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LADBS Pool Permit Cost in Beverly Hills (2026)
Last Updated: · Reviewed by Netanel Presman, CSLB #1105249
A pool permit in Beverly Hills doesn't have one number — it has a baseline ($2,200–$6,800 for LADBS fees alone on a flat lot) plus the overlays Beverly Hills specifically triggers. Most contractors quote one and absorb the other as a change order. This page shows you the full picture — every line item, every waiver, every overlay — so you know what your real pool permit costs before you sign.
CSLB License #1105249 ·
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Permits pulled in our name — included in build contracts ·
18+ projects in Beverly Hills & nearby
Quick Answer — TL;DR
Quick Answer
Pool permit in Beverly Hills runs $2,530–$9,180 all-in for plan check + fees (Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) baseline $2,200–$6,800 plus Beverly Hills-specific overlay costs). Plan on 8–22 weeks for permit issuance, 18–34 weeks permit-to-final inspection. NPLD pulls the permit in our contractor name (CSLB #1105249) at no additional fee for build clients.
The Beverly Hills Pool-Permit Trap Most Contractors Don't Mention
Pool permits in Beverly Hills look uniform until the Baseline Hillside Ordinance surfaces in plan check. Most pool contractors quote $65K-$120K shell-only without factoring overlay costs — and then your job stalls 6-10 weeks while geotech, fire-defensible-space, or Coastal review catches up. NPLD prices the full permit path (overlays included) BEFORE you sign the contract.
Pool Permit Cost Breakdown — Beverly Hills, 2026
Every fee, every charging authority, every waiver option. Highlighted rows are Beverly Hills-specific overlays — most contractors leave these out of the original quote.
Permit cost breakdown for pool in Beverly Hills, 2026
Permit Component
Typical Fee
Who Charges It
Waiver Eligibility
Building Permit Fee (Pool/Spa)
$880 – $2,400
LADBS
No
Plan Check Fee
$680 – $1,800
LADBS
No
Electrical Permit
$280 – $680
LADBS
No
Plumbing Permit
$220 – $580
LADBS
No
Mechanical Permit (heater)
$120 – $320
LADBS
No
Structural Engineering (pool shell + retaining)
$1,400 – $3,800
Independent structural engineer
No
LADWP Service Upgrade (if 100A→200A needed)
$2,500 – $8,500
LADWP
Sometimes — existing 200A panel
Issuance / Permit Service Fee
$95 – $180
LADBS
No
Hillside Ordinance Review (BHO)(overlay)
$680 – $1,400 plan-check addition
LADBS (or local jurisdiction)
No — required on slope-affected parcels
Geotech / Soils Report(overlay)
$3,500 – $9,500 (independent)
Licensed geotechnical engineer
Sometimes — if recent prior report on file
Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) Architectural Review(overlay)
$1,200 – $4,800 + 4–8 weeks review
Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD)
Sometimes — minor-improvement exemptions
Fees current 2026. Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) fee schedules update annually — NPLD verifies against the live schedule on every quote.
Beverly Hills-Specific Regulatory Overlays
Beverly Hills is its own city — permits go through Beverly Hills Community Development (BHCD), NOT LADBS. Every exterior-impacting project requires Architectural Commission Review (4-8 weeks added) regardless of size — this is the slowest permit path on this list. Hillside neighborhoods (Trousdale, Coldwater Canyon) add slope-based FAR and a geotech soils report. The flat parcels south of Sunset (BH Flats) skip hillside review but still face Architectural Commission. Projects on parcels with single-family historic-character buildings may trigger Designation Review.
Baseline Hillside Ordinance
Slope-based FAR caps, haul-route plan, mandatory grading review. Driven by LADBS P/BC 2020-077 (or local equivalent).
Geotech Soils Report Likely
Hillside lots and most additions require a licensed geotech soils report ($3,500–$9,500). Sometimes a recent prior report (within 5 years) on the same parcel is acceptable.
Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) Architectural Review
Permits flow through Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) — NOT LADBS. Architectural Review is required on most exterior-impacting work, adding 4–8 weeks regardless of project size.
The Beverly Hills Pool Permit Process — 7 Steps
Step 1 — Scoping + FeasibilityNPLD walks your pool scope, photographs existing conditions, pulls your parcel's zoning + overlay status (R1 vs RD, BHO, VHFHSZ, HPOZ, Coastal), and confirms what permit(s) you'll need. Free, on-site, no obligation. Beverly Hills-specific: the Baseline Hillside Ordinance.
Step 2 — Plan PreparationOur in-house design team (or your existing architect) produces the LADBS-format plan set: floor plan, electrical, plumbing, T-24 energy compliance, structural calcs where required. Geotech soils report engaged on parcels where likely.
Step 3 — Filing with Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD)NPLD files the application — plans, energy compliance, applicant info, owner authorization — with Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD).
Step 4 — Plan Check + CorrectionsPlan check round 1 takes 6–9 weeks. NPLD's first-pass acceptance rate is 73% — when corrections do come back, we turn them around within 5 business days (industry average is 3-4 weeks). Architectural Review Board concurrent review adds 4-8 weeks.
Step 5 — Permit Issuance + Fee PaymentOnce all corrections are signed off, Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) issues the permit. NPLD pays the fees on your behalf out of the contract deposit — you don't make a separate trip to the building counter. Permit card goes on the job site for inspectors.
Step 6 — InspectionsNPLD schedules each inspection (foundation, framing, electrical rough, plumbing rough, mechanical rough, insulation, drywall nailing, final). Inspectors are typically next-day or 2-day schedule. We're on-site for every inspection — you don't have to take time off work.
Step 7 — Final Sign-Off + Certificate of Occupancy (if applicable)After final inspection passes, Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) issues a final sign-off (or Certificate of Occupancy for ADU/room addition work that adds habitable sq ft). NPLD packages your final permit records, warranty packet, and final-condition photos before walk-away.
Most Common Plan-Check Rejections on Pool Projects in Beverly Hills
These are the corrections NPLD sees most often when reviewing competitors' plans before takeover. Every one of them adds 2–6 weeks to your timeline.
Setbacks — pool wall must be 5 ft from property line, 10 ft from septic, 25 ft from leach field
Pool barrier (fence) not specified or under 5 ft height (CBC G2 / CRC AG)
Pool drain anti-entrapment cover not called out (VGB-compliant)
Equipment pad location not shown OR within required setback from neighbor
Bonding grid / equipotential bonding for pool / spa shell not detailed (CEC 680.26)
Drainage from pool deck to street / sewer not engineered (>750 sq ft impervious)
Slope-based FAR calculation not shown on plan — required under the Baseline Hillside Ordinance (or local equivalent) for any parcel with >15% average natural slope.
Architectural Review Board approval not attached — Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) requires ARB sign-off on exterior-impacting projects before final permit issuance.
How NPLD Handles Your Beverly Hills Pool Permit
We pull every permit in our contractor name (CSLB License #1105249) at no additional fee for
build clients. That means: NPLD files the application, owns plan-check corrections, pays the fees out of
your contract deposit, schedules every inspection, meets the inspector on site, and delivers the final
permit packet at project closeout.
Why this matters in Beverly Hills: Beverly Hills is its own city — permits go through Beverly Hills Community Development (BHCD), NOT LADBS. Every exterior-impacting project requires Architectural Commission Review (4-8 weeks added) regardless of size — this is the slowest permit path on this list. Hillside neighborhoods (Trousdale, Coldwater Canyon) add slope-based FAR and a geotech soils report. The flat parcels south of Sunset (BH Flats) skip hillside review but still face Architectural Commission. Projects on parcels with single-family historic-character buildings may trigger Designation Review.
✓ 73% first-or-second-correction-pass rate — vs LA County average of 4–6 correction rounds
✓ Fixed-price permit cost — overlay fees ARE in your proposal, not surprise change orders
✓ Single point of contact — Netanel Presman (owner, GC) — direct line throughout permit + build
✓ 18+ projects shipped in Beverly Hills and immediate neighbors — we know the local inspectors and the local plan checkers
✓ 12-month workmanship warranty + lifetime warranty on water-related labor
Frequently Asked Questions — Beverly Hills Pool Permits
How much does a pool permit cost in Beverly Hills?
A pool permit in Beverly Hills runs $2,530–$9,180 all-in for plan check + fees. The base Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) cost is $2,200–$6,800; Beverly Hills-specific overlays (the Baseline Hillside Ordinance) add the rest. NPLD itemizes every line in the fixed-price proposal before you sign.
How long does a pool permit take in Beverly Hills?
Permit issuance in Beverly Hills takes 8–22 weeks (plan check + corrections + issuance). Permit-to-final inspection runs 18–34 weeks total. The variance depends on overlay reviews and correction rounds. NPLD's 73% first-or-second-pass acceptance rate keeps most jobs on the early end of the range.
Does NPLD pull the permit, or do I?
NPLD pulls the permit in our contractor name (CSLB #1105249) at no additional fee for build clients. We file with Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD), respond to plan-check corrections, pay the fees out of your contract deposit, and schedule every inspection. You don't make a single trip to the building counter.
What's the pool barrier requirement in LA?
California Building Code G2 (and CRC Appendix G) require a 5-foot minimum perimeter barrier with self-closing/self-latching gates. Existing fence-as-barrier may comply if it meets the height + opening-size requirements. NPLD calls out the barrier detail on every pool permit drawing — and we verify your existing fence on the consultation if you're hoping to skip new fencing.
Does Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) have different permit fees than LADBS?
Yes — Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD) sets its own fee schedule, which is typically 15–35% higher than LADBS plus Architectural Review fees of $1,200–$4,800. The schedule updates annually; NPLD verifies the live fee on every proposal.
Is a geotech soils report always required in Beverly Hills?
For new additions and ADUs on hillside parcels, yes — typically $3,500–$9,500. Sometimes a recent prior report (within 5 years) on the same parcel is acceptable. Pure interior remodels on existing foundations usually skip the geotech. NPLD checks the parcel history first.
Tell us about your Beverly Hills pool project. We'll book a free in-home consultation within 5 business days, deliver a fixed-price proposal within 48 hours of the visit (including every Beverly Hills-specific overlay fee — no surprises), and you decide if NP Line Design is the right fit. CSLB License #1105249, A+ BBB accredited.
“LADBS permit fees scale with construction valuation. A typical $500K renovation pays $8K-$15K in combined building, electrical, mechanical, plumbing, and plan-check fees. Add school district fees ($3K-$8K per added bedroom), park fees, transportation impact fees, and arts development fees in some districts. The fee schedule is published — anyone surprised by permit cost wasn't told the right number at the start.”
Pro Tip
Beverly Hills pool permits do NOT route through LADBS — they go through Beverly Hills Community Development Department (BHCD), with mandatory Architectural Review for any visible exterior work and stricter Title 24 enforcement than LA proper. Real all-in permit cost: $5,500-$14,000 for typical pool, plus $1,200-$3,500 for Architectural Review submittals (renderings + materials board). Most LA contractors bid Beverly Hills as if it's LADBS — and lose money on the back-end. Confirm BHCD vs LADBS jurisdiction at contract. We've shipped 18+ Beverly Hills projects through BHCD's Architectural Review process.