Yes. In almost every city and county, a permanent metal building needs a permit before you pour a foundation or set the steel, because a building on a slab counts as a structure no matter what it is made of. The only authority who can tell you for certain is the local building department with jurisdiction over your address, so call them before you order the kit.
What changes from one place to the next is not whether you need a permit but the details around it: the size that triggers review, the fee, the loads your frame must meet, and whether your city, county, or state issues it. This page is the deep answer to that one question. For the full process, drawings, and inspections, read our metal building permits and codes guide, which sits under the metal building kits pillar.
When you need one
When a permit is required and when it is not
Assume you need a permit for any enclosed, permanent metal building, and treat exemptions as the rare exception you confirm in writing. Use drives the requirement more than the steel does: an enclosed shop with a slab and power is almost always permitted, while a small open carport or a tiny accessory shed sometimes faces lighter review or none. Those thresholds are local, so a shed that needs no permit in one county needs a full review one county over.
| Building scenario | Permit usually needed? |
|---|---|
| Enclosed shop, garage, or barn on a foundation | Yes, almost always |
| Open carport or equipment cover | Often yes; sometimes a lighter review |
| Small accessory shed under a local size cap | Sometimes exempt, often around 120 to 200 sq ft ‹confirm› |
| Any building with electrical, plumbing, or HVAC | Yes, plus separate sub-permits |
| Living space, an office, or public use | Yes, under a stricter code path |
| Farm building in some rural counties | Sometimes exempt ‹confirm›, but verify locally |
A general orientation, not a rule. Your building department sets the exact thresholds and exemptions.
The line moves the moment you add a system or a use. Wire it for power, run water, or finish living space, and other codes stack on top of the structural one, which raises the bar even where a bare shell might have slipped under it. Factor the permit into the plan as early as you factor the foundation or the snow and wind loads, because those are the same details the reviewer checks.
Who issues it
Who issues the permit and what they review
In most of the country the local building department issues the permit: your city if you sit inside city limits, your county if you are on unincorporated land. They adopt a version of a model building code, sometimes with local amendments, and enforce it through a plan review and field inspections. A few states add a statewide code or a state-level stamp for certain structures, so the split varies, but the first call is always local.
The review confirms two things: that the building will stand up to your local snow and wind, and that it sits where zoning allows. A plan reviewer reads your engineer-stamped drawings against the code, then an inspector verifies the work at set stages, commonly the anchors and foundation before the pour, the framing once the steel is up, and a final before you use it. Stamped drawings are the document the whole permit rests on, which is why a reputable supplier engineers them for your exact address. Check that the stamp is included when you read the quote, not an upcharge you learn about later.
The risk
What happens if you skip a required permit
Skipping a required permit is the expensive shortcut. Build without one and the county can fine you, issue a stop-work or removal order, and block the sale of the property until the structure is brought up to code. Your insurance may also decline a claim on an unpermitted building, which turns a saved fee into a loss many times its size.
Confirm before you order, not after
Every threshold here is a starting point you verify, not a guarantee. Size caps, fees, required load values, and who issues the permit are set by your jurisdiction and they change. Find the building department for your address and ask three things: do I need a permit for this building and use, what loads and setbacks apply, and what inspections will you require. Put the answer on your buying plan next to the site prep and delivery so the permit is handled before the steel ships.
Related
Read more
This answer connects to the loads, the foundation, and the rest of the buying decision. Follow these next:
- Metal building permits and codes (the full process, drawings, and inspections).
- Metal building kits: the complete guide (the parent pillar).
- Snow load and wind load explained (the load values the reviewer checks your frame against).
- Metal building foundation options (the slab and anchoring the inspector verifies before the pour).
- Metal building delivery and site prep (where the permit fits in the timeline before the steel arrives).





