Fence Permit
Fence Permit Rules Before You Build
Know when fence height, corner visibility, pools, shared property lines, and historic districts create permit requirements.
Permit likelihood
Often required for tall fences, front-yard fences, corner lots, pool barriers, retaining-wall combinations, and historic districts.
Typical permit cost
$20-$150 for many residential fences; higher when surveys, variance hearings, or historic review are needed.
Planning timeline
One day to four weeks. Variances and historic districts can add public meeting time.
Common permit triggers
- Fence over four feet in front yards or six feet in rear yards
- Corner lot sight-triangle restrictions
- Pool enclosure rules
- Fence in an easement or historic district
Documents to gather before applying
- Property survey or plot plan
- Fence height and material
- Gate swing and latch details for pools
- Neighbor agreement when required locally
Inspection sequence to plan around
- Zoning placement review
- Post depth check when required
- Pool barrier inspection
- Final height and gate check
Mistakes that create delays
- Building on the assumed property line
- Blocking utility easements
- Using privacy fence in a restricted front yard
- Forgetting pool barrier self-closing gate rules
State and city variation
State codes may shape pool-barrier standards, but city zoning usually controls fence height and placement.
Contractor questions
- Who is responsible for pulling the permit?
- Will the permit list the full scope of work?
- Which inspections must happen before work is covered?
- Are permit fees, corrections, and reinspection fees included in the quote?
- Will I receive copies of approvals and final inspection records?