New York Porch

Home & Property · Hudson Valley

Catskill's Permit List Is Broader Than Big Construction

Catskill owners should check the town permit list for decks, pools, roofing, signs, septic, sewer, solar, short-term rentals, and more.

Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026

Catskill’s permit list goes well past new-house construction. The town names new construction, renovations, alterations, additions, repairs, decks, swimming pools, re-roofing, storage sheds and outbuildings, and solar projects over 25 kilowatts.

That range is the point. A homeowner might think a roof, shed, deck, or pool is too ordinary to ask about, but the town’s list puts those projects in the permit conversation.

The same town route carries other forms too: solid-fuel burning stoves, HUD homes, demolition, municipal sewer connection, septic systems, signs, decks, unified solar, site plan projects, short-term rentals, special use permits, variances, subdivisions, and lot-line adjustments.

The memorable fence rule helps the list stick. Catskill’s FAQ treats fences at or above 6 1/2 feet as buildings that need a building permit and setbacks. Fences below that height do not need a permit under that FAQ answer.

For a Catskill owner, the practical folder should include the address, sketch, contractor estimate, project type, and any zoning or site-plan question.

A deck, roof, shed, sign, stove, short-term rental, or lot-line adjustment can each point to a different form. The town page keeps those doors in one place.

Town of Catskill Code Enforcement, Greene County, building permit, fence height, site plan, short-term rental, septic, sewer, and solar are the words to keep near the project folder. The list is broad, so the project name should be precise.

Filed under: Home & Property Catskill Greene County catskillbuilding-permitscode-enforcementgreene-countyhome-projects

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Last reviewed
June 24, 2026

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