Revision Reviews in Florida for Permit Corrections and Re-Submittals
Revision cycles can quietly destroy a schedule. When updated sheets, correction comments, and re-submittals start stacking up, FCC helps keep the private provider review scope moving so your team is not losing weeks every time the set changes.
24hr
Average SFR Reviews
2-Day
Average Commercial Reviews
24hr
Typical Revision Priority
177+
Building Department Registrations
What is a revision review in Florida?
A revision review is the review of updated plans, corrected sheets, or re-submitted permit documents after comments have been issued or the scope has changed. Under F.S. 553.791, FCC can handle the private provider review scope and help keep correction cycles moving faster. Your team still handles permit filing, NTBO filing, and jurisdiction-side intake or issuance.
Correction cycles keep resetting the clock
One missed note or revised sheet can turn one permit delay into three or four smaller delays that quietly wreck the schedule.
- Correction comments often trigger updated sheets, re-submittals, and another round of waiting.
- That delay usually hits mobilization, inspections, and downstream trades all at once.
- FCC helps keep the review side moving instead of letting every correction package disappear into another long queue.
Built for permit coordinators and office teams
Revision work usually gets stuck in the handoff between field changes, updated drawings, and whoever is pushing paperwork.
- FCC works well for contractors, permit coordinators, office admins, and PMs managing repeat submittals.
- Clear review comments make it easier to understand what needs to be fixed before the next upload.
- Real people answer the phone when a correction set is holding up the job.
What FCC changes and what FCC does not
FCC can shorten the private provider review cycle, but not every part of the permit process.
- FCC handles the private provider review scope under F.S. 553.791.
- Your team still files permit applications, handles re-submittal logistics, and files the NTBO.
- Jurisdiction intake, permit issuance, and local retained approvals still stay with the building department.
The point of this page is not to pretend FCC controls the entire permit process. It does not. The useful distinction is whether the delay is in the review cycle itself or in jurisdiction-side intake, routing, and issuance.
Plan reviews in 1-2 days. Not weeks.
Apply to Work With FCC
You've done the math on what a 3-week plan review lag costs. FCC turns that around in 1-2 days — and inspections get matched in minutes, not scheduled into a vague window where your crew waits all morning.
