California law sets a 60-day limit on LADBS ADU plan check — but that clock has a very specific start date, and at least five factors outside the city’s 60-day obligation can push your timeline well past it.
CSLB License #1074505
Itamar Ben Asulin on every submission
Valley · Westside · Eastside
That 60-day clock only begins after LADBS officially confirms your application is complete. Not the day you submit. Not the day your architect emails the drawings. The day LADBS says everything they need is actually there.
California Government Code Section 65852.2 requires local agencies to act on a complete ADU permit application within 60 days. That distinction (complete-not-submitted) changes the entire timeline for most LA homeowners. The City of LA processes thousands of ADU applications each year — queue pressure that other California cities simply don’t face. To avoid losing your queue position before the clock even starts, our ADU permit services ensure your package meets LADBS’s completeness standard on the first submission.
LADBS does not operate alone. LADWP (electrical and water connection), LA Fire Department (fire zone review), and SoCalGas (gas service) all run on their own schedules — independent of the 60-day obligation. For the layered structure, see what the LADBS permit process actually looks like. Track active filings through the LADBS official permit portal or review the California ADU guidelines from the state Office of Planning and Research for the regulatory framework behind the 60-day standard.
At least five separate variables can extend your ADU permit timeline — most of them independent of LADBS. Each one operates on its own terms and adds its own weeks to the total.
LADBS returns the application without review when required documents are missing — soils report, title block, energy compliance sheet. The 60-day clock does NOT begin until a complete resubmission is accepted. Some projects cycle this more than once.
LADBS issues correction notices on most ADU projects. The response window has a deadline. Letting it lapse puts the application back in the general queue — adding weeks before the next review cycle picks it up. Speed and completeness control this one.
Properties in Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones route to LA Fire Department for separate review before LADBS finalizes plan check. Adds time outside the 60-day obligation. Triggers fire-hardened material requirements that must be in the drawings.
LADWP (electrical and water) operates entirely independently from LADBS. Runs parallel to construction and can add weeks AFTER the building permit issues. A homeowner can have a fully permitted, built ADU sitting uninhabited waiting on the connection appointment.
New gas service requires a separate SoCalGas application and installation appointment — outside the LADBS permit timeline entirely. Move-in delays after final inspection are frequently caused by a SoCalGas appointment that wasn’t scheduled far enough ahead.
Most ADU permit delays in LA fall into one of three recognizable patterns — each one outside what state law promises and each one preventable with the right preparation.
Homeowner submitted an ADU application with complete structural drawings. Application passed initial completeness review. Then it routed to Fire Department because the property’s VHFHSZ status hadn’t been confirmed before filing. Fire Department review added 6 weeks. Revised drawings to meet fire-hardening requirements added 2 correction rounds.
Homeowner completed construction on a permitted backyard ADU. Final inspection passed. Certificate of occupancy issued. Then they called LADWP to schedule the electrical connection and learned the next available appointment was 8 weeks out. They had already promised a prospective tenant the unit would be ready in 2 weeks.
Homeowner filed an ADU application missing required energy compliance documentation. LADBS returned the application as incomplete. The homeowner corrected and resubmitted. During the second completeness review, LADBS identified a separate missing item that hadn’t surfaced in the first return — because the application never reached substantive review.
Most permit delays in LA are avoidable — and almost all of them trace back to the same two preparation gaps.
I’ve been managing ADU permit applications across LA County since 2015. I’m Itamar Ben Asulin, owner of IBA Builders, and I’ve worked through the same pattern repeatedly on projects that came to us after a first attempt encountered delays.
The two gaps I see most: filing before the application package is genuinely complete, and not confirming fire zone status before the drawings are done. The first gap assumes LADBS won’t catch a missing document. They will. And when they do, you lose your queue position and start over. IBA files complete packages — every required sheet, every required calculation, every required title block, confirmed against LADBS’s current submittal checklist before anything goes in.
The second gap assumes fire zone status is a detail that surfaces during review. It doesn’t — it surfaces as a return notice, weeks after you thought you were in the queue. We check every property’s VHFHSZ designation before drawings begin. If a property is in a fire zone, the drawings reflect that from the first submission. For hillside and canyon properties specifically, hillside lot permit realities in LA covers the additional layers that come with fire zone geography in more detail. Pulling zoning before drawings (and confirming through LA zoning rules that affect your ADU eligibility) is the same principle applied earlier in the process.
Neither of these things is complicated. They just require knowing what the checklist actually says and checking it before filing.
If your ADU project is already in the middle of a correction cycle, the right move is getting someone familiar with LADBS’s current review standards to handle the response. Correction notices have specific response requirements. An incomplete or incorrectly formatted correction response can extend the review cycle further.
If you haven’t filed yet, the time to act is before submission. An ADU plan check timeline in LA is largely determined by the quality of the initial package. A complete, fire-zone-appropriate, LADBS-formatted submittal moves through plan check faster than one requiring multiple correction rounds. IBA Builders holds CSLB License #1074505 — the CSLB-licensed contractor managing LA County ADU permits — and we prepare and manage ADU permit submissions across LA County from initial submittal through final inspection and certificate of occupancy.
LADBS maintains a current ADU submittal checklist that lists every required document, drawing, calculation, and title block element. A complete application has every item on that checklist present and correctly formatted — site plan, floor plan, elevations, structural drawings with calculations, Title 24 energy compliance report, soils report (if required for the lot), and any items specific to the property (fire zone routing forms, historic overlay documentation, etc.). Missing any one — even a single required title block field — triggers an incompleteness return. The package never enters substantive review.
Because they’re separate agencies with separate scheduling authority. LADBS reviews and issues the building permit. LADWP handles electrical and water connections. SoCalGas handles gas service. None of them are bound by the city’s 60-day plan check obligation, and none of them control each other’s queues. The 60-day rule is a state-mandated review window for LADBS — it’s never been a guarantee for the full project timeline from filing to occupancy.
The LA Fire Department maintains public VHFHSZ maps searchable by address. CAL FIRE also publishes statewide VHFHSZ maps. Pulling the designation takes minutes — and if the property is in a fire zone, the drawings need fire-hardened specifications (exterior materials, vents, decking, eaves) from the first submission. The cost of checking is nothing. The cost of not checking is a Fire Department return weeks into review.
Your application gets placed back in the general review queue — adding weeks before the next reviewer picks up the file. This isn’t a small reset. Depending on current LADBS volume, a lapsed response can cost 2–3 weeks at minimum, sometimes longer. Correction notices have specific deadlines because LADBS is managing thousands of files at any time. Treating that deadline as flexible is one of the most common avoidable delays we see.
Not in any reliable way from the homeowner side. LADWP’s schedule is a function of crew availability and connection backlog in your service area. What you CAN do is initiate the LADWP application as soon as the building permit issues — not weeks later when construction is wrapping. The 4–12 week LADWP window runs parallel to your construction, which means if you start it on day one of the permit, the connection often lines up with construction completion. If you start it after final inspection, you wait the full queue length with the unit complete and empty.
The fastest way through the LADBS ADU permit process is a package that doesn’t come back. IBA prepares applications to LADBS’s complete-submission standard — every required document, fire zone status confirmed, correction response protocols in place before filing. Tell us about your property and where you are in the process. We’ll tell you exactly what your project needs to move forward.