What the Manteca permit process actually involves — and how KHB carries your project through it, from drawings to final inspection.
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Building permits in Manteca are handled by the city’s Community Development Department through its Building Safety Division. Complete residential sets — architectural, structural with calculations, Title 24 energy forms, site plan — clear initial review in a few weeks for typical projects; additions and ADUs run longer. Newer subdivisions often add an HOA design-review requirement on top of the city’s, and the two approvals are best run in parallel. Unincorporated parcels around Manteca submit to San Joaquin County Community Development.
KHB prepares the documents, files both city and HOA packages where needed, clears corrections, and builds the project as your licensed GC (CSLB #1070537).
Last updated: June 2026 · Reviewed by the KHB Construction team
The Manteca-specific trap is sequencing: homeowners get city approval, then discover the HOA wants changes (or vice versa), and the project ping-pongs for months. We prepare the HOA design package and the city permit set together so both reviews run concurrently. Manteca’s growth also means inspection calendars fill fast in building season — our project managers book the inspection sequence early so the build never stalls waiting on a slot.
Whether your plans are stamped and ready or still half-finished, KHB picks up the Manteca permit process at any stage: completing construction documents (structural, Title 24 energy, site plan), filing the submittal, answering plan check corrections, paying and pulling the permit, and scheduling every inspection through final sign-off. And because we’re a licensed design-build general contractor (CSLB #1070537), the company handling your paperwork is the company that builds the project — see our general contractor services in Manteca.
To the City of Manteca Community Development Department (Building Safety Division). If your home has an HOA, its design review runs separately — KHB files both packages in parallel.
In most newer subdivisions, yes — exterior changes and additions typically require HOA design review on top of the city permit. Running them concurrently saves weeks to months.
A few weeks of initial plan check for complete remodel sets; additions and ADUs longer, plus correction rounds. ADUs benefit from California’s 60-day ministerial review requirement.
Yes — bring the correction letter and we’ll fix the set, resubmit, and carry it through permit, construction, and final inspection.
Bring us your plans, your sketch, or your correction letter. We’ll map the exact path through Manteca plan check — and build the project when it clears.
Or call (209) 528-0255 · CSLB #1070537