If you are planning a demolition or land clearing project in Florida, permitting is the step that either keeps your project on schedule or brings it to a halt. At Wingard Land Services, permitting is not something we hand off or outsource. Our team handles every filing, every agency coordination, and every resubmission response in-house. Here is how we navigate Florida's 2026 regulatory environment, what SB 1080 changed, and what you should expect from a contractor who treats permitting as part of the job.
How We Navigate Florida's Permitting Process in 2026
Why Florida Permitting Is More Complex Than Most States
Florida's construction and demolition permitting process involves more regulatory layers than most property owners anticipate. You are not just dealing with a single county building department. Depending on your project, you may need approvals from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP), a regional Water Management District, the Army Corps of Engineers, and your local municipality, all running simultaneously.
For building demolition contractors working in Kissimmee and Osceola County, that means navigating both municipal and county-level requirements, which do not always align on timelines or documentation standards. A contractor who only works occasionally in Florida will struggle with this. Wingard works in this environment every week and has built active relationships with the plan reviewers and inspectors who determine how quickly your project moves. Learn more about our team and our credentials.
What SB 1080 Changed in 2026
Florida Senate Bill 1080 introduced significant changes to how local governments process building and development permits. These updates are now shaping project timelines across the state, and understanding them helps you hold your contractor accountable.
Faster Review Timelines, With Accountability Built In
SB 1080 requires local building departments to meet defined permit review deadlines. If a municipality misses those deadlines, applicants are entitled to fee refunds and in some cases automatic approval of administratively complete applications. This shifts accountability in a meaningful way and benefits owners who work with contractors who submit complete packages the first time.
Important: The deadline protections only apply to complete applications. An incomplete submission resets the clock entirely. Wingard prepares every submittal against the stated completeness checklist for each agency so that deadline protections apply from day one.
Preemption of Local Regulations
SB 1080 also limits how far local governments can go in creating regulations that exceed state standards. For developers working across Central Florida, this reduces the patchwork of county-specific requirements that previously made permitting inconsistent across neighboring jurisdictions. It does not eliminate all local variation, but it narrows the range.
Environmental Review Still Carries Its Own Timeline
While SB 1080 streamlines certain administrative steps, environmental review requirements have not been loosened. Projects near wetlands, floodplains, or protected habitat still require full FDEP review, and the timelines for those reviews are set by state and federal agencies, not local building departments. Our team identifies which review pathway your project falls under before the first application is submitted, so there are no surprises mid-project.
How Wingard Manages the Permitting Process
Pre-Application Site Review
Before submitting anything, we review your site's full regulatory status, including wetland delineations, protected species surveys, floodplain designations, and any prior permitting history on the parcel. Issues discovered after submission cause far more delay than issues identified before the first filing.
Agency Coordination
We identify every agency with jurisdiction over your project and confirm current application requirements for each. These requirements change more frequently than most property owners realize. Submitting against outdated checklists is one of the most common and most avoidable sources of resubmission delays.
Complete Package Submission
We prepare documentation that meets the completeness checklist for each agency, including site plans, demolition scope, erosion control plans, and any required environmental assessments. A complete first submission is how SB 1080's deadline protections work in your favor.
Active Status Monitoring
We do not submit and wait. Our team tracks application status, responds to requests for additional information within 24 to 48 hours, and maintains proactive communication with review staff. The relationships we have built with local plan reviewers over years of consistent work in this region translate directly into faster turnaround for our clients.
Permitted vs. Unpermitted Demolition: What Is at Stake
| Factor | Permitted Demolition | Unpermitted Demolition |
|---|---|---|
| Legal Authorization | Work is legally authorized before starting | Stop-work orders possible at any stage |
| Utility Safety | Disconnections are coordinated properly | Risk of hitting active lines or mains |
| Inspection | Site inspection confirms safe completion | No verification of structural compliance |
| Property Title | Title remains unencumbered | Open permits can delay or block property sale |
| Compliance | Environmental compliance is documented | Potential FDEP fines and penalties |
Local Knowledge Matters for Kissimmee Projects
Building demolition contractors working in Kissimmee operate within Osceola County's jurisdiction for unincorporated areas and the City of Kissimmee's building department for properties within city limits. The two operate on different systems, have different submittal portals, and run different inspector schedules.
This is the kind of detail that only comes from doing the work regularly in a specific market. Wingard is active across Central Florida and we bring that day-to-day familiarity to every project. That means fewer administrative delays turning into week-long setbacks. See the full list of areas we serve to confirm we cover your project location.
Our commitment: Wingard handles 100% of the permitting process for our demolition and site prep clients. You will never be asked to pull your own permit or navigate an agency relationship we should be managing for you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Talk to a Licensed Florida Permitting Expert
Wingard Land Services handles 100% of the permitting process for your demolition and site prep project, from pre-application review through final inspection sign-off. No surprises, no shortcuts.

