Most solar installers think of design and permitting as two separate phases — design the system first, then deal with the paperwork afterward. This siloed approach is costing the industry millions in rework, revision cycles, and delayed installations every year. The truth is that solar design and permitting are inseparable. The quality and accuracy of your design directly determines how quickly — and whether — your permit gets approved.
Why Design and Permitting Are Inseparable
When you submit a permit application to a local Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ), what you are really submitting is the product of your design process. The permit plan set is not a separate document — it is a formalized representation of every engineering decision you have already made: panel placement, string configuration, inverter selection, conductor sizing, conduit routing, and protective device ratings. If any of those decisions do not align with the National Electrical Code (NEC), local fire codes, or structural requirements, the AHJ will reject the application and send you back to revise.
This is why the most successful solar companies do not treat design and permitting as sequential. They run them in parallel, embedding solar design and permitting compliance into the very first layout decision. The result is a dramatically shorter approval timeline, fewer correction notices, and lower per-project cost — all of which translate directly into faster installs and higher margins.
At One Place Solar, we have processed thousands of permit applications across the US, UK, and Canada. Our 98% first-submission AHJ approval rate is not an accident — it is the direct result of an engineering workflow where solar design and permitting are treated as a single, unified process.
What a Permit-Ready Solar Design Actually Requires
A permit-ready solar design goes far beyond placing panels on a roof image. Effective solar design and permitting integrates code compliance at every layer — electrical, structural, and fire safety. AHJs require a complete, professionally prepared plan set that demonstrates code compliance across electrical, structural, and fire safety dimensions. Understanding what is required in solar design and permitting — before you begin designing — is the single most effective way to avoid revision cycles.
Accurate panel placement with dimensioned setbacks from ridges, edges, hips, and valleys per International Fire Code access requirements.
Complete electrical path from PV source circuits through combiners, inverters, disconnects, and the utility interconnection point.
Dead load, live load, and seismic or wind uplift analysis confirming the roof structure can support the additional racking and module weight.
Manufacturer datasheets for all major components — panels, inverters, racking, disconnects — demonstrating listed and labeled compliance.
Licensed Professional Engineer certification for structural and/or electrical compliance, mandatory in many US states and Canadian provinces.
All required labels on AC/DC disconnects, rapid shutdown initiation devices, combiner boxes, and service entrance equipment per NEC 690.
Each one of these elements is shaped by design decisions. The single-line diagram reflects your inverter choice and string configuration. The structural calculations depend on racking type and panel weight. The labeling requirements hinge on whether your system uses a rapid shutdown solution. There is no point at which design ends and permit documentation begins — solar design and permitting are continuous, inseparable disciplines.
Understanding the AHJ Review Process
Once the solar design and permitting package is complete, it is submitted to the local AHJ — typically a city or county building department, though some jurisdictions route solar permits through a state energy office or a third-party review agency. The review process is remarkably variable: some AHJs operate fully online portals with 3–5 business day turnarounds; others require paper submissions and take 4–6 weeks or longer.
During review, a plan checker compares your submission against the locally adopted version of the NEC (currently NEC 2023 in most forward-moving jurisdictions, though many still operate on 2017 or 2020), the International Residential Code (IRC) or International Building Code (IBC), the International Fire Code (IFC), and any local amendments layered on top. The amendments are where many permit applications fail. A design that is fully NEC-2023 compliant may still be rejected if it does not account for a local ordinance requiring specific conductor types, additional labeling, or altered setback distances.
The three primary review tracks a solar permit goes through are:
- Electrical review — Verifies conductor sizing, overcurrent protection devices, disconnect placement, grounding, and rapid shutdown compliance per NEC Article 690 and 705.
- Structural review — Validates roof load calculations, racking attachment methods, lag bolt pull-out ratings, and compliance with local wind and seismic requirements.
- Fire and zoning review — Confirms roof setbacks meet IFC access corridor requirements and that the installation complies with any HOA or local zoning overlay restrictions.
All three review tracks feed back directly to design. An electrical correction means a drawing revision. A structural deficiency means recalculating — or potentially moving panels. A fire access violation means redesigning the layout entirely. This is exactly why permit requirements must inform the design, not react to it — and why unified solar design and permitting is the only reliable path to first-submission approval.
The Most Common Causes of AHJ Rejections
After working through thousands of solar design and permitting engagements across dozens of states and multiple countries, our engineering team has identified the most frequent triggers for AHJ correction notices. Eliminating these from your solar design and permitting workflow can cut revision cycles by more than half.
Panel arrays placed too close to roof ridges, hips, valleys, or edges without the required 18-inch or 36-inch fire department access corridors. This is the most common rejection across residential projects and requires a full layout revision to resolve.
Rapid shutdown initiation labels, combined AC/DC disconnect markings, service entrance labels, and PV system hazard warnings are frequently omitted or formatted incorrectly. NEC 690.56 has specific language requirements that many plan sets overlook entirely.
Wire sizing that does not account for temperature correction factors (NEC 310.15), conduit fill, voltage drop across long runs, or the 156% continuous load multiplier required under NEC 690.8(A). This is especially common in large commercial string inverter systems.
Missing rafter span data, absent confirmation of existing roof framing dimensions, or structural calculations that reference generic assumptions instead of site-specific measurements. Many AHJs now require PE-stamped structural letters for any roof older than 15 years.
Designs built to the base NEC without accounting for local amendments — additional disconnects, specific conduit types, or altered setback rules adopted by the local jurisdiction. These rejections are entirely preventable with jurisdiction-aware design templates.
Spec sheets submitted without cross-referencing maximum PV source circuit voltages against inverter MPPT input ranges, or microinverter configurations that exceed module-level power electronics compatibility thresholds.
How to Streamline Design and Permitting Together
The installers and EPC companies with the fastest permit cycles are those who have fundamentally restructured their solar design and permitting workflow. Here is what a high-performing solar design and permitting workflow looks like in practice.
Start with a jurisdiction check, not a layout
Before committing a single panel to a layout, confirm the locally adopted code version, fire access requirements, and any relevant local amendments for the project’s AHJ. This takes 20 minutes and prevents the most costly revisions. At One Place Solar, every new project begins with a jurisdiction profile lookup that captures these variables before the CAD work starts.
Build permit compliance into the CAD template
Using jurisdiction-calibrated CAD templates is a core best practice in solar design and permitting — it eliminates the most common setback and labeling errors automatically. Templates should embed the correct setback values, pre-populate required label language, and include electrical schedule formats that match what the AHJ expects to see. One template update cascades across every project in that jurisdiction — far more efficient than correcting each project individually after rejection.
Loop in structural engineering during design, not after
In jurisdictions requiring PE stamps — and this includes a growing number of US states, most of Canada, and the UK — structural and electrical review should happen while the design is still fluid. A PE identifying an issue during layout can be resolved with a simple module shift. The same issue identified post-submission requires a drawing revision, resubmission, and additional review time. The cost difference is significant.
Automate quality checks before submission
AI-assisted CAD quality verification is now a standard part of advanced solar design and permitting platforms — it flags labeling omissions, conductor sizing errors, and setback violations before the plan set reaches the AHJ’s desk. One Place Solar’s platform incorporates automated QA checks as a mandatory step in the permitting workflow, catching the categories of errors that most commonly trigger correction notices. This is a primary driver behind our 98% first-submission approval rate.
Centralize the entire workflow
One of the most underappreciated sources of delay in solar design and permitting is simply not knowing where a project is in the process. Handoffs between a sales team, a design team, an external PE firm, and a permit runner — all using separate tools and email threads — create gaps where projects stall. A single platform that tracks design status, submission status, AHJ corrections, and PTO progress gives every stakeholder complete visibility, eliminates confusion, and compresses the total cycle time substantially.
The Business Case for Getting This Right
A single revision cycle in solar design and permitting — one correction notice, one design update, one resubmission, one additional review period — typically adds two to four weeks to a project timeline. For a company running dozens of projects simultaneously, that compounding delay translates into serious revenue deferral and customer dissatisfaction. At a conservative project margin of $2,000 per residential install, a company running 50 projects per month that cuts its revision rate in half frees up roughly 25–50 project-weeks of delayed revenue every month. For commercial and utility-scale projects, the math is considerably more compelling.
Beyond the financial argument, there is a competitive one. In a market where every installer is competing on price and timeline, the ability to promise — and consistently deliver — faster solar design and permitting turnaround is a genuine differentiator. Customers notice when a competitor got their system installed in six weeks while theirs took twelve. Referrals, reviews, and repeat business all follow from execution quality.
Solar design and permitting are not two departments or two phases. They are two expressions of the same engineering process, and companies that internalize this reality — and build their workflows accordingly — will outperform those that do not, at every stage of growth. The firms winning the most market share today are not necessarily those with the cheapest pricing or the most panels per truck. They are the ones who can get a permit approved faster, more reliably, and with fewer internal resources spent chasing corrections.
Partnering with a dedicated solar design and permitting firm like One Place Solar means your team can focus entirely on customer acquisition and installation quality, while expert engineers and permit specialists handle the documentation, compliance verification, and AHJ coordination. It is not just an operational improvement — it is a structural competitive advantage that compounds over time as your project volume grows.

