GreenLite is emerging as a key beneficiary of Florida’s newly enacted HB 803, a sweeping reform that reshapes the state’s building permitting framework starting July 1, 2026. The law introduces a statewide uniform permit application, mandates no-cost electronic registration for private providers, and explicitly allows fee owners and contractors to elect private plan review at any point.
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HB 803 requires commercial permit fee reductions of at least 25% when private providers manage either plan review or inspections and at least 50% when they handle both, potentially tilting economics toward private firms. The statute also narrows local building departments’ review authority to local ordinances, floodplain management, site review, and administrative issues, shortening completeness review timelines from 20 to 10 business days.
These structural changes are expected to reduce permitting costs and approval friction for builders, which could expand demand for private plan review and inspection services across Florida. For GreenLite and its peers, the updated regulatory environment may increase addressable market size and improve pricing visibility, while also intensifying competition and execution pressures as private providers scale operations.
Concurrently, GreenLite is deepening its push into AI-enabled construction permitting, emphasizing that permitting should be treated as a repeatable, systematized workflow rather than a series of ad hoc tasks. Through recent LinkedIn communications and a webinar with pb2 architecture + engineering, the company highlighted how jurisdictional differences in zoning rules, setbacks, and reviewer preferences complicate multi-market retail rollouts.
Drawing on Deloitte’s 2026 Engineering & Construction Outlook, GreenLite underscored sector headwinds including a 499,000-worker shortfall, elevated tariffs on steel and aluminum, and rapid growth in data center construction. In this context, permitting backlogs of 8–12 weeks represent a growing cost burden, and the firm is promoting an AI-plus-expert model aimed at improving first-pass approval rates and compressing entitlement timelines.
The company’s Agentic AI strategy pairs autonomous tools with licensed professionals to address what it views as a structurally under-digitized, pre-construction niche. By mapping U.S. Private Provider Laws in 10 states and offering a free guide to navigate private provider options, GreenLite is positioning itself as both a technical and regulatory partner for developers and multi-market retailers.
Overall, the week’s developments depict a company aligning its AI-powered workflow solutions with favorable regulatory momentum in Florida and other private provider markets. If adoption of private plan review accelerates and GreenLite executes effectively, the firm could see reinforced competitive positioning and more recurring, value-based relationships with clients, although financial outcomes will depend on actual uptake and local regulatory implementation.

