California has the most progressive ADU laws in the nation, making it easier than ever to add housing to residential properties. Since 2016, a wave of legislation has stripped away local barriers and created uniform statewide standards. This guide explains the current law, the 2026 updates, and what cities can—and cannot—require.
The Bottom Line: California state law overrides restrictive local ordinances. If your city has rules more restrictive than state law, state law prevails. Understanding your rights under state law is essential to a successful ADU project.
In This Guide
2026 Law Updates
Several important bills took effect January 1, 2026, further streamlining California's ADU approval process:
SB 543: 15-Day Completeness Determination
What it does: Requires cities to determine whether an ADU application is complete within 15 business days of submittal. If the city doesn't respond within 15 days, the application is automatically deemed complete.
Why it matters: Prevents cities from leaving applications in limbo indefinitely. The 60-day approval clock starts sooner, reducing overall timeline.
AB 462: Coastal Zone Streamlining
What it does: Requires coastal cities to update their Local Coastal Programs (LCPs) to comply with state ADU law. Establishes that ADUs meeting state standards are entitled to streamlined approval even in coastal zones.
Why it matters: Coastal property owners faced significant barriers. This law clarifies that ADUs within 1,200 sq ft receive the same streamlined process as non-coastal properties.
SB 9 Continued Implementation
What it does: The 2021 SB 9 lot-split law continues to interact with ADU law, allowing properties to potentially support multiple housing units through lot splits combined with ADU construction.
Why it matters: Creates pathways for up to 4+ units on single-family lots in certain circumstances (lot split creating 2 lots, each with primary dwelling + ADU).
SB 1211: Multi-Family ADU Expansion (2025)
What it does: Effective 2025, dramatically increased ADU capacity on multi-family lots from 2 detached ADUs to 8 detached ADUs, regardless of existing unit count.
Why it matters: Apartment building owners can now add significant housing capacity. Combined with unlimited conversions of existing non-habitable space, multi-family lots have enormous ADU potential.
Key Legislative History
| Year | Legislation | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 2016 | SB 1069, AB 2299, AB 2406 | Established statewide ADU standards, limited local restrictions |
| 2017 | SB 229, AB 494 | Further limited local barriers, clarified lot coverage rules |
| 2019 | AB 68, AB 881, SB 13 | Major expansion: 60-day approval, fee limits, multi-family ADUs |
| 2020 | AB 3182 | HOA limitations, eliminated owner-occupancy requirement |
| 2021 | SB 9 | Lot splits + duplexes on single-family lots |
| 2022 | AB 2221, SB 897 | Height increases, front setback clarifications |
| 2023 | AB 976, AB 1033 | Owner-occupancy ban permanent, ADU condo conversion |
| 2025 | SB 1211 | Multi-family ADU expansion (8 detached allowed) |
| 2026 | SB 543, AB 462 | 15-day completeness, coastal streamlining |
ADU Size Limits
California state law sets maximum ADU sizes that cities cannot reduce below these thresholds:
Detached ADUs
| Scenario | Maximum Size |
|---|---|
| Standard detached ADU | 1,200 sq ft (state minimum cities must allow) |
| Studio or 1-bedroom | 850 sq ft minimum allowed by cities |
| 2+ bedroom | 1,000 sq ft minimum allowed by cities |
Note: Many cities allow ADUs larger than 1,200 sq ft. Los Angeles allows up to 1,200 sq ft regardless of lot size. San Diego allows up to 1,200 sq ft. Some smaller cities allow even larger ADUs. Check your local ordinance for maximum sizes.
Attached ADUs
| Scenario | Maximum Size |
|---|---|
| Attached to primary dwelling | 1,200 sq ft OR 50% of primary dwelling, whichever is greater |
| Above existing garage | 1,200 sq ft (no 50% limitation) |
Garage Conversions
Garage conversions have no state-imposed size limit. The ADU can be as large as the existing garage footprint allows, plus any permitted expansion.
Junior ADUs (JADUs)
JADUs are limited to 500 sq ft maximum and must be contained within the existing primary dwelling footprint.
Setback Requirements
California law establishes maximum setback requirements. Cities cannot require more than these limits:
| Location | Maximum Setback | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Side yard | 4 feet | From property line to ADU wall |
| Rear yard | 4 feet | From rear property line to ADU wall |
| Existing structure conversion | 0 feet (existing footprint) | No setback required for existing buildings |
| ADU above existing garage | Existing setback | Match existing garage location |
| Front yard | Per local zoning | Typically 20-25 feet; state doesn't override |
Key Protection: If you have an existing garage or structure within 4 feet of the property line, you can convert it to an ADU at its current location—no setback variance needed. This is often the easiest path to ADU approval.
Height Limits
California law establishes minimum height limits that cities must allow:
| ADU Type | Minimum Height Allowed |
|---|---|
| Detached ADU (1 story) | 16 feet |
| Detached ADU (2 stories) | 18 feet (within 1/2 mile of transit or job-rich area) |
| ADU above existing garage | 18 feet (per SB 897) |
| Attached ADU | 25 feet or matching primary dwelling |
2022 Height Increase (SB 897): Prior to 2022, ADUs above garages were limited to 16 feet. SB 897 increased this to 18 feet, making two-story ADUs above garages more practical.
Parking Requirements
California law has effectively eliminated parking requirements for most ADUs:
No Parking Required When:
- ADU is within 1/2 mile of public transit (bus, rail, ferry)
- ADU is within a designated historic district
- ADU is part of an existing primary residence or accessory structure
- ADU is within 1 block of a car-share vehicle
- On-street parking permits are required but not offered to ADU occupants
Practical impact: Nearly all urban and suburban ADUs qualify for at least one exemption. The 1/2 mile transit rule covers most California cities.
If Parking IS Required
In the rare cases where parking is required:
- Maximum of 1 space per ADU
- Can be provided as tandem parking
- Can be located in setback areas
- Can be covered or uncovered
Replacement Parking
If you convert a garage to an ADU, no replacement parking is required. This was a major barrier eliminated by 2019 legislation.
Owner-Occupancy Rules
For Standard ADUs
No owner-occupancy requirement. You do not need to live on the property to build or rent out an ADU. The previous owner-occupancy requirement was eliminated in 2020 and made permanent by AB 976 in 2023.
Important: Some cities attempted to impose owner-occupancy requirements. State law prohibits this for ADUs permitted after January 1, 2020. If your city claims otherwise, they are not following state law.
For Junior ADUs (JADUs)
JADUs do require owner-occupancy—but the owner can live in either the JADU or the primary dwelling. A deed restriction is recorded, but it does not trigger due-on-sale clauses in mortgages.
Short-Term Rentals
ADUs less than 30 days rental (short-term rentals) may be restricted by local ordinances. Many cities prohibit or limit Airbnb-style rentals in ADUs. Check your local regulations.
Multi-Family ADU Rules
Multi-family properties (duplexes, apartments, condos) have different ADU allowances that were significantly expanded by SB 1211:
Detached ADUs on Multi-Family Lots
- Up to 8 detached ADUs allowed (per SB 1211, effective 2025)
- Subject to 4-foot setback requirements
- Subject to local height limits (typically 16-18 feet)
- Cannot exceed lot coverage limits
Conversion ADUs
- Unlimited conversions of existing non-habitable space (storage, laundry, utility rooms)
- At least one conversion ADU must be allowed
- 25% of existing units can be converted (counted separately from new construction)
Example: A 20-unit apartment building could add: 8 new detached ADUs + unlimited non-habitable space conversions + conversion of up to 5 existing units (25%). This represents significant development potential under current law.
Junior ADUs (JADUs)
Junior ADUs are small units created within the existing footprint of a primary dwelling:
JADU Requirements
| Requirement | Standard |
|---|---|
| Maximum size | 500 sq ft |
| Location | Within existing primary dwelling |
| Kitchen | Efficiency kitchen allowed (no gas, limited cooking) |
| Bathroom | May share with primary dwelling OR have separate |
| Entrance | Separate exterior entrance required |
| Interior connection | May maintain interior door to primary dwelling |
| Owner-occupancy | Required (owner in JADU OR primary dwelling) |
| Fire sprinklers | Not required if not in primary dwelling |
JADU + ADU Combination
State law guarantees the right to build both one JADU and one ADU on a single-family lot. This allows up to 3 units on most residential properties.
Navigate California ADU Laws with Expert Guidance
ADU regulations are complex and constantly evolving. We stay current on every law change and ensure your project fully complies with state and local requirements.
Get Expert ADU Planning HelpCoastal & Special Zones
Coastal Zone Properties
The California Coastal Commission previously created significant barriers for coastal ADUs. Recent legislation (AB 462) has improved this:
- ADUs up to 1,200 sq ft receive streamlined ministerial approval
- Cities must update Local Coastal Programs to comply with state ADU law
- Coastal Development Permits (CDPs) still required but cannot impose design review
- No CDP required for ADUs in existing developed areas meeting state standards
Historic Districts
ADUs in historic districts may be subject to additional design review, but:
- Cannot be prohibited outright
- Review must be objective standards, not subjective design preferences
- No parking requirement (automatic exemption)
Fire Hazard Severity Zones
High fire risk areas may have additional requirements:
- Fire-resistant construction materials
- Defensible space requirements
- Fire department review and approval
- Sprinkler requirements in some cases
HOA Properties
Homeowners Associations cannot prohibit ADUs on properties where ADUs are allowed by local zoning (AB 3182, 2020). HOAs may establish reasonable aesthetic requirements but cannot:
- Ban ADUs outright
- Require unreasonable design standards that effectively prohibit ADUs
- Charge excessive fees for ADU approval
What Cities Cannot Require
California law specifically prohibits cities from imposing these restrictions on ADUs:
Cities CANNOT:
- Require owner-occupancy for ADUs permitted after January 1, 2020
- Require more than 4-foot setbacks from side and rear property lines
- Limit ADU size below 850 sq ft (studio/1BR) or 1,000 sq ft (2+BR)
- Require replacement parking when converting a garage
- Require parking if ADU is within 1/2 mile of transit
- Charge impact fees for ADUs under 750 sq ft
- Charge utility connection fees for ADUs under 750 sq ft using existing connections
- Require passageway access (side yard access) to rear ADUs
- Apply lot coverage limits that prevent an 800 sq ft ADU
- Require fire sprinklers unless required for the primary dwelling
- Impose discretionary review (planning commission hearings, CEQA)
- Take longer than 60 days to approve complete applications
What Cities CAN Require
- Building permits and inspections
- Compliance with building codes (structural, electrical, plumbing, mechanical)
- Title 24 energy compliance
- Fire-life safety standards
- Objective design standards (height, bulk, materials lists)
- Front setback requirements (state doesn't override)
- Permit fees based on actual cost of processing
- Utility connections (for ADUs 750+ sq ft)
Know Your Rights: If your city denies your ADU application citing a restriction on this prohibited list, they may be violating state law. Consider consulting with an attorney or contacting HCD's ADU hotline for guidance.
Additional Resources
- California HCD ADU Handbook
- Step-by-Step ADU Permit Process
- ADU Permit Costs in California
- ADU Permit Timeline Guide
Disclaimer: This guide provides general information about California ADU laws as of March 2026. Laws change frequently, and local implementation varies. This is not legal advice. Consult with a licensed attorney or your local building department for guidance specific to your property and project.