SC Standby Generator Permit Requirements
Installing a standby generator in SC requires permits from your local Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) — typically your county or city building department. SC uses South Carolina Building Codes as its baseline building code, with individual counties and municipalities adding local amendments. This guide covers what permits are typically required, setback and noise standards, and what the inspection process looks like.
Permits Required in SC
| Permit Type | Typical Fee | Processing Time |
|---|---|---|
| Building Permit (pad + placement) | $150–$400 total | 1–3 weeks |
| Electrical Permit (ATS + panel) | $150–$400 total | 1–3 weeks |
| Mechanical/Gas Permit (fuel line) | $150–$400 total | 1–3 weeks |
Setback Requirements
In SC, most jurisdictions enforce the following minimum setbacks for residential standby generators:
- 5 ft from openings, 3–5 ft from structure
- 5 feet minimum from any window, door, or opening in the home structure
- 5 feet minimum from overhead electrical service entrance conductors
- Generator must be placed in the rear or side yard — front-yard placement prohibited in most residential zones
Noise Ordinance Standards
Noise regulations in SC are set locally. Typical limits in populated residential areas: 60–65 dBA daytime measured at the property line. Verify your specific city or county limit before purchasing a generator model — air-cooled units (65–68 dBA) may exceed limits in some jurisdictions.
SC-Specific Notes
South Carolina uses the IBC/IRC-based codes, administered by county and municipal building departments. Charleston County and Greenville County have online permit portals and process generator permits in 1–2 weeks. Coastal SC communities (Hilton Head, Myrtle Beach, Beaufort) have high generator demand from hurricane exposure and have experienced permit offices. South Carolina has no HOA-specific generator protection legislation.
The Inspection Process in SC
- Rough-in electrical inspection — Before ATS or conduit is enclosed. Inspectors check wiring, conductor sizing, and ATS listing.
- Rough-in gas/mechanical inspection — Before gas line is buried. Pressure test documentation required.
- Final electrical inspection — After generator is fully wired. Labeling, grounding, and anti-islanding verification.
- Final building inspection — Verifies pad dimensions, setback compliance, and unit matches the permit specs.