When Tew & Taylor says clients save an average of 6–7 weeks, contractors often ask: where does that time actually come from? The answer is in the gaps — the accumulated waiting periods that stack up between permit submission and certificate of completion when every step routes through an overloaded municipal system.
Where Construction Time Gets Lost
The delays aren’t usually caused by bad weather or subcontractor issues. They come from the inspection and permitting process itself:
- Plan review queue: In Florida’s busiest counties, initial plan review takes 3–6 weeks. Each revision round adds time. A project with two revision rounds can consume 8–10 weeks in plan review alone before a permit is issued.
- Inspection scheduling: Municipal inspection queues of 1–3 weeks are common during peak periods. A project with 8–12 inspection phases (foundation, framing, rough MEP, final, etc.) accumulates that wait at every phase.
- Re-inspection delays: When an inspection fails, getting a re-inspection scheduled through the municipal system adds another full queue cycle — potentially another week or two.
- Communication lag: Waiting for answers to plan review comments, permit status updates, or clarifications from a building department adds unstructured delays that are hard to predict or manage.
Where Private Providers Recover the Time
Licensed private providers like Tew & Taylor eliminate or dramatically compress each of these gaps:
- 2-day plan review: Initial review returned in 2 days on average. Comments are organized, numbered, and actionable — reducing revision rounds.
- Same-day inspections: Available in all service areas. Inspections happen when your crew is ready, not when the municipal calendar opens up. Across 10–12 inspection phases, that difference is significant.
- Re-inspections prioritized: Re-inspections are scheduled promptly. A failed inspection doesn’t mean a week-long wait to get back on the calendar.
- Direct communication: One dedicated contact answers questions in hours, not days. Questions about plan comments get resolved in a phone call, not a queue.
The Math
For a typical residential project with 10 inspection phases and two plan review rounds: if the municipal system costs an average of one week per inspection phase and four weeks per plan review round, the total municipal-attributable delay is roughly 18–22 weeks spread across the project timeline. With a private provider, that same process takes 3–5 weeks. The recovered time is 6–7 weeks — sometimes more on commercial projects with higher inspection counts.
What That Time Is Worth
For a homebuilder paying carrying costs on a construction loan, six weeks of recovered schedule time reduces interest expense directly. For a GC managing a delivery commitment to a homebuyer or commercial tenant, six weeks of schedule buffer is the difference between on-time delivery and a penalties clause. For a developer with a hotel or multi-family project, it’s earlier revenue recognition.
The question isn’t whether schedule time has value. It’s whether the cost of a private provider is less than the cost of the time. For almost every project above a certain scale, it is.
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