If your project is a simple interior renovation with no structural changes (painting, flooring, non-structural finishes) you do not need an architect for permit drawings. A BCIN designer or no professional at all may be sufficient. We will confirm this during an initial call and tell you directly if our involvement is not warranted for your scope.
A building permit in Toronto is not issued to a homeowner. It is issued to a set of drawings.
The Toronto Building Division reviews drawings against the Ontario Building Code and Zoning Bylaw 569-2013. What determines whether your permit clears review on first submission or returns with deficiency notices is the completeness, accuracy, and coordination of the architectural package submitted. An incomplete package does not get reviewed, it gets returned before substantive review even begins.
Quadrant Architects prepares residential building permit drawings in Toronto for custom homes, multiplexes, additions, garden suites, and laneway suites across all Toronto districts, East York, North York, Etobicoke, Scarborough, Leslieville, Riverdale, the Annex, High Park, and the inner suburbs. We are OAA-licensed with full professional liability insurance.
A complete residential permit submission to the Toronto Building Division contains the architectural drawings and all supporting technical documentation required for the specific project type. Missing a single required component returns the application as incomplete before review begins.
Structural drawings prepared and stamped by a licensed structural engineer are required for new construction, additions, and any project involving structural alterations. We coordinate structural drawings with the architectural package before submission so both sets are fully aligned. Mismatched architectural and structural drawings are one of the most common causes of examiner comments on residential submissions.
Basement apartments: ceiling height confirmation (minimum 1.95 m under OBC), egress window compliance, fire separation between the unit and the remainder of the house, and mechanical ventilation documentation.
The Ontario Building Code has two primary residential compliance paths. Which one applies determines the entire scope of documentation, fire separation requirements, mechanical system design, and egress analysis required. Preparing drawings under the wrong path results in permit rejection at first submission.
Part 9 governs buildings that are three storeys or less in building height and have a building area of 600 square metres or less. It applies to most detached houses, semi-detached houses, and simple duplexes within the house form. Part 9 uses prescriptive standards, span tables, standard wall assemblies, defined minimums, and is the simpler compliance path.
Part 3 applies to any residential building with three or more units, regardless of size or height. Every triplex, fourplex, and multiplex conversion in Toronto falls under Part 3. Part 3 requires engineered structural design, fire-resistance-rated assemblies, a full egress analysis, mechanical engineer coordination, and in some configurations a sprinkler system. It is a substantially more demanding compliance path.
A common mistake on Toronto multiplex projects is receiving drawings quoted under Part 9 when the unit count requires Part 3. The permit application is rejected at examiner review, drawings must be substantially revised, and the review clock restarts. We determine the correct code path before the first concept sketch on every project.
A renovation permit in Toronto is required whenever a residential renovation involves structural changes, changes to fire separations, new mechanical or electrical systems, changes of use, or any modification to the building envelope. The threshold is not the dollar value of the work, it is whether the work affects structure, systems, or safety.
Renovation permit packages for Toronto residential projects typically require:
Renovation permits across Toronto neighbourhoods, from Annex Victorian semi-detached houses to North York bungalow conversions to Leslieville row houses, each carry specific zoning conditions and heritage considerations that affect what can be submitted and approved. We confirm the applicable requirements for your specific address before drawings begin.
Toronto renovation permits use the same e-permit submission system as new construction permits. The same completeness requirements apply. An incomplete renovation permit submission is returned before review begins, identical to new construction.Toronto Building Division permit applications can be tracked through the City’s Development Applications Public Portal at toronto.ca. Search by address or application number to see the current review stage. Understanding what each status means tells you what is actually happening with your application and what action, if any, is required.
| Status | Description |
|---|---|
| Application Received | The Building Division has received the submission. Completeness check has not yet begun. |
| Under Review | The application is assigned to an examiner and active technical review is in progress against the OBC and Bylaw 569-2013. |
| Revisions Required / Comments Issued | The examiner has issued comments requiring drawing revisions or additional information. The applicant must respond with coordinated revisions before review continues. |
| Revision Under Review | Resubmitted drawings are being reviewed against the issued comments. If comments are fully resolved, the application advances. If not, a further revision cycle is issued. |
| Approved: Awaiting Fee Payment | Technical review is complete. The permit fee must be paid before the permit document is issued. |
| Permit Issued | The building permit has been issued. Construction may begin. Site inspections must be scheduled at prescribed stages. |
The stage where most residential applications stall is Revisions Required. The examiner has reviewed the drawings and issued comments, typically requiring revised dimensions, additional fire separation details, corrected zoning calculations, or updated structural coordination. How those comments are responded to determines whether the application advances on the next cycle or generates another revision round.
A complete, coordinated response that addresses the root of each comment, not just the surface issue, closes the cycle. A partial response that corrects the identified item without checking whether the same issue appears elsewhere in the drawing set generates a further round of comments. We track every examiner comment across the full drawing package before preparing any revision response.
Toronto’s Building Division handles residential permit review across all city districts through a centralised e-permit system. While the process is the same city-wide, permit complexity varies significantly by neighbourhood depending on zoning overlays, heritage designations, and EHON eligibility. What we have encountered across Toronto districts:
These inner-city neighbourhoods have active EHON multiplex permitting and a mix of RD and RS zoning designations. Angular plane requirements from rear lot lines shape multiplex and addition design on narrower lots. Heritage overlays affect blocks adjacent to conservation districts in Riverdale. Part 3 multiplex permits are common here.
Larger residential lots with more permissive setback conditions relative to the inner city. Bungalow lots in Willowdale and Bathurst Manor are active targets for multiplex conversion and replacement custom homes. Development charge obligations on new units are a frequent project cost consideration.
Etobicoke lots tend to be wider and deeper than inner-city Toronto, with more flexibility for additions and garden suites. Lakeshore corridor properties face specific grading and stormwater conditions. Heritage designations are active in Kingsway-area streets.
Scarborough residential lots frequently offer more rear yard depth, supporting garden suite feasibility on lots that inner-city properties cannot achieve. Building Division review in Scarborough districts follows the same Toronto-wide process. Ravine and environmental protection overlays affect properties along the Bluffs escarpment.
Dense inner-city neighbourhoods with strong heritage character and active heritage overlay designations. Multiplex conversion permit applications on semi-detached and detached houses are common. Heritage façade retention conditions affect addition and alteration design on designated properties.
Toronto building permit fees are calculated based on construction value and type. The City applies a fee per square metre for new construction and additions. Development charges apply to projects creating new dwelling units, including multiplex conversions and secondary suites, and are updated annually. The fee structure for residential projects includes:
An occupancy permit, formally a Certificate of Occupancy in Ontario, confirms that a completed building or unit may be legally occupied. It follows a final inspection by the Building Division confirming construction was completed in accordance with the approved permit drawings and the Ontario Building Code.
For new residential buildings, new garden suites, laneway suites, and multiplex units, an occupancy permit is required before any unit can be legally occupied or rented. A unit rented without an occupancy permit exposes the owner to bylaw enforcement and potential liability issues if something goes wrong. We coordinate the required inspections and prepare any documentation needed to support the occupancy permit application through to issuance.
Incomplete first submission
Wrong code path
Zoning non-compliance
Uncoordinated consultant drawings
Missing planning approval
Every one of these causes is identifiable and addressable before submission. We conduct a pre-submission coordination review, checking the full package for completeness, code compliance, zoning accuracy, and consultant coordination, before the application goes to the Building Division.
We work across all Toronto districts. The zoning conditions that apply in Leslieville are not the same as those in Willowdale or the Kingsway. We confirm the specific conditions for your lot and address before any drawings begin.
A: For projects requiring Part 3 Ontario Building Code compliance, all multiplexes of three or more units, stacked townhouses, and mixed-use buildings, drawings must be prepared by or under the supervision of an OAA-licensed architect. For Part 9 projects such as detached houses and simple additions, a BCIN-certified designer may prepare the drawings, but an OAA architect provides mandatory professional liability insurance coverage and stronger regulatory competence for complex or heritage-adjacent projects. If you are unsure which applies to your project, we confirm the correct credential requirement during the initial feasibility review and tell you directly if a BCIN designer is sufficient.
A: Toronto building permit fees are calculated based on construction value and floor area, using fee schedules published by the City of Toronto Building Division and updated periodically. For new residential construction and additions, fees are applied per square metre of gross floor area. Projects creating new dwelling units, multiplex conversions, garden suites, laneway suites, attract development charges that are separate from and often larger than the permit fee itself. Development charge rates are updated annually and directly affect project economics on intensification projects. We confirm the applicable fee components for your specific project scope and type during the pre-application review.
A: A complete, compliant first submission for a straightforward residential project, a house addition or a simple renovation, typically takes 10 to 16 weeks through Toronto Building Division review. Multiplex projects under Part 3 typically take 12 to 20 weeks depending on documentation complexity and examiner comment cycles. Projects requiring Committee of Adjustment approval before the permit can be submitted add 3 to 5 months to the overall timeline. City review timelines also fluctuate with Development Review queue volume. The most reliable way to shorten your permit timeline is a thorough, complete, and coordinated first submission.
A: The City of Toronto’s Development Applications Public Portal at toronto.ca allows applicants to search by address or application number to check current permit status. The statuses you may see are: Application Received (completeness check pending), Under Review (assigned to examiner), Revisions Required (comments issued, response needed), Revision Under Review (revised drawings being assessed), Approved: Awaiting Fee Payment (technical review complete), and Permit Issued (permit document available, construction may begin). If your application shows Revisions Required, comments have been issued to the applicant. We respond to examiner comments with full consultant coordination before resubmitting.
A; A renovation permit in Toronto is required whenever a residential renovation involves structural changes, removal of load-bearing walls, creation of new floor area, changes to fire separations between units, new mechanical or electrical systems, changes of use, or any modification to the building envelope. The threshold is not the renovation budget, it is whether the work affects structure, systems, or safety. Cosmetic work such as painting, flooring, and non-structural cabinet installation does not require a permit. If the scope of your renovation is unclear, a brief feasibility review before work begins confirms whether a permit is required.
A: A building permit is issued before construction begins and confirms that the proposed drawings comply with the Ontario Building Code and Toronto Zoning Bylaw 569-2013. An occupancy permit is issued after construction is complete following a final inspection confirming the finished building was built in accordance with the approved permit drawings. For new secondary units, garden suites, laneway suites, basement apartments, an occupancy permit is required before the unit can be legally occupied or rented. Both are issued by the City of Toronto Building Division.
A: No. The Ontario Building Code requires a valid building permit to be in place before construction begins on any project that requires one. Beginning construction before permit issuance risks a stop-work order from the City of Toronto, financial penalties, and a requirement to expose or remove completed work for inspection. The only exception is emergency stabilisation work required to prevent immediate structural danger, which must be reported to the Building Division immediately. For all other residential projects, construction cannot begin until the permit document is in hand.
A: If the Toronto Building Division returns a permit application as incomplete, it means one or more required components were missing from the submission, typically a required study, an unsigned form, a missing consultant drawing, or a drawing set that does not meet the City’s submission standards. The application is not placed in the review queue until completeness is confirmed. Resubmitting the complete package restarts the completeness check. Applications returned as incomplete before substantive review do not count against permit timeline benchmarks. We conduct a pre-submission completeness audit against the Toronto Building Division’s submission checklist before any application is filed.
Every member of our team has advanced education in architecture and design

M.Arch Architect, OAA
Principal

M.Arch.BCIN
Principal

M.Arch.BCIN
Principal