Edward
2024 Supporter
- Sep 18, 2012
- 16,152
- 6,574
if I tried that and didn't get a permit ,and have a license ,jail time .
illegal in my state ,no way would I try as to sell my house requires a home inspector and I eventually plan to se'll it and not die in my county if the lord wills .
if its not code I would have to bring it up to code and pay double for that fix ,once for me and twice to bring up to code .
all cuz of the theft after hurricanes back in 2005,its a felony to work outside of your construction license
Nowadays the home inspector can roll up out front and pull up every permit that's ever been pulled at that address. Gotta uv them 'puters, lol.
But no permits for an improvement you did? No license, no code knowledge, oh they can roast you over the coals....except for, they can't always and I'll tell you why not. I'm used to dealing with the licensing and building department and got clued in to what the real deal is. The real deal is, Have you ever read a code book? It is littered with threats all throughout the book.
Example: ...and if this (whatever) installation does not meet these guidelines, then we can fine you and charge you triple permit fees for no permit, take your first born son and put you in Jail!!! (Or something similar)
And then it'll quote a State statute for you. It all reads real ominous and scary. But it's all smoke and mirrors Brother. Have you ever looked up any of the statutory references in the code book as threats? I have. I looked up a lot of them. And the real deal is (the intent), was so that no clueless clown would do A hack job and leave a hazardous condition. If you leave a potentially hazardous condition in place then you have reason to fear. But if you do it right (up to code) and do not leave a hazardous condition, then they can't really do anything to you.
See when I was a Contractor in Colorado, I didn't like having to force homeowners to buy a permit. I don't get paid for that and like one guy said, He can look at a mans work and see if it's good work or not, he don't have to pay them to babysit him about his house. And he is my customer, I want to please them and give them what they want. I am not the permit police. People used to ask me, please don't make me buy a permit...So I figured, ok, they're the customer. Besides, it wouldn't change my job. It's just as easy to do it right rather than wrong.
So I would tell people, If you want a permit then I'll get a permit and an inspection. This is good for people who have no clue about the work that was done, so it's good for them to have an inspector come out and make sure I did my job right.
But people who've worked the trades...I wont get a permit if you don't want the expense, But! If you try to sell the house and the home inspector sees the new water heater, they'll charge you a triple permit fee to pull the permit, and I do not pay for that triple fee. This is Your decision. If they have no plans to sell then you're pretty safe from inspector woes.
I remember one real nice black man I did his water heater and he said no permit (tipped me more than the permit fee would have been for not forcing him to get it!!) He had no plans to move. Everything was cool. But about 6 months later, his life plans changed somehow and he tried to sell his home and they caught the water heater job. He called me and was mad at first and asking if I pay the triple fee. And very slowly and calmly refreshed his memory and hey we talked about this, remember. And he did remember so it was cool with him.
But the regional building department (my license and the plumbing permit place) called me up and started screaming at me! Throwing bad threats at me and basically reaming me for no permit. I interupted him and said hey, whoa! He says, yeah? So I said well I know that you guys have not even been out there to see the job yet, or you wouldn't be on the phone to me. It will pass inspection. So go inspect it and if you want changes then I'll make changes. But it'll pass inspection. And it did pass too cuz I never heard back from them on it.
So a homeowner has more leeway at home than anywhere. In Colorado, the only permit that a homeowner can not pull is a Mechanical permit (furnaces & venting n such). I don't know how it is in Florida but you should be able to do a lot of your own work on your own house that you live in.
When I would drift out of my licensed trade for a job, like an Electrical job, I'd do the work and let the homeowner pull the permit if he wanted one. I know most electrical codes too. They used to let us HVAC guys pull the electrical permit for A/C units and RTU's but got greedy and took the electrical from us.
But the bottom line is, just do your work to code and it's not hard to find out code questions with Google lol. No potentially hazardous conditions...no problems for you!