Pali Builds

Pali Builds
Pali Builds

(Revised 8-6-25 2:57 pm pst)

The July building permit data is here and the total number of “new building” permits issued in July for single family homes in the Palisades is 44.  What does that mean?  That means 44 homes or parcels or lots have had new building permits approved to build a single family home.

Building permit data is a strange beast — unique, messy, and open to interpretation. How do I know? I spent years building a large permit database in the U.S. for a venture I founded called Naybur. It didn’t work out (so no bragging rights), but the goal was simple: help homeowners find the contractors their neighbors had trusted in the past, so they could interview them for their own projects.

We believed quantitative data like this was far more valuable than vague testimonials such as, “Susie in Thousand Oaks said they were super duper awesome.” To make it happen, I collected datasets manually from municipal employees in hundreds of cities, compiled millions of records, and then cleaned, parsed, and standardized them into something usable. In the process, I became something of an expert on building permit data.

But here’s the catch: permit data is only as accurate as “Bob the Builder” writing the job description, and the city employee entering the details and adding notes. Every applicant uses different language, and every city staffer has their own style, which means the same type of project might be described in completely different ways. That’s why you can’t just run a simple query or script and expect perfect answers — you have to look at each permit closely and in context.

Things to remember:

  1. Any home address can have 1 or 8 permits tied to it at the same time; a plumbing, swimming pool, new bldg, electrical, grading, demolition, etc.  All of these are individual permits that could actually reflect only 1 rebuild.  
  2. There are permit applications and issued permits.  Not all permit applications get approved.  If you look at the average approval time of issued permits, you are taking only those permits that have been issued.  In other words, if you look at the approval time of all permits that were initiated in June, you can’t average in the number of days of the “still pending” permits.  You can only calculate the average days of those that were approved at the time you calculated the average.
  3. Assume a margin of error around 10%.  Permits get edited, there are duplicates sometimes, and people like me will make mistakes.

Mayor Bass’ office stated on Tuesday, August 5th, that more than 380 “rebuilding plans” have been approved.  Pali Builds feels this number is misleading because it doesn’t reflect the number of new homes approved to build. 380 reflects total permits related to building, so what. The important number is that of new homes, and that number is 104.

As of July 31st, 2025, Pali Builds counts 104 approved “new builds” in the Pacific Palisades since the fire.  The Mayor’s number is 265% higher than ours.  

Let’s start with July numbers:

Approved “New Building” permits for homes – 44 (unique addresses)

Approved permits for commercial permits – 3 (unique addresses. 0 new builds)

Now, since the fire:

For “New Building” permits issued (since Fire) the average time was 62 days

Let’s break them down by month.  The below numbers reflect permits issued in said month, and how long they took to be issued. This is only for “New Building” permits only, not swimming pools, demo, etc.  

Mar – 31 days (2 permits)

April – 46 days (5 permits)

May – 56 days (24 permits)

June – 71 days (29 permits)

July – 63 days (39 permits)

Now let’s look at the time and volume of all permit types that were issued, not just “New Building.” This includes Electrical, Grading, etc.  Again, the below numbers reflect permits issued in said month, and how long they took to be issued.

Jan –  2 days, (4 permits)

Feb – 14 days, (10 permits)

Mar – 19 days, (12 permits)

April – 26 days, (42 permits)

May – 35 days, (90 permits)

June – 45 days, (108 permits)

July – 46 days, (98 permits)

Here are some other interesting data points we collected:

73% of the building permit applications are like-for-like plans, making them an “eligible project.”  This means that ~25% of those applying for permits want to build something that exceeds 110% most likely.  Again, remember the margin of error.

And lastly, I thought we’d throw in this house-size morsel.  According to all permit applications, here is the breakdown or home levels:

Single Story :   28

Double Story : 139

Three Story :   4

Ok, that about does it for July’s building data update.  We will be mapping all of the newly issued permits and permit applications very soon.  Oh, and July home sales data is coming soon so you can see buyer profiles. 

Please feel free to reach out to us for help.  Need a graph or infographic for media?  Email us at info@palibuilds.com.  We’re happy to share as long as you reference us as the source.

A personal note from author:

It gives us no pleasure in sharing the real rebuild numbers here, since they’re lower than our local governments’.  We are from the Palisades, love our community, and want nothing more than everyone to move “home” sooner rather than later, but hopefully this data can help improve operational efficiencies and enable a faster rebuild.  For example, maybe a dedicated location and staff at the Dept. of Building & Safety for Palisades permits?  They would be Pali experts!!

Frank and Kambiz

PaliBuilds.com


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9 Responses

  1. I have been going through endless red tape. Applied to build like-kind home. That was April 25th. It has now been 111 days and counting.

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