Brooklyn Sign Permits & Installation | Licensed Sign Company | Valle Signs
4.8/5
★★★★★
108 Google reviews

Brooklyn Sign Permits & Sign Installation

Valle Signs is a commercial sign company that handles the DOB permits and installs the sign — working brownstone storefronts and the commercial corridors from Atlantic Avenue to Bedford. We hold the NYC Special Sign Hanger License, keep your signage code-compliant, and put it up legally, start to finish.

UL Registered Licensed & Insured In-House Permit Expeditor
Illuminated channel letter sign fabricated and installed by Valle Signs

Do you need a permit for a sign in Brooklyn?

In most cases, yes. Under the NYC Sign Code, any sign larger than six square feet, or any illuminated sign, requires a permit from the Department of Buildings (DOB). Signs six square feet or smaller and not illuminated generally don't need one, but still have to follow local zoning. In Brooklyn that often adds a layer: storefronts in landmark districts like Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO, and Park Slope need Landmark Preservation Commission review, and commercial-overlay zoning along the corridors shapes what's allowed. Because the city requires a licensed sign hanger to install most commercial signage, Valle Signs files the permit, keeps the sign code-compliant, and handles the installation — so your sign goes up legally and stays up without a violation behind it.

DOB Sign Permits

Sign & Signage Permits in Brooklyn

Brooklyn regulates signage tightly, and the rules change block to block. The Department of Buildings reviews and approves sign permits, while zoning dictates what's allowed where — commercial-overlay districts (C1/C2) along corridors like Atlantic Avenue, Flatbush Avenue, and 5th Avenue carry their own limits even on otherwise residential blocks. In landmark districts such as Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO, and Park Slope, a second layer of Landmark Preservation Commission approval comes into play. We've been filing these permits for more than 20 years, and we handle the whole process in-house so you're not chasing agencies.

DOB Permit Filing

We prepare and submit the application, drawings, and zoning analysis to the Department of Buildings.

Zoning Analysis

We confirm what's permitted for your sign's size, type, and location before anything is fabricated.

Landmark / LPC Review

When your storefront sits in a Brooklyn historic district — Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO, Fort Greene, Park Slope, Cobble Hill, Carroll Gardens, or Clinton Hill — we manage Landmark Preservation Commission approval.

Illuminated & Electrical

The additional filings required for lit channel letters, light boxes, and signs wired for power.

Awning Permits

Permits for storefront and dining awnings, which follow their own set of rules.

Existing Violations

Research and sign-off on open DOB/ECB sign violations so a new sign starts clean.

How much does a sign permit cost in NYC?

There's no single flat fee — and that's exactly why most owners find this confusing. The total comes down to three things:

  1. DOB filing fees, set by the city and scaled to the sign's size and the value of the work.
  2. Professional filing / expeditor work — preparing the drawings, zoning analysis, and submission.
  3. The sign itself — fabrication and installation, which depend on the type and the site.

The fastest way to a real number is a quote on your specific sign and address. Ask about our in-house permit expeditor — we'll tell you what the DOB will require and what it will cost before you commit.

Licensed Installation

Licensed Sign Installers in Brooklyn

When you put a sign on a building in Brooklyn, the installation isn't the part you can afford to get wrong — and it isn't something just anyone is allowed to do. The city requires a licensed sign hanger to install most commercial signage, and Valle Signs holds the NYC Special Sign Hanger License that makes our crews legal to work on your storefront, building, or pole sign across the borough. We're the Brooklyn sign company businesses trust to handle the install the right way.

Brooklyn work has its own realities. We install on brownstone and low-rise storefronts, and on the mixed low- and mid-rise buildings that line corridors like Fulton Street, Bedford Avenue, and 86th Street — fitting the sign to the façade and the access the site allows.

We've been fabricating and installing commercial signs since 2002 — channel letters, pylon and monument signs, blade signs, light boxes, and gold-leaf storefronts. Because we build in our own UL-registered, 25,000-square-foot facility and run our own crews, the same team that engineers your sign is the one that hangs it. No handoff to a subcontractor who's never seen the drawings.

20+
Years in business
4.8★
108 Google reviews
5,000+
Signs installed
NYC Special Sign Hanger LicenseLegally cleared to install across all five boroughs
4.8★ on Google (108 reviews)See our reviews →
UL-Registered ManufacturerBuilt in our own 25,000 sq ft facility
In Business Since 200220+ years, thousands of installs
Trusted by National BrandsIHOP, Wendy's, Key Food

Common Questions

Brooklyn Sign Permit FAQ

In most cases, yes. Under the NYC Sign Code, the Department of Buildings requires a permit for any sign larger than six square feet and for any illuminated sign, regardless of size — and in Brooklyn's landmark districts and commercial-overlay zones, an added layer of review often applies. Smaller, non-illuminated signs — six square feet or less — generally don't need a DOB permit, but they still have to comply with the zoning rules for your district, which control where signs can go and how big they can be. Wall signs, projecting and blade signs, pylon and monument signs, light boxes, and channel letters on commercial buildings almost always cross the permit threshold. The safest approach is to confirm before anything is fabricated, because an unpermitted sign can draw a DOB or ECB violation and a fine. Valle Signs reviews your sign and location up front, files the permit, and installs with a licensed sign hanger so the whole job stays compliant.

There isn't one flat fee, which is why this trips up most business owners. The total depends on three things: the DOB filing fees set by the city, which scale with the sign's size and the value of the work; the professional work of preparing and filing the application, drawings, and zoning analysis; and the sign itself — fabrication and installation, which vary by type and site. A small non-illuminated wall sign sits at the low end; large illuminated channel letters or a pylon sign in a landmark district cost more because they involve more filings and review. Rather than guess, we quote your specific sign at your specific address, including the DOB requirements, so you see the real number before you commit. Ask about our in-house permit expeditor — it's the fastest way to a firm figure.

New York City requires that most commercial signs be installed by a licensed sign hanger — a credential issued by the Department of Buildings for the people legally permitted to erect signs in the city. This isn't a formality: using an unlicensed installer can invalidate your permit and expose you to violations. Valle Signs holds the NYC Special Sign Hanger License, so our own crews can legally install your storefront, building, projecting, or pole sign anywhere in the five boroughs. Because we also fabricate the sign and file the permit in-house, you're working with one accountable company from design through installation, rather than stitching together a sign maker, a separate installer, and an expeditor. That continuity is part of why the work holds up — and why national brands trust us with their NYC rollouts.

Yes. Illuminated signs — lit channel letters, light boxes, and any sign wired for power — require a DOB permit even when a non-illuminated sign of the same size might not, and they involve additional electrical filings. The city treats illuminated signage more strictly because of the wiring, brightness, and zoning considerations involved, and some districts limit or prohibit illuminated signs entirely. Valle Signs handles the illuminated-sign permit and the electrical filings together with the installation, so the lit sign you want is engineered and approved correctly the first time. We'll also confirm whether your zoning district allows the illumination you're planning before fabrication begins, which avoids the costly surprise of building a sign you can't legally light.

Timelines vary with the sign, the district, and the Department of Buildings' current review queue. A straightforward, by-right sign in a standard commercial zone moves faster than a large illuminated sign or anything in a landmark or special sign district, where additional review adds time. The biggest avoidable delays come from incomplete filings and rejections — which is exactly what an experienced, in-house permit expeditor prevents. When you work with Valle Signs, we prepare the application correctly the first time, track it through DOB, and keep fabrication aligned with the approval so your sign isn't sitting in a shop waiting on paperwork. For a realistic timeline on your specific project, give us the sign type and address and we'll tell you what to expect.

What Our Clients Say

Rated 4.8 From 108 Google Reviews

Real reviews from the businesses we've designed, fabricated, and installed signs for.

★★★★★

A wonderful company! They did the sign for my business and helped me get everything I needed to get permits. The staff is so nice and helpful and prices are reasonable. Highly recommend.

MM
Melissa M.Google review
★★★★★

They did a great job getting our sign approved, and the installation was done with care and professionalism.

RM
Richard M.Google review
★★★★★

From the first moment I called, Massiel was very professional and was quick to reply to any emails that I sent. I would definitely use them again for any future jobs.

MA
Marilyn A.Google review
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