Minor Works Licence in One Visit — Paint, Shade, Small Fixes

newfoundations.org painting

Goal: see if a simple ‘obras menores licence’ is doable in one morning for small jobs (paint, a short privacy screen, window screens). Marina Alta council. Normal weekday.

What I took

  • ID
  • Form filled at home (name, address, phone)
  • One-page sketch with basic dimensions and materials
  • Two printed photos of the spot
  • Rough budget number (materials + labour, even if DIY)
  • Owner authorisation (I’m not the deed holder)

Stopwatch log (today)

  • 08:03 arrive, take number A-27
  • 08:06 triage glance, sent to “licencias menores”
  • 08:19 at desk
  • 08:26 sketch checked; asked distance to boundary and height of screen
  • 08:32 budget entered; fee calculated
  • 08:34 sent to cashier
  • 08:41 pay; back to desk with receipt
  • 08:49 licence printed with conditions (hours, waste)
  • 08:52 out

Time inside: 49 minutes. Queue light; two people bounced for missing papers.

What they actually checked

  • ID matches the form
  • Address matches the sketch/photos
  • Dimensions make sense; boundary distance shown
  • Materials are ordinary (paint, timber, mesh)
  • Budget line not blank; phone number legible

Fee was based on the budget band. Mine landed in a low bracket and was paid at the cashier before they printed the licence.

Where people lost time (watched from the chairs)

  • No sketch (talking it through wastes 10 minutes)
  • No budget number (can’t calculate the fee)
  • No owner authorisation
  • Only phone photos; printer drama

Bring paper. It goes faster.

One change I’ll ask for

A printed sketch sheet at the door: small plan box, small elevation box, one line for “distance to boundary,” one for “materials,” one box for “budget.” Next to it, a short card that says what counts as “minor”: paint, short screens, like-for-like repairs; no structure, no services.

Cost: a few prints. Likely saves the two bounces I watched.

My checklist (kept on the fridge)

  1. ID + a photocopy
  2. Form filled (name, address, phone)
  3. One-page sketch: plan + elevation + dimensions + boundary distance
  4. Budget number (materials + labour, even if DIY)
  5. Owner authorisation (if not the holder)
  6. Two printed photos
  7. Copies of everything

Edge notes

  • Boundary work: take neighbour consent if you plan to touch their wall.
  • Street-visible: expect a quick note on finish/colour; bring a product sheet.
  • DIY vs contractor: write which it is; they asked.
  • Waste: ask if the ecopark needs anything from you first.

What I’ll time next run

  • Ticket to desk: target ≤ 20 min
  • Desk to cashier and back: target ≤ 15 min
  • Total inside: target ≤ 60 min
  • Returns for missing papers: target 0

If I ran the counter for a week

Clipboards with the sketch sheet and two filled examples at the door. A pen pot. One sign that matches the website text. Cashier arrow painted on the floor.

I like forms. This is a good one-morning job if you walk in with a sketch and a number.

Share the Post: