Permit-Ready vs Permit-Approved Steel Building Drawings in Canada
What the Difference Means Before You Build
“Permit-ready” and “permit-approved” sound close enough that many steel building owners treat them as the same thing.
They are not the same.
Permit-ready drawings are prepared for submission. Permit-approved drawings have gone through the authority having jurisdiction’s review process and have been accepted for the permit scope, often with conditions, notes, required revisions, inspections, or additional approvals still attached.
That difference matters.
A steel building project can have professional drawings, supplier drawings, foundation details, reaction tables, and a polished permit package, but still not be approved by the municipality or reviewing authority. The AHJ may ask for clarification, revised drawings, zoning confirmation, site plan information, grading details, foundation changes, energy code information, fire/life safety coordination, professional forms, or updated supplier documents.
The problem begins when someone treats “ready to submit” as “ready to build.”
For steel buildings, that mistake can affect ordering, fabrication, anchor placement, foundation construction, inspection timing, erection, and project cost.
This guide explains the real difference between permit-ready and permit-approved drawings in Canada, what each status does and does not mean, and what should be confirmed before a steel building moves from paperwork to construction.
Quick Answer
Permit-ready steel building drawings are prepared for submission to the authority having jurisdiction based on available project information and defined scope. Permit-approved drawings have been reviewed and accepted by the AHJ for the permit scope, often with conditions, notes, required inspections, approved revisions, or additional requirements.
Permit-ready does not mean construction can begin. Permit-approved does not mean all fabrication, shop drawing, field condition, inspection, zoning, site plan, development, grading, fire, or future change issues are automatically resolved.
In Canada, drawing status and permit requirements can vary by province, territory, municipality, AHJ process, project type, building use, site conditions, professional scope, and whether separate zoning, site plan, development, grading, fire, or inspection requirements apply.
The Difference in Plain Language
| Drawing Status | What It Means | What It Does Not Mean |
| Permit-ready | Drawings are prepared for permit submission based on available project information and defined scope | The AHJ has approved the project |
| Permit-submitted | The package has been submitted for review | Review is complete |
| Review comments issued / under review | The AHJ has reviewed some or all of the package or issued comments | The project is automatically approved |
| Permit-approved | The AHJ has accepted the permit scope and issued approval or permit authorization | All construction issues, inspections, supplier details, field changes, and other approvals are solved |
| Issued for construction | Drawings are intended to guide construction within their scope | Construction can ignore permit conditions, field conditions, shop drawings, or inspections |
The safest way to think about it is this:
Permit-ready means the package may be ready to ask for permission.
Permit-approved means the AHJ has responded and accepted the permit scope under the applicable review process.
They are different project stages.
The Word “Ready” Causes the Problem
“Permit-ready” sounds final. That is why it creates risk.
In many projects, permit-ready simply means the drawings have been prepared with the intent of being submitted to the AHJ. They may include enough information to begin municipal review, but they have not yet been tested against the reviewer’s comments, local interpretations, required forms, zoning checks, or site-specific concerns.
Permit-ready drawings may include:
- building plans
- structural drawings
- supplier drawings
- foundation drawings
- design notes
- site plan information
- code references
- professional seals where required
- engineering schedules or forms where applicable
- project specifications
- energy code information where applicable
- other submission documents
But the phrase does not automatically mean the city, municipality, province, territory, building official, plans examiner, or other reviewing authority has accepted the package.
A permit-ready package can still receive comments.
That is normal.
The issue is not that comments were received. The issue is when the project team assumes comments will not happen and starts making construction decisions too early.
Permit-Approved Is Not the Same as “Nothing Else Can Change”
Permit approval is important, but it should not be misunderstood either.
Permit-approved drawings usually mean the AHJ has reviewed and accepted the permit submission for the defined scope, subject to applicable conditions, code basis, permit notes, inspection requirements, and approved documents.
Permit-approved drawings should mean the approved set and approved revision, not an earlier permit-ready or submitted version.
Permit approval does not automatically mean:
- shop drawings are reviewed
- fabrication details are finalized
- supplier revisions are current
- field changes are accepted
- anchors are coordinated with final base plates
- foundation reactions will never change
- site conditions match assumptions
- inspections will pass automatically
- zoning, site plan, development, environmental, or fire approvals are fully resolved if separate approvals apply
- construction can ignore permit notes or conditions
- every contractor method is accepted
- every future change is covered
Permit approval is a major step. It is not a blank cheque for anything that happens afterward.
If the project changes after approval, the drawings, permit, engineering scope, or AHJ review may need to be revisited.
Why This Matters More on Steel Building Projects
Steel buildings are often assembled from multiple document streams.
A typical project may involve:
- supplier drawings
- permit drawings
- sealed structural drawings
- foundation drawings
- anchor layouts
- reaction tables
- shop drawings
- erection drawings
- site plans
- grading information
- architectural drawings
- permit comments
- revised submissions
- inspection notes
That makes status control important.
A steel supplier may issue drawings for quotation, approval, permit, fabrication, or construction support. An engineer may prepare foundation drawings from supplier reactions. A contractor may schedule concrete based on anchor drawings. A municipality may review the permit package. A fabricator may work from shop drawings.
If one team member says “the drawings are ready” and another hears “the permit is approved,” the project can move ahead on the wrong assumption.
For steel buildings, that misunderstanding can show up as:
- fabricated steel based on old revisions
- anchors placed before permit comments are resolved
- foundation work based on preliminary reactions
- shop drawings prepared before permit changes are reflected
- erection delayed because approval conditions were missed
- inspection issues because site work does not match approved documents
- cost increases because revisions happen after work is already committed
The status of the drawings matters because the project moves from paper to concrete and steel very quickly.
A Simple Status Ladder for Steel Building Drawings
A safer way to manage the project is to separate drawing status into clear stages.
1. Concept Drawings
These may show size, layout, general configuration, or supplier proposal information.
They are useful for planning and pricing, but they are not permit approval and should not be treated as construction documents.
2. Permit-Ready Drawings
These are prepared for submission to the AHJ based on current information and defined scope.
They may be sealed where required, but the AHJ has not necessarily approved them.
3. Submitted Drawings
These have been sent to the municipality or reviewing authority.
Submission starts the review process. It does not end it.
4. Commented Drawings
The AHJ has issued comments, requests, or deficiencies.
At this stage, the drawings may need clarification, revision, additional documentation, or resubmission.
5. Permit-Approved Drawings
The AHJ has accepted the permit submission or issued the permit for the defined scope.
The approval may include conditions, notes, inspections, and limitations.
6. Issued-for-Construction Drawings
These are intended to guide construction, but they must still align with permit approval, supplier information, shop drawings, site conditions, and any required revisions.
7. Revised or As-Built Information
If changes occur during construction, updated drawings, review, or documentation may be needed depending on the scope and AHJ requirements.
This ladder prevents a common mistake: jumping from Step 2 to Step 6 without Step 5.
Permit-Ready Drawings: What They Should Usually Include
Permit-ready drawings should be prepared to support AHJ review. The exact package depends on the project, municipality, province or territory, building use, site conditions, and scope.
For a steel building, permit-ready documents may need to address:
- project location
- building use
- building size and layout
- occupancy and code basis where applicable
- site plan information
- foundation information
- supplier drawings
- structural drawings
- design loads
- foundation reactions
- anchor coordination
- fire and life safety information where applicable
- energy code requirements where applicable
- grading or drainage information where applicable
- professional seals, schedules, or forms where required
- specifications or notes
- other AHJ submission requirements
The goal of permit-ready drawings is to provide enough clear information for the AHJ to review the proposal.
The goal is not to guarantee approval before the AHJ has reviewed it.
Permit-Approved Drawings: What Changes After Review
Permit approval changes the project status because the reviewing authority has accepted the submission for the permit scope.
After approval, the project team should identify:
- which drawings were approved
- which revision dates were approved
- whether any conditions apply
- whether additional approvals are still required
- whether inspections are required
- whether site work must follow specific notes
- whether stamped documents must be kept on site
- whether revised drawings are required before certain work
- whether shop drawings or supplier revisions still need coordination
- whether foundation or anchor details changed during review
The approved set matters.
A contractor should not assume that an older permit-ready set is the same as the permit-approved set. The approved drawings may include revisions, notes, responses, or conditions that change what can be built.
The Dangerous Middle: Permit Comments
The stage between permit-ready and permit-approved is where many delays happen.
The AHJ may issue comments such as:
- provide revised structural drawings
- clarify building use
- provide foundation design
- provide supplier design criteria
- provide professional seal or schedule
- clarify snow, wind, or seismic basis
- revise site plan
- confirm zoning or setbacks
- provide grading or drainage information
- clarify fire access
- provide energy code information where applicable
- coordinate foundation reactions
- submit missing forms
- respond to code review comments
These comments are not necessarily a failure. They are part of the review process.
The problem is when permit comments arrive after the owner has already ordered steel, scheduled foundation work, placed anchors, or told the contractor to proceed.
Permit comments should be reviewed before the project moves further into fabrication or construction.
A P.Eng Stamp Does Not Automatically Mean Permit-Approved
A professional seal is important, but it should not be confused with AHJ approval.
A P.Eng stamp indicates professional responsibility for the defined engineering scope shown or referenced by the authenticated documents. It does not mean the municipality has accepted the submission, issued a permit, approved zoning, accepted site grading, reviewed all related disciplines, or waived future comments.
A stamped drawing can be permit-ready and still receive AHJ comments.
That does not automatically mean the drawing was bad. It may mean the AHJ needs clarification, local forms, additional documents, revised coordination, or information outside the sealed scope.
The correct question is not only “Is it stamped?”
The better question is “Has the AHJ approved this package, and are we looking at the approved revision?”
Supplier Approval Is Not Permit Approval
Steel building suppliers may use approval language for their own drawing process.
For example, supplier drawings may be issued for owner approval, dealer approval, fabrication approval, or internal release.
That is not the same as municipal permit approval.
Supplier approval may mean the owner, dealer, or project team accepted the building configuration for the supplier’s process. It does not mean the AHJ accepted the building for construction under local permit requirements.
This distinction matters because a supplier may be ready to fabricate before the municipality has approved the permit.
That can create risk if permit comments later affect:
- building layout
- openings
- foundations
- anchors
- bracing
- loads
- site placement
- fire access
- energy code requirements
- professional documentation
- occupancy assumptions
Supplier approval should not replace AHJ approval.
Shop Drawings Are Not Permit Approval Either
Shop drawings support fabrication, detailing, or installation coordination.
They may be reviewed for general conformance with design intent within a defined scope, but they do not usually replace permit drawings or AHJ approval.
A shop drawing can be reviewed and still not mean:
- the permit is issued
- the AHJ has accepted the project
- the foundation is approved
- construction can ignore permit notes
- field conditions are accepted
- substitutions are approved
- contractor methods are approved
Shop drawing review is important, but it is not the same status as permit approval.
This is especially important if fabrication is scheduled before permit review is complete.
What Should Not Happen Before Permit Approval
Every project is different, and some staged work may be allowed when the AHJ permits it. But in general, project teams should be cautious about committing too far before approval.
Before permit approval, be careful with:
- ordering final steel
- releasing fabrication
- placing anchors
- pouring foundations
- relying on preliminary reactions
- proceeding from unapproved revisions
- scheduling erection
- treating comments as minor before review
- assuming shop drawings solve permit issues
- ignoring site plan or zoning status
- assuming the stamped package guarantees approval
The right answer depends on the project and local authority. Some projects may proceed in stages only if the proper staged approvals, partial permits, or authorization are in place.
Without that, moving too early can turn a review comment into a field problem.
Permit-Approved Does Not Remove Inspection Risk
After permit approval, construction still has to match the approved documents and applicable conditions.
Inspection issues can still occur if:
- the wrong revision is used on site
- anchors are placed incorrectly
- foundation work does not match approved drawings
- supplier drawings changed after approval
- shop drawings conflict with approved documents
- field changes are made without review
- site grading differs from approved plans
- required documents are missing on site
- construction does not follow permit conditions
- required inspections are missed
Permit approval is not the end of control. It is the start of building under an accepted permit scope.
The project still needs revision control through construction.
The Drawing Status Check Before You Build
Before steel fabrication, foundation work, anchor placement, or erection, the project team should confirm drawing status.
Ask these questions:
| Question | Why It Matters |
| Has the permit actually been issued? | Submission is not approval |
| Which drawing revision was approved? | Old permit-ready drawings may not match approved drawings |
| Were AHJ comments fully answered? | Unresolved comments can affect design or construction |
| Are approval conditions attached? | Conditions may affect inspections or construction sequencing |
| Do supplier drawings match the approved permit set? | Supplier changes can create conflicts |
| Do foundation drawings match current reactions? | Reactions may change during review |
| Do anchors match final base plates? | Anchor errors can delay erection |
| Do shop drawings match approved documents? | Fabrication may otherwise follow old information |
| Are site plan or grading approvals separate? | Building permit approval may not cover all site approvals |
| Are field changes documented? | Undocumented changes can trigger inspection or review problems |
This check is not paperwork. It is risk control.
Common Misunderstandings That Delay Steel Building Projects
| Misunderstanding | What Is Actually True |
| “The drawings are permit-ready, so we can build.” | Permit-ready means ready for submission, not approved |
| “The engineer stamped it, so the city has to approve it.” | AHJ review can still require clarification or revisions |
| “The supplier approved the drawings.” | Supplier approval is not municipal permit approval |
| “The shop drawings were reviewed.” | Shop drawing review is not permit approval |
| “The permit was issued, so every future change is fine.” | Changes may need review or revised approval |
| “The foundation was designed once, so it is final.” | Foundation design may need review if reactions or conditions change |
| “The approved set is the same as the first submitted set.” | Revisions and comments may change the approved documents |
| “Inspection will pass because the permit was issued.” | Work must still match approved drawings and conditions |
These misunderstandings are common because drawing statuses sound similar.
The solution is simple: name the stage clearly before making construction decisions.
How DelCor Helps When Drawing Status Is Unclear
DelCor is often needed when the project team has drawings, but not certainty.
That may happen when:
- drawings are permit-ready but not yet approved
- AHJ comments have been issued
- supplier drawings changed during review
- foundation reactions were revised
- anchors were planned from old drawings
- shop drawings do not match the permit package
- construction is being scheduled before approval status is clear
- the owner needs to understand what still has to be resolved
- the contractor needs clarification before concrete, fabrication, or erection
DelCor can review the available documents and help identify whether the issue is permit drawing coordination, foundation engineering, structural load review, anchor coordination, shop drawing review, AHJ response, or construction-stage engineering.
The goal is not to rename the drawings. The goal is to make sure the project team knows what status the drawings actually have and what should not move forward yet.
Do Not Build From a Status Assumption
If the project team cannot clearly answer whether the drawings are permit-ready, submitted, commented, permit-approved, issued for construction, or revised after approval, that uncertainty should be resolved before major work proceeds.
The highest-risk moments are usually:
- before steel is released for fabrication
- before anchors are ordered
- before concrete is poured
- before erection is scheduled
- after AHJ comments are received
- after supplier drawings change
- after a field change is proposed
DelCor can help review the drawing package, comments, revisions, and engineering scope so the project does not move forward based on the wrong status.
Request a Drawing Status Review
Canadian Code, Permit, and Engineering References to Confirm
Permit-ready and permit-approved drawing requirements in Canada depend on the applicable jurisdiction, project type, local authority, engineering scope, and permit process.
Useful reference points may include:
- Codes Canada model code adoption information
- Codes Canada publications
- Canadian Board for Harmonized Construction Codes provincial and territorial adoption information
- provincial and territorial engineering regulators listed by Engineers Canada
- Engineers Canada licensing process information
- CSA A660 quality certification for steel building systems from CWB Group
- the applicable provincial or territorial building code framework
- municipal permit submission requirements
- local zoning, site plan, development, grading, fire, or inspection requirements where applicable
- supplier drawings and project-specific engineered drawings
- AHJ review comments, permit conditions, and approved drawing sets
These references do not replace project-specific engineering review or AHJ direction. They help define the regulatory and professional context for the drawing status discussion.
Reviewed by Engineering Team
This content has been reviewed by DelCor’s engineering team with emphasis on drawing status, revision control and the transition from permit submission to construction.
Permit-ready drawings have been prepared for submission using the available information and defined scope. They have not necessarily been accepted by the authority having jurisdiction.
Submitted drawings have entered the AHJ review process. Submission confirms delivery of the package, not permit approval or construction authorization.
Review comments may affect structural drawings, building use, site information, foundations, reactions, anchors, professional documents or other disciplines. A complete response should update every affected document rather than answering one comment while leaving related drawings unchanged.
Permit-approved drawings should be identified by the exact revision accepted by the AHJ, together with the permit record, approval notes, conditions, required inspections and any remaining approvals. The first submitted set should never be assumed to be the approved set.
Issued-for-construction status is a separate document-control decision. The construction set should incorporate the approved permit basis, current structural information, foundation documents, supplier revisions, shop-drawing information where applicable and approved project changes.
Permit approval does not authorize unreviewed revisions made afterward. Changes to building use, site conditions, steel framing, reactions, base plates, anchors, foundations or other approved information may require engineering review, revised drawings, AHJ notification or permit amendment.
Where staged or partial work is authorized, the written approval should identify the precise work allowed. It should not be interpreted as approval of the remaining project.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What does permit-ready mean for steel building drawings in Canada?
Permit-ready means the steel building drawings and supporting documents have been prepared for permit submission based on the available project information and defined professional scope.
It does not mean the authority having jurisdiction has reviewed or approved the package. The submission may still receive comments requiring revised drawings, calculations, professional forms, site information or clarification.
2. What does permit-approved mean for steel building drawings in Canada?
Permit-approved generally means the authority having jurisdiction has accepted the identified drawing package for the scope covered by the issued permit.
The exact meaning depends on the local permit process, permit conditions and approved-document records. Approval does not automatically authorize work outside the permit scope, later design changes or construction that differs from the approved documents.
3. Are permit-ready steel building drawings enough to start construction?
No, unless the authority having jurisdiction has issued the required permit, staged permit or specific written authorization allowing the proposed work to proceed.
Permit-ready drawings are prepared for review. They do not independently authorize excavation, foundation work, anchor placement, fabrication, erection or other regulated construction activities.
4. Can P.Eng-stamped drawings still receive permit comments?
Yes.
A professional engineer’s authentication identifies responsibility for the engineering content within the stated scope. It does not represent acceptance by the authority having jurisdiction.
Permit comments may still address zoning, site information, grading, foundations, building use, fire and life-safety requirements, accessibility, energy compliance, professional forms or conflicts between submitted documents.
5. Does permit approval mean a steel building is ready for fabrication?
Not automatically.
Before fabrication, the project team should confirm that the supplier drawings, shop drawings, structural design, openings, reactions, base plates, anchors and approved permit revisions are coordinated.
Permit approval supports the regulatory review stage. Fabrication release is a separate project decision that should be based on current and coordinated information.
6. Can supplier-approved drawings be treated as permit-approved drawings?
No.
Supplier approval generally confirms that drawings meet the supplier’s internal design, manufacturing or customer-approval process. It does not replace approval by the municipality or other authority having jurisdiction.
Supplier-approved drawings may still require professional authentication, foundation coordination, site information, permit submission and responses to AHJ comments.
7. What happens if AHJ comments arrive after steel has been ordered?
The comments may require changes to the steel building package, structural design, openings, reactions, base plates, anchors, foundations or supporting permit documents.
Those changes can lead to revised supplier drawings, updated shop drawings, additional engineering, fabrication changes, delivery delays or field modifications. Ordering steel before permit review is complete transfers significant revision risk to the project team.
8. How can I confirm which steel building drawing revision was permit-approved?
Confirm the permit number, approved drawing list, drawing numbers, revision dates, approval stamps or electronic records, permit conditions and final AHJ correspondence.
The approved set may differ from the original permit-ready or submitted package. The contractor, supplier, engineer, fabricator and site team should all work from the same confirmed approved revision.
9. What should be checked after a steel building permit is approved?
After approval, confirm that the issued permit, approved drawings, supplier drawings, foundation drawings, anchor layout and construction documents all refer to the same current project revision.
Also review:
- permit conditions
- outstanding AHJ requirements
- required inspections
- approved building use
- current foundation reactions
- base plate and anchor information
- professional forms
- changes made during permit review
- fabrication and erection information
Permit approval should trigger a coordination check before construction documents are released to the field.
10. Are shop drawings the same as approved permit drawings?
No.
Approved permit drawings support regulatory review and identify the design information accepted for the permit scope. Shop drawings support fabrication, detailing and assembly.
Shop drawings may show member marks, plates, welds, bolts, holes and connection details, but they must remain consistent with the approved design documents. A shop drawing review does not automatically replace permit approval or professional responsibility for the original design.
11. What is the difference between permit-approved and issued-for-construction steel building drawings?
Permit-approved drawings are the documents accepted by the authority having jurisdiction for the permit scope.
Issued-for-construction drawings are documents released to guide construction within their stated purpose and scope. The construction set should incorporate applicable permit comments, approved revisions, supplier information and coordinated foundation and anchor details.
A permit-approved set is not automatically the final construction set, and an issued-for-construction label does not replace required permit approval.
12. Can construction changes be made after permit approval?
Yes, but changes affecting the approved design may require engineering review, revised drawings and further approval from the authority having jurisdiction.
Changes to the building dimensions, use, framing, bracing, openings, reactions, foundations, anchors or site conditions should be reviewed before construction continues. Depending on the jurisdiction and scope, a permit amendment, resubmission or inspection coordination may be required.
13. Can I order a steel building before the permit is approved?
Steel may be ordered before permit approval, but doing so creates commercial and technical risk.
Before an early order is released, the project team should confirm the intended use, dimensions, openings, site location, design loads, foundation approach and likely permit requirements. AHJ comments may still require changes that affect the building package, reactions, anchors or foundations.
Responsibility for the cost and schedule impact of later revisions should be allocated clearly in writing.
14. Can anchor bolts be set or concrete be poured before the steel building permit is approved?
Not unless the required permit, staged permit or written authorization has been issued by the authority having jurisdiction.
Even where early work is authorized, anchor and foundation information should be coordinated with the current steel reactions, base plates, foundation drawings and permit comments.
Proceeding without confirmed authorization and coordinated documents can result in misplaced anchors, incorrect foundations, failed inspections, demolition or costly engineering corrections.
15. Can permit-ready steel building drawings be used for pricing before approval?
Yes, but the pricing should clearly identify that the drawings have not yet been permit-approved and may still change.
Quotations should state the drawing revision, assumptions, exclusions and responsibility for changes resulting from AHJ comments, final engineering, supplier revisions or site information.
Permit-ready pricing can support budgeting, but it should not be treated as a guaranteed final construction cost.
16. Does steel building permit approval guarantee that inspections will pass?
No.
Inspections assess whether the work complies with the approved documents, permit conditions and applicable requirements at the inspected stage.
An inspection may identify incorrect anchors, missing reinforcement, unapproved changes, dimensional conflicts, incomplete documentation or work that differs from the approved drawings. Permit approval does not guarantee workmanship, field compliance or acceptance of later modifications.
17. What documents are needed for a steel building drawing-status review?
A drawing-status review should include the most current available versions of:
- permit-ready drawings
- the submitted permit package
- AHJ comments
- response letters
- permit-approved drawings
- the issued permit and conditions
- supplier drawings
- structural calculations, where available
- foundation drawings
- reaction tables
- anchor layouts
- shop drawings
- issued-for-construction drawings
- revision logs
- field changes
- the construction schedule
The review should identify which documents are current, which are superseded and which have been accepted for permit, fabrication or construction. DelCor may assist with this review where it falls within the confirmed written engagement.
18. When should steel building drawing status be reviewed?
Drawing status should be reviewed before permit submission, steel release, fabrication, anchor ordering, concrete placement and erection.
It should also be reviewed whenever:
- AHJ comments are received
- supplier drawings change
- foundation reactions are revised
- permit approval is issued
- construction documents are released
- field changes are proposed
- different project parties appear to be using different revisions
DelCor can review available documents and identify drawing-status or coordination gaps within the agreed project scope.
Request engineering services
Find the Drawing Set That Governs the Work
A project may have submitted drawings, AHJ comments, supplier revisions, foundation sheets, shop drawings and an approved permit set circulating at the same time. A DelCor drawing-status review can reconstruct that revision trail and identify what is approved, what still requires response and which construction decisions should remain on hold.
Response within one business day.
Typical consultation inputs
- project location and municipality
- building size and intended use
- available drawings or supplier information
- known permit or technical requirements
- project stage and timeline


