Cars & Driving · Catskills
Sullivan County road permits belong early in the plan
Sullivan County road access, hauling, and right-of-way work should be sorted before a rural project gets too far along.
Published July 7, 2026 · Last verified July 7, 2026
Sullivan County road questions often show up where a rural project meets a public road: a new driveway, a timber job, a utility cut, a heavy delivery, or equipment that needs to move through hill roads.
The county Highways and Bridges page makes one basic distinction very useful: Sullivan County has county, state, town, and privately maintained roads. Blue and yellow Sullivan County road signs are the clue that a road belongs in the county lane.
That does not replace a town building permit or a private survey. It keeps the road piece from getting lost.
The Catskills road map adds its own personality. A short drive can move from a village street to a county route, then into a narrow road with grades, curves, stone walls, or a bridge that deserves attention before a truck shows up.
The county also points driveway access and oversize or overweight permit questions to its permitting contact. Underground utility protection rules belong in the plan too, because digging has its own call-before-you-dig lane.
A good file has the address, road name, nearest intersection, load or equipment description, driveway sketch, and photos of the shoulder or ditch. That kind of detail makes the first conversation shorter and more useful.
In Sullivan County, planning the road approach is part of planning the job.