The Electrical Inspection Process in Florida Step by Step
Florida's electrical inspection process is the formal sequence through which local building departments verify that electrical installations comply with the Florida Building Code (FBC) and the underlying 2017 National Electrical Code (NEC) as adopted by the state. Inspections occur at defined stages of construction or renovation and are a mandatory condition of permit closure. Understanding how this process is structured — from permit application through final approval — is essential for contractors, property owners, and developers operating across Florida's 67 counties and hundreds of incorporated municipalities.
Definition and scope
An electrical inspection is a formal review conducted by a licensed building official or electrical inspector employed by or contracted to a local jurisdiction. Its function is to confirm that installed electrical work matches the permitted scope, meets applicable code provisions, and does not present documented risk categories identified under Florida Electrical Code Standards.
Florida's inspection authority flows from Chapter 553 of the Florida Statutes, which establishes the Florida Building Code as the mandatory statewide standard. The Florida Building Commission, operating under the Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR), publishes and maintains the FBC. Local jurisdictions administer inspections through their own building departments but cannot require less than what the FBC mandates — though they may adopt local amendments that exceed the baseline.
Scope of this page: This reference covers the electrical inspection process as it applies to permitted work in Florida under the FBC. It does not address federal installations, work on federal property, inspections conducted under separate authority by utilities such as Florida Power & Light or Duke Energy Florida, or inspection requirements in tribal jurisdictions. Work performed under a separate federal permitting regime falls outside Florida building department jurisdiction. For a broader overview of Florida's electrical sector, the Florida Electrical Authority index provides a structured entry point to all major topic areas.
How it works
The Florida electrical inspection process follows a discrete sequence tied to the permit lifecycle. While administrative details vary by jurisdiction, the core phases are consistent across Florida's building departments.
1. Permit Application
Work requiring a permit — including new installations, service upgrades, rewiring, and additions to existing systems — must begin with a permit application submitted to the local building department. Applications reference the scope of work, the licensed electrical contractor of record (per Florida Electrical Licensing Requirements), and the applicable code edition.
2. Plan Review
For commercial, industrial, and larger residential projects, the building department conducts a plan review. Reviewers check load calculations, panel schedules, grounding electrode system specifications, and code compliance for the proposed installation. Residential projects below a certain complexity threshold may qualify for over-the-counter permit issuance without a full plan review cycle.
3. Rough-In Inspection
The rough-in inspection takes place after conduit, wiring, boxes, and raceways are installed but before walls are closed or insulation covers the work. Inspectors verify wire gauge, box fill compliance, conduit support spacing, and correct placement of required protection devices such as AFCI and GFCI receptacles and breakers. The rough-in inspection is a hold point — no concealment of work is permitted until it passes.
4. Service Entrance and Meter Inspection
Service entrance components — including the meter base, service mast, and main disconnect — are subject to a separate inspection coordinated with the serving utility. Florida's wind-load provisions under the FBC require that service entrance equipment meet hurricane-resistance standards applicable to the project's wind zone. Details specific to this phase are covered under Florida Electrical Service Entrance Requirements.
5. Final Inspection
The final inspection confirms that all remaining work — device installation, panel terminations, fixture mounting, bonding, and labeling — is complete and code-compliant. The inspector verifies that arc-fault circuit interrupter (AFCI) and ground-fault circuit interrupter (GFCI) protection is installed in all required locations per the 2017 NEC as amended by the FBC. A passing final inspection results in the issuance of a Certificate of Completion or Certificate of Occupancy, depending on project type.
Common scenarios
Different project types encounter the inspection process at different points and with different complexity:
- Residential panel upgrades: A Florida Electrical Panel replacement triggers a permit, a rough-in or service inspection, and a final inspection. The utility must also be notified to disconnect and reconnect service.
- New residential construction: Requires a minimum of a rough-in inspection and a final inspection; larger homes or those with complex systems may require additional intermediate inspections.
- Commercial tenant improvements: Full plan review is standard. Inspections are staged to match construction phases, and a fire alarm or emergency lighting inspection may be required concurrently.
- Solar photovoltaic systems: Permitted under a separate solar or PV permit in most jurisdictions, these installations require both a building department final inspection and a utility interconnection review. See Florida Solar Electrical Systems for specifics.
- EV charging installations: Dedicated circuit additions for Level 2 chargers require a permit and final inspection. Commercial charging stations may require plan review. Coverage of applicable standards is available under Florida EV Charging Electrical Requirements.
- Pool and spa electrical: Bonding and GFCI protection inspections are mandatory for all pool and spa electrical work per Florida Pool and Spa Electrical Requirements and Chapter 680 of the NEC.
Decision boundaries
Not all electrical work in Florida requires a permit or a formal inspection. The FBC and local amendments define exemptions, but those exemptions are narrower than commonly assumed.
Permitted and inspected work (examples):
- New service installations or service upgrades of any amperage
- Addition of branch circuits or subpanels
- Replacement of electrical panels
- Installation of generators with transfer switches (see Florida Generator Electrical Codes)
- Any work in a new structure
Typically exempt from permit (examples):
- Like-for-like replacement of a single receptacle, switch, or fixture in an existing installation, with no wiring change
- Replacement of a circuit breaker of identical amperage in an existing panel
Residential vs. commercial distinction:
Residential inspections generally follow a simpler 2-stage model (rough-in, final), while commercial inspections commonly involve 3 or more discrete phases, full plan review, and coordination with mechanical and fire protection inspectors. Industrial installations, addressed under Florida Industrial Electrical Systems, involve additional review layers including coordination with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services for certain occupancy types.
Inspector authority:
A building official or inspector has the authority under Florida Statute §553.80 to stop work, require corrections, or revoke a permit when code violations are identified. Disputes over inspection findings may be referred to the local Construction Board of Adjustment and Appeals. Enforcement pathways and penalties are addressed under Florida Electrical Violations and Enforcement.
When a project involves systems outside the standard residential or commercial categories — manufactured housing, for example — separate standards apply. Florida Mobile and Manufactured Home Electrical covers the distinct inspection requirements for those installation types.
References
- Florida Building Commission — Florida Building Code
- Florida Statutes Chapter 553 — Building Construction Standards
- Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR)
- National Fire Protection Association — NFPA 70 (National Electrical Code)
- Florida Building Code, 7th Edition (2020) — Florida Building Commission
- Florida Statutes §553.80 — Enforcement