New North Carolina Law Clarifies When Building Permits Are NOT Required: Less Is More?


A new law took effect in North Carolina on October 1, 2016, and it affects the need for building permits. Session Law 2016-113, entitled An Act to Provide Further Relief to the Agricultural Community, clarifies in Section 13 that a building permit is not required for certain work costing less than $15,000 provided that the work is performed in accordance with the current edition of the North Carolina State Building Code.

The new law - which amends N.C.G.S. 143-138, N.C.G.S. 160A-417 and N.C.G.S. 153A-357 - provides that no permit is required to conduct any construction, installation, repair, replacement, or alteration activities costing $15,000 or less in residential and farm structures if the work is performed in accordance with the current edition of the North Carolina State Building Code and involves:

The law also provides that no permit "from any State agency" is required for:

This new law also provides that no permit is required, either under the State Building Code or any local variant, for routine maintenance of fuel dispensing pumps and other dispensing devices.

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National Law Review, Volume VI, Number 280