Florida
Solar Permits.
FBC 8th Edition.
All 67 Counties.
Florida has two completely different permitting environments. Miami-Dade and Broward counties operate under the High-Velocity Hurricane Zone — every solar component needs a separate Notice of Acceptance (NOA). The other 65 counties follow Florida Building Code 8th Edition with NEC 2020. Every plan set we build is formatted for the correct environment from the first sheet.
Two Systems. One State. One Critical Distinction.
Permit Design produces Florida solar permit plan sets for solar installers, EPCs, and roofing companies across all 67 Florida counties. Florida has a critical permitting distinction that catches out-of-state installers every time: Miami-Dade and Broward counties operate under the High-Velocity Hurricane Zone (HVHZ) — a designation requiring every solar component to carry individual Notice of Acceptance (NOA) certification. A standard FBC plan set built for Orlando submitted to Miami-Dade Building Department will be rejected at intake.
Outside the HVHZ, Florida enforces the Florida Building Code 8th Edition incorporating NEC 2020. All Florida solar permits must comply with NEC Article 690 (Solar PV Systems), Article 705 (Interconnected Power Production Sources), and NEC 690.12 (Rapid Shutdown). Wind load calculations are mandatory across all 67 Florida counties — Florida wind speeds are the highest in the continental US even outside HVHZ areas.
Florida requires a DBPR-licensed electrical contractor on every solar project. The DBPR licence number must appear on the permit application or it is automatically rejected. Florida Power & Light (FPL), Duke Energy Florida, Tampa Electric (TECO), JEA, and Kissimmee Utility Authority each have distinct interconnection requirements. Every Permit Design Florida plan set is formatted for the correct jurisdiction from the first page.
Last updated: May 2026 · Reading time: ~8 minutes · FBC 8th Edition, HVHZ NOA requirements, and DBPR licensing confirmed as of May 2026.
Miami-Dade + Broward — Standard Plan Sets Will Not Pass Here
The HVHZ is the most demanding solar permitting environment in the United States. If you are expanding into South Florida, understanding these requirements is the difference between closing projects and watching them stall for weeks.
Every HVHZ Component Requires Separate NOA
FBC 8th Edition + NEC 2020 — The Non-HVHZ Florida Code Stack
For the 65 Florida counties outside the HVHZ, the Florida Building Code 8th Edition incorporating NEC 2020 governs solar permits. Wind load calculations are mandatory statewide — Florida has the highest wind loads in the continental US even outside HVHZ.
Florida Wind Design Zones — All Plan Sets Must Include Wind Load Calculations
| Zone | Counties / Region | Design Wind Speed | Special Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| HVHZ | Miami-Dade · Broward | 185 mph (Risk Cat. II) | NOA per component · ASCE 7-16 · FL PE stamp |
| Coastal High Wind | Palm Beach · Monroe · Martin · Indian River · Brevard · Volusia (coastal) | 150–170 mph | ASCE 7-16 wind load calcs · PE stamp recommended |
| South / Central FL | Orange (Orlando) · Hillsborough (Tampa) · Sarasota · Lee · Charlotte | 120–140 mph | Standard FBC wind load calcs required |
| North / Inland FL | Duval (Jacksonville) · Alachua (Gainesville) · Leon (Tallahassee) · Marion (Ocala) | 100–120 mph | FBC wind load calcs required |
| Panhandle | Escambia (Pensacola) · Bay (Panama City) · Northwest Florida Gulf Coast | 120–150 mph | Gulf Coast wind exposure — elevated loads vs inland |
FPL · Duke Energy Florida · TECO — Know Your Territory
Florida has multiple investor-owned utilities with distinct interconnection requirements. Using the wrong utility's documentation format results in rejection at utility review. Verify the serving utility by project address — not by county name.
Florida Solar Permit Plan Set — Standard + HVHZ
Every Florida plan set is formatted for the correct code environment — FBC 8th Edition with NEC 2020 for 65 counties, full HVHZ NOA documentation for Miami-Dade and Broward. DBPR licence fields on every cover sheet.
How Florida Solar Permit Plan Sets Work
Submit Your Florida Project
Send us the county and address — we determine HVHZ vs standard Florida. For HVHZ projects we immediately verify every specified component has a valid NOA or Florida Product Approval with HVHZ designation before proceeding. Roof photos, equipment model numbers, and serving utility required.
We Build to FBC 8th + NEC 2020
Standard FL: FBC 8th Edition NEC 2020, county-specific wind load engineering, FPL/Duke/TECO interconnection, DBPR fields on every sheet. HVHZ: same base plus full NOA documentation, 185 mph ASCE 7-16 structural engineering, and Miami-Dade Product Control format throughout.
Complete Package in 24–48 Hours
Your 8-sheet Florida plan set — correct wind zone, HVHZ NOA documentation where required, and utility interconnection package — delivered in 24–48 hours. Submit to your AHJ and utility on the same day. Free revisions until your Florida AHJ approves.
Try Us on Your First Florida Project. Free.
New to Permit Design? Send us your first Florida residential solar project — standard FBC or HVHZ — and we'll deliver the complete plan set free. NOA documentation verified, wind loads calculated, FPL or Duke Energy interconnection included.
Available for solar installers, EPCs, and roofing companies offering solar installation services. Not available for individual homeowners or end customers. One free residential plan set per company.
Florida Solar by the Numbers
Top 3 Reasons Florida Solar Permits Get Rejected
These are the three most common rejection triggers across Miami-Dade, Broward, Orange County, Hillsborough, and all 67 Florida counties — all preventable with correctly formatted plan sets.
Florida Solar Permit Design — FAQ
Florida Plan Sets That Pass.
FBC 8th Edition · NEC 2020 · HVHZ NOA Documentation
FPL · Duke Energy · TECO · DBPR Licensed · All 67 Counties · 24–48 Hours