, ADU professionals, and commercial property teams. Our goal is simple: make the drawing clear enough that your permit office can review the project without unnecessary back-and-forth.
What Does a Site Plan Need to Include for a Building Permit Site Plan?
A strong permit site plan should answer the questions a reviewer is likely to ask. What is already on the property? What are you adding or changing? How close is it to property lines? Does it affect easements, drainage, utilities, access, parking, or other site restrictions?
Permit Site Plans We Prepare in Your City
Every permit type has different drawing needs. A fence permit site plan is not the same as a pool permit site plan, and an ADU permit usually needs more context than a simple shed permit. We prepare site plans based on the project type so the drawing matches the review purpose.
Site Plan Service for Residential Contractors and Builders
Contractors often need fast permit drawings without slowing down the job schedule. If you build fences, pools, decks, sheds, garages, ADUs, additions, or outdoor improvements, outsourcing permit drawings can save time and keep your team focused on installation and client communication.
We support residential contractors who need repeatable, fast permit drawings for contractors. Send the property address, scope of work, dimensions, and any city checklist. We can prepare a clean plan for the homeowner or contractor to submit with the application.
Site Plan Cost in Your City
Fixed prices based on project type. Every tier includes a permit-ready PDF and free revisions if the city sends comments.
- Permit-ready PDF
- Property lines & setbacks
- 48-hour delivery
- 1 free revision round
- Multi-structure layout
- Rush 24-hr delivery
- Everything in Basic
- Multi-structure layout
- Equipment & access notes
- Unlimited free revisions
- 24–48 hr delivery
- Commercial-grade detail
- Everything in Standard
- Commercial-grade detail
- Parking, ADA & circulation
- Contractor collaboration
- Priority support
- 12-hr rush delivery
- Everything in Professional
- 12-hour rush delivery
- Same-day revision turnaround
- Direct drafter contact
- Weekend availability
- Resubmission priority
Not sure which tier fits? Use the Siteplan Cost Calculator, review Plans and Pricing, or send your project details for a fixed quote — free, no payment required.
Permit-ready or we revise it free
If your building department sends comments on our drawing, forward them to us. We revise until it passes review — at no extra cost, no matter how many rounds it takes.
Common Permit Rejection Reasons and How to Fix Them
Many building permits get rejected or marked incomplete because the site plan does not answer basic review questions. These problems are usually fixable once the reviewer's comments are clear. If your permit was already denied, our permit correction and plan revision service can fix the drawing, or try the free Permit Rejection Fix Tool.
Site Plan vs Plot Plan: What Is the Difference?
Many property owners ask whether they need a site plan or a plot plan for a permit. In everyday permit language, the terms are often used in similar ways. Both usually show the property layout and proposed work. The exact name depends on the city, county, permit portal, or checklist.
| Document | What It Shows | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Site Plan | Property layout, existing structures, proposed work, setbacks, access, easements, and permit notes. | Fence, pool, deck, shed, garage, ADU, building, and commercial permits. |
| Plot Plan | A simplified property drawing showing lot layout and proposed improvement location. | Basic residential permit applications and zoning review. |
| Survey | Legal boundary information prepared by a licensed surveyor. | Boundary confirmation, legal disputes, flood zones, or offices that specifically require a survey. |
| Permit Drawing Package | Site plan plus other required drawings such as floor plans, elevations, or details. | ADUs, additions, commercial work, garage conversions, and more complex permit submissions. |
How to Get a Site Plan Approved Faster
Getting a permit approved faster starts with a cleaner first submission. Before ordering, gather the property address, permit type, approximate project size, proposed location, photos, sketches, surveys, contractor layouts, product sheets, and any written building department comments.
Why Property Owners and Contractors Trust Permit For Site Plan
What Customers Say About Our Site Plans
"My shed permit was rejected twice before I found these guys. Sent them the city's correction letter and the revised plan passed review the first time. Worth every dollar."
"We're a fence company doing 15–20 permits a month. Outsourcing the drawings saved my office manager hours per job. Fast, consistent, and the permit offices accept them."
"Ordered a pool site plan on Monday morning, had the PDF Tuesday. City approved with zero comments. The setback labels and barrier notes were exactly what the reviewer wanted."
Site Plan for Permit FAQs
What is a site plan and why do I need one for a permit?
A site plan is a drawing that shows the property layout, existing structures, proposed work, setbacks, access, easements, and key permit notes. Many permit offices need it to confirm where the project will be built and whether it fits site rules.
What does a site plan need to include for a building permit?
Most site plans include property lines, existing structures, proposed improvement, setback distances, driveway or access areas, utilities, easements, north arrow, scale, address, parcel ID, and project notes.
How can I avoid permit delays?
Submit a complete plan from the start. Include the correct project footprint, dimensions, setbacks, scale, north arrow, existing structures, easements, and any city-specific checklist items. If you already received comments, address every item clearly before resubmitting.
Why do building permits get rejected?
Common permit rejection reasons include missing setbacks, unclear proposed work, no scale, missing north arrow, incomplete title block, missing easement information, or a drawing that does not match the application details.
Can contractors outsource permit drawings?
Yes. Contractors often outsource site plan drawings to save time, reduce administrative work, and keep projects moving. We support contractors who need fast permit drawings for recurring residential and light commercial projects.
Do I need a site plan or a plot plan for my permit?
Many cities use the terms site plan and plot plan in similar ways. Both show the property layout and proposed work. The best term depends on the permit checklist, but we can help prepare the drawing in the format your city expects.
What drawings do I need for a deck, pool, shed, ADU, or fence permit?
Many projects need a site plan. Deck permits may also need framing details. Pool permits may require pool layout, equipment location, safety barrier notes, and setbacks. ADUs often need site plans plus floor plans, elevations, and utility or parking details.
Do you serve Your City?
Yes. Permit For Site Plan serves cities and counties across all 50 states. We can prepare permit-ready site plans for both major metro areas and smaller local jurisdictions.
Need a Site Plan in Your City?
Prefer to talk? Call +1 (385) 885-5362 or use the cost calculator