Two permits, not one. Every illuminated sign requires both a sign permit (from the planning or building department) and a separate electrical permit (from the electrical division). Missing either permit is a violation. The electrical permit must be pulled by a licensed electrician in most states.

Why Illuminated Signs Require Two Permits

A sign permit confirms your sign meets the location's zoning rules: the right size, type, and placement for your district. An electrical permit covers the safety of the electrical installation: the wiring, the power connection, and the load. These are separate reviews handled by separate departments and inspectors. You cannot energize (turn on) an illuminated sign until both permits are approved and the electrical inspection has passed.

In practice, most sign companies file both permits simultaneously and schedule their work so the electrical inspection happens before the sign is fully commissioned. The sign installer handles the sign permit; a licensed electrician handles the electrical permit.

What Counts as "Illuminated"

Nearly every definition of an illuminated sign in U.S. municipal codes includes:

Signs that are NOT considered illuminated (and don't trigger the electrical permit requirement):

The Sign Permit Process for Illuminated Signs

The sign permit application for an illuminated sign follows the same process as any other sign permit, with additional documentation requirements:

For digital / LED display signs, many cities require additional documentation: hours of operation (some ordinances limit illuminated signs to specific hours), maximum brightness (often capped at 0.3 foot-candles above ambient in residential adjacent areas), and message dwell time (minimum seconds each message displays).

The Electrical Permit Process

The electrical permit is separate from the sign permit and goes through your city's or county's electrical division. Key points:

Special Rules for Digital / LED Signs

Digital and electronic message center (EMC) signs face the most restrictive rules of any sign type. Common restrictions include:

Verify digital sign availability before purchasing. Many business owners have purchased expensive LED message centers only to discover they're prohibited in their zone. Confirm with your planning department that digital signs are allowed at your specific address before making any purchase commitment.

Timeline for Illuminated Sign Permits

Sign TypeSign Permit ReviewElectrical Permit ReviewTotal Estimated Time
Illuminated wall sign (channel letters)1–3 weeks3–7 business days2–4 weeks
Internally lit cabinet sign1–2 weeks3–7 business days2–3 weeks
Neon sign1–2 weeks3–7 business days2–3 weeks
Externally lit sign (spotlight)1–3 weeks3–10 business days2–4 weeks
Digital / LED message center3–8 weeks1–2 weeks4–10 weeks
Any sign in historic districtAdd 3–6 weeks for design reviewSame6–12 weeks total

Grandfathered Illuminated Signs

Many older illuminated signs were installed legally under previous sign ordinances that have since been updated. A sign that was legally permitted under old rules may be "grandfathered" — allowed to remain but not expanded or replaced in-kind without meeting current code. Key points about grandfathered signs:

Illuminated Sign FAQs

Small LED "Open" signs occupy a grey area. Some cities explicitly exempt them if they're under a specific size (often 288 square inches or 2 sq ft) and are plug-in rather than hardwired. Others require a permit for all illuminated window signs. The safest approach: call your planning department and specifically ask about small LED open signs. The call takes two minutes and prevents a violation notice.

External lighting added to an existing non-illuminated sign typically requires both a modification to your sign permit (or a new sign permit treating the illuminated sign as a new sign type) and an electrical permit for the fixture installation. Retrofitting an existing sign with illumination is a modification that triggers the full illuminated sign permit process in most jurisdictions.

If the sign is visible from outside and from a public right-of-way, most sign codes treat it as a window sign subject to their rules — which typically require a permit if illuminated. The physical location of the sign (inside vs. outside the glass) matters less than whether it functions as a sign visible to the public. Confirm your city's specific definition of "window sign."

Planning an illuminated sign?

Download our sign permit application checklist — includes the specific items needed for illuminated signs and electrical permits.

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Disclaimer: Illuminated sign permit requirements vary by city, county, and zoning district. This page is for general informational purposes only. Always verify current permit requirements with your local planning department and ensure your electrical contractor confirms permit requirements before beginning installation.