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NJ Codes, Permits & Inspections

Step 1 of the Construction Order — New Jersey Bathroom & Shower Projects

This page explains how bathroom and shower construction is regulated in New Jersey, what permits and inspections actually do, and why skipping them creates risk—not savings.

This guide follows the TCNA Handbook methods for tile and wet-area assemblies, coordinated with New Jersey code requirements. Permits ensure your build meets both standards.

This is the starting point for any compliant build.


Official Standards & References

Before diving in, here are the authoritative bodies and standards that govern tile and bathroom construction in New Jersey:

Organization What They Do Official Link
TCNA (Tile Council of North America) Publishes the Handbook for Ceramic, Glass, and Stone Tile Installation—the industry bible tcnatile.com
ANSI (American National Standards Institute) Develops A108/A118/A136 standards for tile installation materials and methods ansi.org
NTCA (National Tile Contractors Association) Trade association providing training, certification, and best practices tile-assn.com
ICC (International Code Council) Publishes the IRC, IPC, and other model codes adopted by NJ iccsafe.org
NJ DCA (Department of Community Affairs) Administers the Uniform Construction Code statewide nj.gov/dca/codes

For homeowners: You don’t need to memorize these standards. But knowing they exist—and that your contractor should follow them—protects your investment.


The Governing System: New Jersey Uniform Construction Code (UCC)

All construction in New Jersey is regulated under the Uniform Construction Code (UCC) (N.J.A.C. 5:23).

Key characteristics:

The UCC adopts national model codes, including:

Inspectors enforce the intent of the code: safety, sanitation, drainage, and durability.


Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ)

The Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) is the local Construction Office or Construction Official assigned to your municipality.

Finding Your Local Construction Office

Every NJ municipality has a Construction Office. To find yours:

  1. Search “[your town] NJ construction office” online
  2. Visit NJ League of Municipalities Directory
  3. Call your town hall and ask for the Construction Department

What the AHJ Does

Important Realities for Homeowners

Pro tip: If your contractor dismisses permits or avoids inspections, that’s a red flag. Licensed NJ contractors (like us—HIC #13VH10808800) work with inspectors, not around them.


When a Permit Is Required

A permit is typically required when a bathroom or shower project includes:

Work That May Be Exempt

Purely cosmetic work—such as painting, replacing faucet handles, or swapping a toilet of the same type—may be exempt. However:

Permits protect both the homeowner and the contractor. They create accountability and legal documentation.


How to Apply for a Permit in New Jersey

Step-by-Step Process for Homeowners

1. Determine Permit Requirements

2. Gather Required Documents Typical requirements include:

3. Submit the Application

4. Wait for Approval

5. Schedule Inspections

Permit Fees in New Jersey

Permit fees vary by municipality but typically include:

Fee Type Typical Range
Building permit (base) $75-$150
Plumbing sub-permit $50-$100
Electrical sub-permit $50-$100
Plan review (if required) $50-$200

Note: Some towns calculate fees based on project value. Always confirm fees before starting.


What Permits Actually Do (Plain Language)

A permit:

A permit does not:

It ensures the work meets minimum life-safety and sanitation standards.


The Inspection Process: What to Expect

Typical Inspection Sequence for Bathroom/Shower Projects

While details vary by municipality, most bathroom and shower builds follow this inspection order:

Stage What’s Inspected Typical Duration
1. Rough Plumbing Drain location, slope intent, venting, supply lines 15-30 minutes
2. Rough Framing Structural changes, blocking, benches, niches 15-30 minutes
3. Rough Electrical Wiring, boxes, GFCI protection, fan venting 15-30 minutes
4. Waterproofing/Pan Slope, drain integration, water containment 15-45 minutes
5. Final Fixtures installed, systems operational, safety verified 30-60 minutes

How to Schedule Inspections

  1. Your contractor typically handles this (make sure this is in your contract)
  2. Call the Construction Office or use their online portal
  3. Provide the permit number and requested inspection type
  4. Be available—inspections are usually scheduled for AM or PM windows
  5. Ensure the work area is accessible and well-lit

What Happens During an Inspection

The inspector will:

If an inspection fails:

Homeowner tip: You have the right to be present during inspections. It’s a good opportunity to learn about your project and ask questions.


Working With Your Municipality: Tips for Homeowners

Before the Project

During the Project

After the Project


Why Inspectors Focus on What They Do

Inspectors focus on items that:

They are not evaluating aesthetics. They are verifying assemblies—the systems that keep water where it belongs and protect your home’s structure.


TCNA Compliance: Why It Matters

The TCNA Handbook for Ceramic, Glass, and Stone Tile Installation is the definitive reference for tile installation methods in North America.

What TCNA Provides

Key TCNA Methods for Bathroom/Shower Projects

Method Description Application
B412 Cementitious backer unit with waterproof membrane Shower walls over wood or steel studs
B414 Foam backer board with bonded waterproofing Lightweight shower wall systems
B421 Bonded waterproof membrane shower receptor Modern shower floors with surface-applied waterproofing
B422 Shower receptor with traditional membrane Clamping drain systems
EJ171 Movement joint design guide Where soft joints are required

Why Homeowners Should Care

When your contractor says “we follow TCNA methods,” they’re referencing a specific, documented assembly—not an opinion. This creates:

Example: TCNA Method B421 specifies a bonded waterproof membrane shower receptor with surface-applied waterproofing—including required slope, drain type, and membrane continuity.


ANSI Standards: The Technical Foundation

ANSI (American National Standards Institute) publishes the technical standards that underpin TCNA methods:

Standard What It Covers Why It Matters
ANSI A108 Installation methods for ceramic tile Defines how tile is properly installed
ANSI A118.1 Dry-set portland cement mortar Standard thinset specifications
ANSI A118.4 Modified dry-set cement mortar Enhanced mortars for wet areas
ANSI A118.10 Load-bearing bonded waterproof membranes Critical for shower pans
ANSI A118.12 Crack isolation membranes Prevents substrate cracks from telegraphing
ANSI A136.1 Organic adhesives (mastics) When mastics can/cannot be used

What ANSI A118.10 Means for Your Shower

ANSI A118.10 is the standard for load-bearing, bonded waterproof membranes—the type used in modern surface-applied shower waterproofing. A membrane that meets this standard:

Homeowner insight: Ask your contractor if their waterproofing system is ANSI A118.10 compliant. If they don’t know what that means, consider it a warning sign.

Where to Access ANSI Standards


Approved Alternatives & Performance-Based Approval

The UCC allows inspectors to approve alternative methods when:

This is why mixing incompatible systems often fails inspection—performance cannot be verified when components from different systems are combined.


Common Misunderstandings

Myth Reality
“It passed inspection before, so it must be fine” Past approvals do not override current code requirements
“Tile standards are code” Tile standards guide best practice; inspectors enforce building/plumbing code
“Curbless means no rules” Curbless showers are performance-based, not exempt from requirements
“We don’t need a permit for this” When in doubt, call your town—unpermitted work creates liability
“Inspectors are just trying to slow us down” Inspectors are protecting you and your investment
“TCNA is just a suggestion” TCNA methods represent industry consensus on proper installation

What Homeowners Should Ask Up Front

Before your project begins, ask your contractor:

Clear answers early prevent delays and redesigns later.


Resources for NJ Homeowners

Resource Purpose Link
NJ DCA Codes & Standards Official code information nj.gov/dca/codes
NJ UCC Regulations Full text of N.J.A.C. 5:23 nj.gov/dca/codes/codreg
NJ DCA License Verification Verify contractor licensing newjersey.mylicense.com
TCNA Handbook Tile installation methods tcnatile.com
TCNA ANSI Standards FAQ Overview of tile standards tcnatile.com/faqs
NTCA Contractor certifications & standards tile-assn.com
ICC Code Library Model building codes codes.iccsafe.org

Key Takeaways


Next Step in the Build Phase

Shower Pans, Slopes & Drains How water is managed before tile is installed—and why most failures start here.

A compliant build starts with permits and ends with verification.