Water Heater Permit Cost in Utah — What You’ll Pay by City

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By Emergency Water Heater SLC Team · · Updated March 7, 2026 · 6 min read

Quick Answer

Utah water heater permits cost $50–$150, depending on the city.

Salt Lake City charges $75–$120.
Provo runs $60–$100.
Most rural counties charge $50–$80.

Permits are mandatory for all new installations and replacements (gas conversions especially).

Your plumber usually handles the permit — add the cost to your total installation bill.

Permit fees are non-refundable and include a standard inspection.


Why You Need a Permit (and Why It Costs Money)

Utah requires permits for water heater work for three reasons:

  • Safety code compliance
  • Tax base assessment
  • Building department inspections

When you replace a water heater, the city wants to know so they can:

  • Verify the installation meets current code (venting, gas line sizing, electrical work)
  • Ensure you’re not doing unpermitted work that could void homeowner insurance
  • Conduct an inspection (usually included in permit fee)

Skipping a permit saves $75–$150 upfront but creates problems.

Insurance won’t cover damage from unpermitted work.

If you sell your home, the title company will demand permits for recent work.

And if something goes wrong (gas leak, electrical fire), you’re liable.

Licensed plumbers are required to pull permits.

Anyone who offers to “skip the permit” is cutting corners — don’t hire them.


Permit Costs by Utah City and County

City/CountyPermit CostInspection IncludedNotes
Salt Lake City$75–$120YesGas line inspection required if converting to gas
Provo$60–$100YesOnline permit system
Ogden$70–$110YesAdditional re-inspect fee if work fails: $25–$50
West Jordan$80–$130Yes
Sandy$65–$115Yes
Lehi$70–$120YesFast-track available (+$25)
Draper$75–$125Yes
Layton$60–$100Yes
Farmington$55–$95Yes
Davis County (unincorporated)$50–$80YesSlower approval, may take 5–7 business days
Utah County (unincorporated)$55–$85Yes
Box Elder County$45–$70YesRural county, lower cost
Weber County$50–$80Yes

General rule: Bigger cities = higher permit costs. Rural counties = $50–$80.

If your city isn’t listed, call your local building department (they’re listed on your city/county website).


What’s Included in the Permit Fee

Included

  • One standard building inspection
  • Permit paperwork and processing
  • City records update

NOT included

  • Re-inspection if work fails first inspection ($25–$50 extra)
  • Expedited/fast-track permitting (add $25–$75 if needed)
  • Gas line safety inspection by Dominion Energy (usually free but requires separate scheduling)

Utah-Specific Permit Considerations

Gas conversion permits

If you’re switching from electric to gas (or upgrading an existing gas unit to a new model), expect the permit to take longer.

Permit timeline: 3–5 business days vs 1–2 days

Dominion Energy must inspect the gas line.

There’s usually no extra permit cost from the city, but Dominion charges separately.

Call 1-800-333-4797 for details.


High-altitude homes (6,000+ ft)

Mountain areas of Utah require pressure-sealed venting documentation for gas units.

This adds one day to the inspection process but no extra permit cost.


Basement vs garage installations

Basement water heaters require:

  • Overflow pan certification
  • Sometimes moisture-barrier inspections

Permits process normally, but inspections may take longer.

Schedule one extra day for inspection.


Hard water deposits

Permits don’t explicitly account for hard water flushing.

But if your old unit was heavily scaled (150–250 GPG Wasatch Front water), mention it to your plumber.

They may schedule inspection after descaling to avoid complications.


Timeline: When Permit Comes Up

Your plumber’s job

Pulls permit (1–2 days)

Schedules inspection (inspection appointment = 2–7 days later, depending on season)

Installs unit

Calls inspector

Inspector approves work (usually same day or next day)


Your job

Make sure someone’s home for the inspection (usually 30 minutes)

Don’t hide old pipes or connections — inspector needs to see them


Best-case timeline

Permit pulled Monday
Inspection Thursday
Work complete by Friday

Total time: 3 days


Busy season (November–December)

Inspection waits can stretch to 10–14 days.

Plan ahead.


Cost of Expedited Permits (If You Need Your Heater Fast)

Most cities offer expedited permitting for an additional fee.

CityFast-Track CostTimeline
Salt Lake City$50–$7524-hour permit turnaround
Provo$40–$60Same-day or next-day
Ogden$35–$5024-hour turnaround
Most other cities$25–$5024–48 hours

Is it worth it?

Only if your heater is completely down and you need hot water immediately.

Most homeowners can wait 3–5 days for a standard permit.


How Plumbers Handle Permits

Good plumbers

Include permit cost in their quote

Handle all paperwork

Schedule the inspection

Handle any re-inspection if needed

Provide you with the final permit approval


Red flags

“We can skip the permit” — walk away

Permit cost hidden from the quote — ask for it in writing

Unwilling to provide proof of permit after work — get it before paying the final bill


Always ask:

“Will you provide me with the signed-off permit and inspection report before I pay?”

You need this documentation.


Find Local Help

Water heater permitting is city-specific.

Working with a licensed local plumber is essential because they understand your city’s:

  • Requirements
  • Timelines
  • Inspection process

Ask them to handle permits upfront — it’s part of the job.

Service hub: Water Heater Replacement

Salt Lake City: Water Heater Replacement in Salt Lake City

Salt Lake County: Water Heater Replacement in Salt Lake County

Browse all Utah cities: Find Water Heater Services Near You


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I pull the permit myself?

Technically yes, but permits require a licensed plumber’s signature.

The city won’t accept a homeowner-pulled permit for water heater work.

Let your plumber do it.


What if the inspector finds a problem?

The plumber fixes it.

There’s usually a re-inspection fee ($25–$50).

Most first-time failures are minor (small gas line adjustment, venting tweak) and fixed in one day.


Do I need a permit if I’m just replacing an old tank with the same size?

Yes.

Even a “straight replacement” requires a permit in Utah.

A new unit counts as a new installation in the city’s records.


What if I don’t pull a permit?

When you sell your home, the title company flags unpermitted work.

You must either:

  • Obtain a late permit (harder), or
  • Reduce your sale price

Insurance may also deny claims related to unpermitted work.

Not worth the risk.


Gas line inspection — is that the same as the building permit inspection?

No.

The building department inspects the installation.

Dominion Energy inspects the gas line (if new or modified).

Both are required for gas conversions.

Dominion’s inspection is usually free — you just schedule it.


Sources and Update Policy

This article was last updated March 2026.

Permit costs change annually. We update every spring or when changes are detected.

Sources

Individual Utah city and county building departments (official permit schedules)

Dominion Energy gas line safety: 1-800-333-4797

Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing (DOPL) plumber requirements

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