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Permit Benchmarks

Building Permit Activity & Wait Times in Kelowna (2026)

13
median days
39.8
average days
1,467
permits (12 mo)
$604K
avg project value

Across 1,467 building permits issued in Kelowna, BC over the trailing 12 months, the typical permit took a median of 13 days from application to issuance, with an average of 39.8 days. The average runs higher than the median because a minority of large or complex projects pull the mean upward, which is exactly why the median is the number to plan around.

Kelowna permit activity at a glance

MetricValue
Median days to issuance13 days
Average days to issuance39.8 days
Permits issued (last 12 months)1,467
Average permits per month133
Average project value$604K
Total declared project value$770.4M
Cross-city median (6 timing cities)28 days

How Kelowna compares

The median across the 6 cities in our dataset that publish processing-time data is 28 days. Kelowna sits 15 days faster than that benchmark. A wait time below it means permits here generally move faster; above it means the opposite. Either way, the spread between fast and slow categories within a single city is usually wider than the gap between cities, so the by-work-type table below matters more than any single headline number.

Permit activity by type of work in Kelowna

Not all permits move at the same speed. Simple alterations clear far faster than new-building applications. Here is how the most common work types in Kelowna broke down over the last 12 months:

Type of work Permits Median days Avg days
Commercial - Renovation 225 22 35.4
Single Family Dwelling - Renovation 190 8 27.2
Sign 169 4 24.1
Demolition 104 0 1.8
Swimming Pool - In ground 88 14 46.6
Single Family Dwelling - Renovation with Suite 62 13 42
Single Family Dwelling - New 62 28 59.1
Decommission - Illegal Dwelling 58 0 0.4
Accessory Structure - New 55 21 61
Single Family Dwelling - Restoration 48 5 11.2
Single Family Dwelling - Addition 44 17 26.5
Apartment Building - Renovation 41 16 43.6

Permit volume trend

Kelowna issued 1,467 permits over the trailing 12 months , representing $770.4M in total declared project value. The busiest single month was Oct 2025 (169 permits). Volume drives wait times: months with a surge in applications tend to push processing times up as review staff work through the backlog.

What drives building permit wait times

Permit processing time is rarely about a single step. The biggest levers are:

How to read these benchmarks

These are permit-volume and application-to-issuance timing benchmarks, they measure how long permits that were issued took to get there. They are not approval rates: the underlying dataset has no approval-versus-denial field, so we never report rejection percentages. Use the median as your realistic planning number, the average as your worst-case buffer, and the by-work-type table to set expectations for your specific project. The single best way to stay on the fast end is to submit a complete, compliant application the first time.

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Compare other cities

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Source: Wolf Codes permit dataset, 4,291,388 Canadian building permits. Figures cover the trailing 12 months, analysed June 2026. Permit-volume and (where available) application-to-issuance timing benchmarks from the Wolf Codes permit dataset. The data has no approval/denial column, so these are NOT approval rates — they measure how many permits were issued, their declared value, and how long issued permits took where a processing-time field is published. Only cities with at least 50 qualifying permits are reported.