Erie County, Pennsylvania
All providers are verified and meet Pennsylvania licensing requirements
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Building permits are issued by Erie County or the City of Erie Building Department. Most projects over $500 require a permit.
Exterior project work has higher consequence than interior — weather exposure, structural loads, and street visibility all magnify the difference between DIY and pro.
Before you start: Pennsylvania requires home-improvement contractor registration (PA HICPA) for work over $500/year. Unlicensed contractors lack insurance protections; DIY work without permits may affect homeowner's coverage and resale value.
Cosmetic touch-ups and very small projects.
Possible for committed DIYers with the right tools.
Scope, equipment, code, or structural concerns make these pro-only.
Get a free quote from a vetted glass & glazing contractor in Erie. Most respond within hours.
Weather and ground movement are unforgiving. A small mistake in pitch, drainage, base prep, or sealing manifests as cracks, sag, or rot within 1-3 years. Pros build to last 15-30 years; DIY usually lasts 5-10.
Substantial projects typically require permits: concrete pours over 100 sq ft, retaining walls over 4 ft, structural fence work near setbacks, anything tying into a public sidewalk or right-of-way. Check with City of Erie Code Enforcement.
Materials are 30-50% of project cost; DIY saves the rest. But factor in: tool rental ($100-500), waste from learning, time (2-5× longer than a pro), and the cost of redoing it if it fails in 3 years.
Risky. Unlicensed contractors usually carry no insurance — if they get hurt on your property, you can be liable. PA requires registration for home improvement contractors over $500/year.
Resale. Buyers and inspectors notice obvious DIY exterior work. A bad concrete driveway, mismatched fence sections, or DIY window install can knock $2,000-$10,000 off resale value or trigger inspection concessions.