Rule of thumb: Budget 2–4 weeks for standard sign permits in most U.S. cities. Double that for illuminated signs in large cities, and triple it for anything in a historic district.

Timelines by City Size

City SizeSimple Wall SignIlluminated SignMonument / PylonHistoric District
Small / township3–7 business days5–10 business days1–2 weeks3–6 weeks
Mid-size city5–15 business days2–3 weeks2–4 weeks4–8 weeks
Large city (300K+)2–4 weeks3–5 weeks4–6 weeks6–12 weeks
Major metro (NYC, LA, Chicago)3–6 weeks4–8 weeks6–10 weeks10–20 weeks

What Affects Review Time

Several factors can push your permit review beyond the standard timeline:

How to Track Your Application

Most cities now offer online permit tracking. After submitting, you should receive a permit application number — use this to check status through the city's online portal. What the status codes typically mean:

If you haven't heard anything after the city's stated review period, call the permit office directly. Reference your application number and ask for an estimated completion date.

Planning Around a Grand Opening

The biggest mistake new business owners make is ordering a sign after signing a lease and assuming it will arrive and get permitted before opening day. A realistic timeline for a new business's signage:

In a best-case scenario for a mid-size city: 6–8 weeks from starting the process to a sign on your building. In a large city: 10–14 weeks. Start the permitting process the moment you sign your lease — not the week before opening.

In the meantime, apply for a temporary banner permit to identify your business during the permitting and fabrication period.

Timeline FAQs

Some cities offer expedited review for an additional fee (typically 50–100% surcharge on the permit fee). This is more common in larger cities with formal permit systems. Ask your planning department directly whether an expedited option exists and what the cost is. Not all sign permit types qualify for expedited review even in cities that offer the option — historic district reviews, for example, typically cannot be expedited because they depend on a review board meeting schedule.

Most cities give a response window for permit comments — typically 30–90 days. If you don't respond within this window, the application may be voided or expire, requiring you to start the process over and pay the fee again. Set a calendar reminder the day you receive comments and respond as quickly as possible — a faster response gets you back into the review queue faster.

Estimate Your Permit Fee

While you're waiting on timeline, get a ballpark on what the permit will cost with our fee estimator.

Estimate Fees →

Disclaimer: Review timelines are estimates based on typical municipal permit processing. Actual timelines vary by city and current workload. Contact your local planning department for current processing times before planning your signage schedule.