How Much Does City Permits Cost in 2026?
Below Market Range
$745 - $1800
Minor Interior Alterations / Simple Basements
Market Range
$1800 - $5300
Standard Additions / Legal Secondary Suites
Above Market Range
$5300 - $15000+
Major Additions / Custom Homes
Disclaimer: The lowest market rates do not always guarantee satisfactory results. Conversely, premium pricing should always be justified by exceptional detail, advanced expertise, or comprehensive service guarantees.
Price Breakdown Analysis
Understanding Permit Costs: Types, City Fees, and Complexity
When planning a renovation in Ontario, it is important to understand that a “building permit” is rarely just a single document. The final cost of getting your project approved depends on the types of permits required, the city you live in, the complexity of the design, and who is managing the application.
1. There Are Different Types of Permits
Depending on your scope of work, the Ontario Building Code (OBC) may require multiple approvals for a single renovation:
- Building Permit: Covers general construction, framing, insulation, and structural changes.
- Plumbing Permit: Required anytime you add, move, or alter sinks, toilets, or showers.
- HVAC Permit: Needed for altering ductwork or installing new heating/cooling systems.
- Electrical Permit (ESA): Managed separately through the Electrical Safety Authority, not the local municipality.
2. Minimum Municipal Fees (2026 GTA Rates)
Every municipality charges a non-refundable “base fee” just to open your file and begin the review process. This fee is paid directly to the city and is separate from your designer’s fee. As of 2026, minimum starting fees in the GTA are approximately:
- City of Toronto: ~$215 minimum (plus ~$4.90+ per square meter for interior alterations).
- Mississauga & Oakville: ~$200 – $250 minimum base fee.
- Vaughan, Brampton & Markham: ~$200 – $250 minimum base fee.
Note: This is only the starting point. The final city fee scales up based on the total square footage and value of your specific project.
3. DIY vs. Hiring a Professional
Your total permit budget is heavily influenced by how the application is handled:
- DIY (Applying Yourself): You only pay the city’s municipal fees. However, you are strictly responsible for drafting your own architectural plans to OBC standards. This route is highly prone to examiner rejections, months of delays, and potential code violations if you lack technical expertise.
- Hiring a Professional (BCIN Designer / Architect): You pay the city fees plus a professional coordination fee. The professional creates “Permit-Ready” drawings, handles zoning paperwork, communicates with city examiners, and guarantees code compliance. This is the standard, stress-free route for most GTA homeowners.
4. Project Complexity Matters
The nature of your project dictates the final cost. A simple project (like finishing an open-concept basement without a second kitchen) requires fewer drawings and faster city reviews. A complex project (such as removing a load-bearing wall, underpinning a foundation, or creating a legal secondary suite) requires structural engineering stamps, HVAC calculations, and sometimes Committee of Adjustment hearings. The more complex the project, the higher the municipal and professional fees.
Expert Tip: Always budget for both the “City Fee” (the tax paid to the municipality) and the “Coordination Fee” (paid to your designer or engineer) to get a true, realistic picture of your permit costs.