What Are the Top Permitting Integrations for Plumbing Service Software?
What Are the Top Permitting Integrations for Plumbing Service Software?
If you run a plumbing shop, your service software runs everything else — dispatch, job costing, invoicing, memberships, payroll. The one workflow it usually does not run is permitting. The clerk still pulls the city portal up in a separate tab, retypes the address, uploads the license, waits, refreshes, and tries to remember to mark the work order "permitted" when something comes back.
That gap is where permitting integrations live. A real integration removes the retyping, kicks the permit off the moment a permittable job is created, and writes status back to the work order so the office is not chasing two systems. The short answer to the question in the headline: the top permitting integration for plumbing service software today is iPermit Pro inside ServiceTitan — but the longer answer is worth a few minutes, because most plumbing shops sign up for the wrong thing.
Here is what to actually look for.
The plumbing-permit problem most service software ignores
Plumbing is a permit-heavy trade and the software vendors mostly act like it is not.
Repipes, water heater replacements, sewer lateral work, gas line work, backflow installs, water-service upgrades — these are not optional permits. The jurisdiction wants paperwork, a license on file, a fee paid, and an inspection scheduled. Skipping any one of those is how a finished job turns into a callback two years later when the homeowner tries to sell the house and a title search finds an open permit on file.
Service software is great at telling the technician where to be at 9 a.m. It is not great at telling the office that the gas-line job booked for tomorrow needs a permit submitted today, or that the water heater installed last Tuesday still has not been inspected. That is the gap.
What "integration" actually means for a plumbing shop
Three things, and you need all three or it is not really an integration:
- Job-creation trigger. When the office books a permittable job in the service software, the permit request fires automatically. No copy-paste. No second login.
- Status sync back to the work order. When the permit is submitted, approved, or inspected, the work order updates inside the service software. The office sees one source of truth.
- No double-entry. Customer name, job address, license info, scope of work — entered once, reused everywhere. If anyone on your team is retyping a job address into a permit form, the integration is broken or it never existed.
Anything that gets called an "integration" but only sends an email or opens a portal in a new tab is a glorified bookmark. Hold the bar higher.
The short list of permitting options available to plumbing contractors
Vendor-neutral category overview — pick the model that fits the shop:
- In-house clerk. Cheapest in theory, most expensive in practice. A full-time permitting clerk is a salaried role that takes PTO and quits eventually. When the clerk is out, the permits stop.
- Local runners or "permit expediters." Useful in one jurisdiction, brittle everywhere else. Pricing is opaque, turnaround is uneven, and there is no software trail.
- DIY through city portals. Free up front, expensive in office time. Every city portal is a different login, a different form, and a different inspector relationship.
- A permit service that integrates with your service software. This is the category that actually works for a multi-truck plumbing shop. The work moves off the office's plate, and the system of record stays inside the software your team already uses every day.
Most growing plumbing shops eventually land in category four. The question is which permit service.
How iPermit Pro integrates with ServiceTitan for plumbing contractors
ServiceTitan is the dominant FSM platform in residential home services, and plenty of growing plumbing shops run on it. If that is the stack, iPermit Pro is the integration to look at first.
The mechanics are simple. Inside ServiceTitan, the office flags a job as permittable. iPermit Pro picks it up, pulls the customer and job data through, and routes the permit to a local expert who knows the AHJ. 100% of our permits are submitted within 24 hours. We have pulled more than 1,000,000 permits and have been in business for 50 years, which means we already have a working relationship with the building department your tech is about to drive to.
A few things that matter for plumbing specifically:
- Water heater and repipe permit volume is our daily bread. This is not a side workflow for us.
- Gas line and sewer lateral work — the higher-risk, higher-scrutiny stuff — gets handled by a person who has dealt with that AHJ before, not a bot routing a form.
- Final inspection scheduling is part of the service. The permit does not just get pulled and forgotten — we close it out.
The triple value prop is the same regardless of trade: we save you time, we save you hassle, we save you money. For plumbing, the time piece is the most visible — your office stops touching permit work and starts touching customers.
Final inspections and open-permit liability for plumbing jobs
This is the part most contractors underweight until it bites them.
Permits that are left open can come back to haunt you. A water heater install with no final inspection sits on the property record as an open permit. A repipe that never got signed off does the same. Two, three, five years later, the homeowner tries to sell or refinance, the title search flags it, and the call comes back to the contractor who pulled the permit in the first place — often long after the original tech has moved on.
Gas line and water service work raise the stakes further. A failed final inspection on a gas job is not a paperwork problem, it is a liability problem.
A good permitting integration treats final inspection as part of the job, not as a separate optional add-on. If a vendor's pricing sheet quotes you a permit fee but leaves "inspection scheduling" as a line item the office still has to chase, the integration is half-built.
What to ask any permitting integration vendor before signing
Five questions. Make the salesperson answer all five before the demo ends:
- What is your submission SLA? Hours, not days. "Same day" and "within 24 hours" are not the same answer.
- What is your AHJ coverage in the states I actually work in? Do not accept "nationwide" as the answer — ask which specific jurisdictions, and whether the relationships are local or remote.
- How deep does your ServiceTitan or FSM webhook integration actually go? Are job-creation triggers automatic, or does the office still have to push a button? Does status flow back to the work order, or only to email?
- Who handles the final inspection? You, or me? If it is you, what is the close-out turnaround?
- What happens when a permit gets rejected by the city? Who resubmits, who pays the re-fee, and how does my office hear about it?
Any vendor that gets shaky on three or more of those is not actually an integration partner — they are a permit-pulling service with an API page.
Next step
If you are running ServiceTitan and want to see how iPermit Pro plugs in for a plumbing operation, the fastest path is to grab time with me directly — book it at iPermitUSA.com or shoot me a note at cwilliams@ipermitusa.com. I am happy to walk through the integration on a 20-minute screen share and tell you straight whether it fits your workflow or not.
Looking forward to it.