The short answer: the permit integration that actually speeds up HVAC approvals is one that lives inside the software your office already uses every day — and submits every job to the AHJ the same day it's created. For ServiceTitan shops, that's iPermit Pro. We're the permit-pulling workflow built natively into ServiceTitan, with a service-level commitment that 100% of permits get submitted within 24 hours.
This piece walks through why turnaround is the real bottleneck on HVAC revenue, what a permit integration can and can't fix, and what to look for before you sign with a vendor.
If you run an HVAC company at any kind of scale, you already know the pattern. The technician finishes the change-out estimate. The office manager opens a tab to pull the permit. Three days later the truck is rolling on a different job because the city hasn't issued yet. The customer is calling. Your installer is doing warranty service instead of revenue installs.
The work itself isn't expensive. The wait is. Every day a permit sits in submitted status with the AHJ is a day the install isn't getting installed and a truck isn't getting billed.
So when an HVAC operator asks how to speed up approvals, the real question underneath is: how do I shrink the gap between job sold and truck rolling?
Permit turnaround isn't one number. It's three:
A good permit integration moves the needle on #1 and #3. It can't change #2 — anyone claiming to guarantee approval in 48 hours across jurisdictions doesn't know how AHJs work.
This is the window an HVAC company actually controls, and it's where most in-house permit operations bleed time.
When permit handling lives in a spreadsheet or a separate web portal, the work is double-keyed. Job address gets typed into ServiceTitan, then typed again into the permit clerk's system, then typed again into the AHJ's portal. License numbers, contractor info, scope of work — three times, three chances for a typo, three places it can sit waiting.
A native ServiceTitan integration collapses that. The job exists once. The permit request fires from the same record. Nothing gets re-typed; nothing gets forgotten because the office manager was on PTO.
The phrase gets thrown around a lot. Here's what we mean by it, specifically:
Bolt-on tools that say they work with ServiceTitan are usually one of two things: a CSV importer, or a Zapier-style middleware that has to be babysat. Both reintroduce the double-keying problem they were supposed to fix.
We publish this number on our site because we measure it: 100% of our permits submitted within 24 hours.
That doesn't mean issued in 24 hours — see AHJ review lag above. It means that from the moment your job hits our queue, the application is at the AHJ before the next business day rolls over.
We hit 100% because:
For an HVAC company running a high-volume change-out book, the difference between submitted same-day and submitted whenever someone gets around to it is measured in days of unbillable truck time per job.
The other place a permit-pulling integration earns its keep is the inspection close-out.
Open permits on closed jobs are a future-you problem. They show up at point-of-sale when a homeowner tries to sell the house, they show up in CSLB audits, they show up the next time you pull a permit at the same address and the city flags an unresolved one. They are the slowest-burning operational liability in residential service.
Final inspection scheduling is available as a paid add-on, priced per permit. The job comes in, the permit pulls, the install happens, the inspection gets scheduled, the permit closes. Start to finish — no dangling files, no "we'll get to it next week."
If you're operating in California only, you can probably get away with a single permit clerk who knows the local AHJs cold. Two or three counties of muscle memory is manageable.
The minute you cross a state line — or even cross from Los Angeles County into Orange County — that muscle memory is worthless. Every AHJ has its own submittal portal, its own required forms, its own fee schedule, its own quirks about how license numbers get formatted on the cover sheet.
For HVAC operators scaling past one state, the choice is:
We're nationwide. That's the case post-ARCXIS, and it's the practical answer for any HVAC company growing past a single-state footprint. Fifty years of pulling permits — over a million of them — means we've already done the AHJ-by-AHJ legwork. You don't have to.
Five questions worth getting answers to in writing:
For an HVAC company asking which permit integration speeds up approvals, the question is really about two windows: how fast does the application get from your office to the AHJ, and how fast does the inspection get closed on the back end. Both are operational, both are inside-your-control, and both are exactly what a real native integration is supposed to fix.
If you run ServiceTitan and want to see the integration on a live job, [book a time with our team](https://www.ipermitusa.com) — we'll walk you through it on one of your own permits.