Building permit plans

Get general information about the plans you need for most building permits for work on a house or duplex (residential). Viewing our sample floor plan, sample foundation plan and sample site plan can help you get started.

On this page

This webpage is about plans you need to accompany a building permit application.

Please talk with one of our plans examiners for help with building plans. You can book a free 15-minute appointment for more information.

Preparing your plans and minimum submittal requirements

Apply online: One set of plans is required when you apply for a building permit online.

Apply in person: Four sets are required when dropping off plans in person. One set will be stamped approved and returned to you to keep at the job site.

A copy of your approved plans will become a permanent record with the City of Portland.

Items usually required for a complete building permit application

Typical plans include:

All plans must be drawn to scale.

Site plan

A well-prepared site plan is the most important document to include with your application. All major review groups need to approve your site plan. Site plans must be easy to read and copy. A complete and accurate site plan will speed up your permit application reviews. It also means less requests for missing information, which can delay an application.

Use the Sample Site Plan to help you prepare complete site plans for your project. Check out the sample site plan here:

Visit the guide to the Sample Site Plan: Drawing a site plan.

Floor plans and foundation plans

A floor plan, also known as a plan view, is what you would see if you were to look straight down at a floor or basement with the roof or floors above removed. You will need to provide a roof plan and one floor plan for each level of the building on which work is being done, that clearly shows existing and proposed work. Also:

Sample floor plan drawing shows bedrooms, bathroom and inside and outside walls

Sample foundation plan shows foundation detail and details foundation requirements

Section drawings

Section drawings, sometimes called cross sections, are what you would see if you cut vertically through a building from the tip of the roof down through the ground, and then looked at what the cut exposed. Include gutters and downspouts. Also: