Roofing Permits, Codes & Inspections in NV: What You Need to Know

Last updated June 18, 2026

Roofing Permits, Codes & Inspections in NV: What You Need to Know

A Clark County roofing permit costs between $150 and $400 for most residential jobs — the contractor who tells you to skip it to “save money” is actually transferring legal and financial risk directly onto you. That’s not an opinion; it’s a pattern we’ve seen play out dozens of times over 16 years of roofing in Las Vegas. Unpermitted roof work doesn’t disappear quietly. It shows up in title searches when you sell, it shows up in buyer inspections, and it shows up in denied insurance claims when water gets into a structure that was “fixed” with no inspected record. This guide covers exactly when a permit is required in Clark County, how the inspection sequence works, what the Nevada Energy Code demands on re-roofing jobs, and what to do if you discover prior unpermitted work on your property — so you’re never the homeowner caught holding someone else’s mistake.

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Quick Answer

Most roofing work in Clark County, Nevada requires a building permit. A permit is mandatory when you replace more than 25% of the total roof covering within any 12-month period, when structural decking is replaced, or when a full re-roof is performed. Repairs that are genuinely minor maintenance — patching a few shingles, reseating flashing — may fall below the threshold, but your contractor should confirm in writing before starting work without a permit.

Table of Contents

When Is a Roofing Permit Required in Clark County?

Clark County’s building code — administered through the Clark County Building Department for unincorporated areas, and through the City of Las Vegas Building & Safety Division for properties within city limits — draws a clear line between maintenance and regulated work. That line matters more than most homeowners realize.

A permit is required when any of the following apply:

  • You are performing a complete tear-off and re-roof on any residential structure.
  • You are replacing more than 25% of the existing roof covering within a rolling 12-month period.
  • Any structural component — rafters, trusses, roof sheathing — is being repaired or replaced.
  • You are adding a new roof system over an existing one (a “recover” or “overlay”).
  • The scope of work changes the roof’s drainage pattern or slope.
  • A specialty roofing installation — tile, metal, TPO, modified bitumen — is being applied to a structure where it wasn’t previously installed.

Work that typically does NOT require a permit:

  • Replacing fewer than 10 individual shingles as a spot repair, provided no decking is disturbed.
  • Re-seating or recaulking existing flashing without replacing it.
  • Applying roof coating over an intact, undamaged existing membrane on a flat or low-slope system.

The critical word in every one of those exemptions is “typically.” Clark County inspectors have discretion, and in our experience working across Las Vegas neighborhoods from Summerlin to Henderson, the safest move is always to call the building department and get a written response before assuming a project is exempt. Verbal exemptions aren’t worth anything when an inspector shows up.

The Square Footage and Material Replacement Thresholds That Trigger a Permit

The 25% rule is the most misunderstood threshold in Clark County roofing code — and the one most commonly exploited by contractors who want to avoid the permit process. Here’s how it actually works.

Clark County applies the International Residential Code (IRC) as amended for Nevada, and the IRC’s Section R908 governs existing roof re-covering. The code measures replacement percentage against the total roof area of the structure. On a 2,000-square-foot home with a standard 8:12 pitch, your total roof surface might be 2,400–2,600 square feet of actual roofing material. Twenty-five percent of that is 600–650 square feet — roughly six roofing squares.

What contractors sometimes do is stage repairs across multiple visits to stay under the threshold. Clark County closes that loophole with the 12-month rolling window. If a contractor replaced 400 square feet of shingles in March and another 350 square feet in September of the same year, that’s 750 square feet total — over the threshold, permit required, regardless of whether each individual visit looked “minor.”

Material-change thresholds also matter:

  • If you’re switching from asphalt shingles to concrete or clay tile, a permit is required regardless of square footage, because the weight load and structural implications must be reviewed.
  • If you’re installing a photovoltaic-ready or solar-integrated roofing product from manufacturers like GAF (Timberline Solar) or any integrated system from the brands we work with — GAF, CertainTeed, Owens Corning, IKO, Atlas, Tamko, or Boral — a separate electrical permit is also required alongside the roofing permit.
  • Any change to the roof covering class (e.g., from a Class A to a different assembly) triggers a permit in Clark County.

The permit fee itself — typically $150 to $400 for a standard residential re-roof — is a rounding error compared to the cost of retroactive permitting after the fact, which we’ll cover in the resale section below.

How the Clark County Inspection Sequence Works

This is where legitimate roofing work separates from cut-rate work, and it’s the section every homeowner should read before signing a contract.

Clark County requires a multi-stage inspection on permitted roofing jobs. A contractor who pulls a permit but then rushes to final without calling in intermediate inspections is not giving you a permitted job in any meaningful sense — they’re giving you a piece of paper with no verified work record behind it.

The standard residential re-roof inspection sequence in Clark County:

  1. Deck/Sheathing Inspection: After the old roofing material is torn off and before any new underlayment is installed, the inspector verifies that the decking is structurally sound, properly fastened, and meets the minimum thickness requirements. In Las Vegas, where older homes in neighborhoods like North Las Vegas and the older east-side subdivisions sometimes have original 3/8″ plywood from the 1970s and 1980s, this inspection catches decks that need upgrading before they’re buried under 30 years of new material.
  2. Underlayment/Dry-In Inspection: Before any finish roofing material is installed, the inspector verifies that the underlayment meets Nevada’s requirements — including the specific product type, number of layers, and the method of application at eaves, valleys, and penetrations. This is the moisture barrier inspection, and it’s the one most often skipped by contractors who claim “the inspector doesn’t require it here.” They do.
  3. Final Inspection: Once the finish material is fully installed, the inspector verifies that installation matches the approved permit, that flashing details are correct at all penetrations and walls, and that the roof meets the applicable wind-uplift requirements. In Clark County, residential roofing must meet minimum wind resistance standards given our exposure to sustained desert wind events — especially relevant in the northwest Las Vegas Valley near Lone Mountain and the Spring Mountains corridor.

Ask your contractor directly: “Will you call in the deck inspection and the underlayment inspection before covering the work?” If they hesitate or tell you the inspector “usually just does a final,” find a different contractor.

Nevada Energy Code Requirements for Re-Roofing

This is the section most contractors — and most homeowners — don’t know about, and it’s generated more than a few surprised faces on jobs we’ve handled across the Las Vegas Valley.

Nevada has adopted the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) with state amendments. Under the IECC as applied in Clark County’s Climate Zone 3B (the desert hot-dry classification that covers Las Vegas), a re-roofing project that replaces more than 50% of the roof covering area triggers a mandatory attic insulation evaluation.

Specifically: If your existing attic insulation does not meet the R-38 minimum threshold required by the current Nevada energy code, and you are replacing more than 50% of your roof covering, the code requires that the insulation be brought up to R-38 as part of the same permitted scope of work.

In practical terms: if you’re getting a full re-roof on a 1990s-era home in Summerlin or Green Valley and your attic has original R-19 batts, your roofing permit scope legally must include an insulation upgrade. Many homeowners don’t find out about this requirement until the permit is pulled and the inspector’s plan review notes come back — at which point the roofing contractor may try to charge it as a change order.

What to do before you sign a re-roofing contract:

  • Ask your contractor whether the job scope will exceed 50% of your roof area (it will, on any full re-roof).
  • Have your attic insulation checked before the contract is written — not after the permit is pulled.
  • Make sure the insulation upgrade cost is included in any proposal, not treated as an optional add-on.
  • Get documentation of the R-value installed — you’ll need it at final inspection and it’s useful for utility records and resale disclosure.

The energy code requirement is not optional, and it’s not a contractor’s judgment call. It’s written into the permit process, and an inspector will flag it at final if the work record doesn’t include the insulation component.

What Happens at Resale: Title, Appraisal, and Escrow Risk

This is the thesis of this entire guide, and the real reason the permit conversation matters: unpermitted roofing work is a title problem.

When you sell a home in Nevada, you are legally required to disclose known material defects — and in Clark County, an unpermitted structural or exterior system is a known material defect once you’re aware of it. The Nevada Revised Statutes governing seller disclosure (NRS 113.130) are explicit. Failing to disclose and having the buyer’s inspector or lender appraisal flag the unpermitted work puts you in a material misrepresentation exposure, not just a code violation.

Here’s how unpermitted roofing work surfaces at resale:

  • Home Inspector Reports: A thorough home inspector will pull the permit history for the address through Clark County’s online building records portal. If a roof was replaced and no permit is on record, they’ll note it in the report. Buyers use this as a negotiating lever.
  • Lender Appraisals: FHA, VA, and conventional lenders with tighter guidelines may flag unpermitted work during the appraisal process. An appraiser who notes a five-year-old roof replacement with no corresponding permit record may require the work to be retroactively permitted — or value the property as if the work didn’t meet code standards.
  • Title Insurance: Title companies increasingly flag open or expired permits and unpermitted work as a title encumbrance. Some title insurers will require a permit be pulled retroactively, or that funds be escrowed — typically 110–150% of the estimated remediation cost — until the work is inspected and closed.
  • Retroactive Permitting: Clark County does allow retroactive “after-the-fact” permits, but the process is more expensive, requires an inspector to assess work that may now be covered by other finishes, and can require destructive investigation if intermediate inspection points can’t be verified. We’ve seen retroactive permits in Las Vegas cost $800–$2,500 all-in when you factor in the permit fee, reinspection fees, and any remediation required to bring the work up to current code.

The contractor who saved you $300 by skipping a permit has potentially cost you thousands at closing — and transferred the liability entirely to you the moment they cashed your check.

How to Pull Your Permit History Through Clark County’s Online Portal

Every Clark County property has a public permit record you can access without calling anyone. Here’s the step-by-step process.

  1. Determine your jurisdiction. Clark County Building Department covers unincorporated Clark County. If your property is within the City of Las Vegas, City of Henderson, or City of North Las Vegas city limits, those municipalities maintain separate permit databases. Use your county assessor parcel number to confirm your jurisdiction if you’re unsure.
  2. Go to the Clark County Building Department’s Online Services portal. The primary search tool is accessible through the Clark County website under “Building & Fire Prevention.” The permit lookup tool lets you search by address or parcel number (APN).
  3. Run a permit history search by address. Enter your street address and pull the full permit history. You’re looking for any permit with a “ROOFING” or “REROOF” classification. Note the permit number, issue date, and — critically — the inspection status.
  4. Check the inspection status on any roofing permit. A permit that was pulled but never had a final inspection closed is an open permit — effectively an incomplete job in the eyes of the county. Open permits are visible to title companies and are treated similarly to unpermitted work.
  5. If your property is in City of Las Vegas limits, use the City of Las Vegas Online Permit Center (accessible through lasvegasnevada.gov). The process is similar: search by address, filter by permit type, check inspection status.
  6. Document what you find. Screenshot or download the permit history before your home goes on the market, and share it with your real estate agent so they can address any open items proactively rather than reactively during a buyer’s due diligence period.

What to Do If You Discover Prior Unpermitted Roof Work

Finding unpermitted roofing work on your property — whether it’s work you knew about or something you’re discovering for the first time — is fixable. Here’s the practical sequence.

  1. Don’t panic, and don’t try to hide it. Nevada’s disclosure laws mean that once you’re aware of the issue, non-disclosure is a legal exposure, not a strategy.
  2. Get a professional roof inspection first. Before engaging with the permit process, you need to know the actual condition of the existing work. If a previous contractor did a shoddy unpermitted job, you need documentation of what’s there — not just what’s missing from the permit record.
  3. Contact the applicable building department to discuss an after-the-fact permit. Clark County and the City of Las Vegas both have processes for retroactive permitting. Call the building department, explain the situation, and ask about the “as-built” permit process. They’ve seen this before. The fee is typically 1.5–2x the standard permit fee, and there may be reinspection surcharges.
  4. Be prepared for investigative work. If the intermediate inspection points — deck, underlayment — can’t be verified without opening the roof, an inspector may require access to those areas. In some cases, this means pulling back a section of the finish material.
  5. If the work is substandard, repair or replace it under a new permit. There’s no value in retroactively permitting work that was done incorrectly. If inspection reveals deficiencies, address them under a new properly permitted scope.
  6. Get a certificate of completion once the retroactive permit is closed and all inspections are signed off. Keep this with your home’s permanent records and provide a copy to your real estate agent when you sell.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Taking a contractor’s word that “this job doesn’t need a permit.” Any contractor who makes that determination without directing you to verify with the building department is protecting their convenience, not your interests. Always confirm permit requirements directly with Clark County or the City of Las Vegas before work begins.
  • Assuming a permit was pulled just because the contractor said they’d handle it. Pull the permit record yourself before the job closes. A contractor can claim they filed without ever following through — and the liability sits with the property, not the contractor, once they’re gone.
  • Letting a contractor skip the deck and underlayment inspections “to keep things moving.” Speed is not worth an unverifiable work record. In Las Vegas, where summer monsoon season can reveal flaws in underlayment installation within months, you want every inspection checkpoint documented.
  • Not accounting for the Nevada R-38 insulation requirement on a full re-roof. Discovering mid-project that your attic needs an insulation upgrade — a requirement you weren’t budgeted for — is avoidable if your contractor identifies it upfront. Get this confirmed before you sign any contract for a full replacement.
  • Staging small repairs to stay under the 25% threshold as a strategy. Clark County’s 12-month rolling window is specifically designed to prevent this. If repairs add up over the year, you may owe permit fees retroactively — plus potential penalties for work performed without required permits.
  • Not checking the inspection status on existing permits before buying a home. A permit that was pulled but never finally inspected is an open permit — a title issue waiting to surface. Run the permit history on any home you’re purchasing in Clark County, not just post-purchase.
  • Choosing a contractor based solely on price without verifying their permit process. In our 16 years working in Las Vegas, we’ve seen the cleanup cost of unpermitted roofing work exceed the original job cost. The cheapest bid on paper rarely accounts for the downstream risk it transfers to the homeowner.

When to Call a Professional

Call a licensed roofing contractor before you make any permit decisions — not after. If you’re not sure whether your planned repair crosses the 25% threshold, a professional site assessment will give you a documented answer. If you’re buying a home in Las Vegas and the permit history shows a re-roof with no inspections on record, call a roofer for an inspection before you close, not as a post-purchase discovery. If you’ve just had storm damage and you’re considering whether to repair or replace — a distinction with major permit implications — that decision needs to be made with an accurate damage assessment in hand, not a contractor’s verbal estimate from the ground.

Pro Roof Care Solutions Las Vegas offers free estimates across the Las Vegas Valley — Jake Evans will assess your roof directly, give you a clear picture of the permit requirements that apply to your specific job, and put it in writing. Call (725) 500-0271 to schedule.

Frequently Asked Questions

The Bottom Line

A roofing permit in Clark County is not a bureaucratic inconvenience — it’s a documented, inspectable record that the most expensive system on your home was installed correctly and to current code. The $150–$400 fee buys you a verified work record, a defensible position at resale, and protection under Nevada’s energy code. Skipping it saves the contractor time and saves you nothing. Over 16 years in Las Vegas roofing, Jake Evans has pulled permits on every project that legally requires one — because the homeowner’s long-term protection matters more than a faster job start. If you’re planning roofing work, check the thresholds, understand the inspection sequence, and work with a contractor who treats the permit process as standard practice, not an optional upgrade.

For Roof Repair in Spring Valley, Roof Replacement & Installation in Spring Valley, or Specialty Roofing in Spring Valley — Pro Roof Care Solutions Las Vegas handles the full permit process on every applicable job. Call (725) 500-0271 for a free estimate.

Written by Jake Evans, Owner & Lead Technician at Pro Roof Care Solutions Las Vegas, serving Las Vegas since 2010.

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