Pomona

Los Angeles County portion

ADU Pass helps homeowners in Pomona, Los Angeles County, California navigate the permit paperwork for building an accessory dwelling unit. This area covers 3 ZIP codes.

3 ZIP codes

ADU details

ADU legality: allowed

Stateallowed (California Government Code 65852.2 / 65852.22 (AB 68/881/671/3182, SB 13, AB 976, SB 897, AB 2221, AB 1332, SB 1211, AB 2533)) — California ADU statute preempts most local restrictions; HCD's March 2026 ADU Handbook update is the current state-level reference. Pomona's ordinance was reviewed by HCD on 2024-10-29.
Countyallowed (Los Angeles County unincorporated zoning - applies in unincorporated LA County only) — LA County's ADU rules govern unincorporated LA County. Within Pomona city limits the City's Zoning and Development Code Section 830.A plus state law are controlling.
Cityallowed (Pomona Zoning and Development Code Section 830.A (Accessory Dwelling Units and Junior ADUs); Ordinances 4281, 4353 (urgency), 4354) — Pomona's ADU/JADU standards live in the Zoning and Development Code §830.A, effective with the rewritten Zoning Code on 2024-07-31. Detached ADUs cap at 1,200 sqft; attached at 50% of primary or 1,200 sqft (whichever less); JADUs at 500 sqft within existing single-family footprint. 16 ft height for detached; 4 ft side and rear setbacks. HCD's 2024-10-29 review letter raised conformance items on the prior ordinance text that the rewrite addressed.

By-right under ministerial review per state law and Pomona Zoning Code §830.A. Plan-check intake at the Planning Counter / Development Services at 505 South Garey Avenue.

Cost scenarios

ScenarioSq ft PermitBuildTotal
minimum 400 $3,500 $180,000 $183,500
600 600 $5,200 $270,000 $275,200
midpoint 675 $5,800 $304,000 $309,800
1000 1,000 $8,500 $460,000 $468,500
maximum 1,200 $10,200 $558,000 $568,200
Fee breakdown (as of 2026-04)
Plan review$1,500
Building permit$2,800
Utility connection$1,000
Total$5,500

Permitting process

Typical duration73 days
Backlog14 days
  1. Pre-application research at the Planning Counter (~5d)
    Confirm parcel zone, setbacks, and §830.A eligibility (RS, RM, RH, MU). Planning Counter at 505 S Garey Ave is open Mon-Thu 7:30 am-6:00 pm; closed Friday. Phone +1-909-620-2191; email PlanningCounter@pomonaca.gov.
  2. Zoning clearance / Planning sign-off (~14d)
    Planning Division reviews ADU/JADU application against §830.A objective standards. Class I ministerial track; non-discretionary if standards met.
  3. Building plan check (Building & Safety Division) (~30d)
    Plan check for CRC, CMC, CPC, CEC, Title 24 Part 6 (energy), and Pomona local amendments. Pomona uses the Tyler EnerGov Citizen Self Service portal for solar streamlining and tracks ADU permits through the same Development Services queue. Typical 2 correction cycles for custom plans; pre-approved-plan track skips most plan-check.
  4. Fire Marshal review (if applicable) (~14d)
    LA County Fire Department serves Pomona for fire prevention; Fire Marshal review attaches when site-access, hydrant-distance, or sprinkler-supply issues flag. Smoke- and CO-alarm conformance always required.
  5. Permit issuance (~5d)
    Once all corrections cleared and fees paid at the Planning Counter or via the online portal, permit issues. State law requires action within 60 days of complete submittal (deemed-approval).
  6. Construction inspections
    Building & Safety inspections: foundation, framing, MEP rough-in, insulation, drywall, final. Inspection scheduling by phone or portal.
  7. Certificate of occupancy (~5d)
    Final inspection sign-off; ADU eligible for tenancy upon CO issuance.

Viability (permitted uses)

  • Long-term rental: yes (Pomona Zoning and Development Code §830.A) 30+ day rental of ADU permitted by-right. AB 1482 statewide rent cap may apply to some Pomona properties; new ADU construction is exempt from local rent control under Costa-Hawkins.
  • Short-term rental: with-restrictions (Pomona Municipal Code STR provisions; TOT requirement) Pomona regulates STRs separately from §830.A ADU permitting; STR registration runs through the City Clerk and Code Compliance.
    • Transient Occupancy Tax collection required
    • Business license required
    • City STR ordinance restricts non-owner-occupied STRs in some residential zones
  • Office rental: no ADU use limited to residential dwelling under §830.A; commercial office tenancy not permitted in residentially-zoned ADU.
  • Home office: yes Home occupation permitted with restrictions on signage, customer traffic, and outdoor storage.
  • Studio / workshop: yes Personal artist/workshop use is a permitted accessory residential use.
  • Agriculture: with-restrictions Limited urban agriculture and small-livestock keeping permitted in designated residential zones; varies by district.
  • Relative support: yes Family-occupancy ADU explicitly permitted; JADU framework specifically supports owner+relative arrangement.

Incentives

Contacts

DepartmentCity of Pomona Development Services Department - Planning Division and Building & Safety Division

Staff: Planning Counter (ADU/JADU intake and zoning clearance) PlanningCounter@pomonaca.gov, Building & Safety Division (Plan check, building permits, inspections), Pomona Sewer and Water Services (Utility coordination for ADU connections)

Utilities

  • Water: City of Pomona Water Resources Department (most parcels) - Golden State Water Co. serves a smaller adjacent service area · 21d connect · $4,200
  • Sewer: City of Pomona Sewer Services (collection) discharging to Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts (treatment, JWPCP/SJCWRP regional system) · 21d connect · $4,800
  • Electric: Southern California Edison (SCE) - delivery; Pomona Choice Energy (CCA, generation) is the default supply provider since 2020 · 35d connect · $2,200
  • Gas: Southern California Gas Company (SoCalGas) · 30d connect · $1,700

Property values & taxes

Median value$712,000
Median tax$8,200/yr
Effective rate1.1%

Market rent by ADU size

Sq ftRent
400$1,450/mo
600$1,825/mo
800$2,150/mo
1,000$2,425/mo
1,200$2,700/mo

Construction timeline

Detached build22 weeks
Conversion11 weeks
Contractor lead4 months

Realistic total: best 7mo · typical 11mo · worst 16mo

Inland LA County contractor pool more available than coastal LA but tighter than Central Valley. Cal Poly Pomona engineering/architecture faculty network drives some local design-build availability.

Modular pathway California HCD Factory-Built Housing Program · inspectors are occasional with modular

I-10 / SR-71 / SR-57 freeway corridors deliver modules well to Pomona. Older central-Pomona streets (Holt corridor, Lincoln Park) have narrow lot frontages that may constrain module width; Phillips Ranch and newer subdivisions are easier.

Financing

Typical HELOC8.5%
Cash-out refi avg7.4%
Fannie Mae ADUeligible

State ADU loans:

Insurance impact

Annual premium delta$540
Landlord policyrecommended
Umbrella threshold$1M umbrella when renting

Inland LA County exposure profile is moderate: WUI risk in foothill zones, modest seismic, lower flood exposure than coastal LA. California FAIR Plan availability where private market declines.

HOA prevalence & preemption

% parcels under HOA32%
State HOA preemptionyes
Preemption citationCalifornia Civil Code 4740 / 4741 (AB 670 / AB 3182)

Pomona has substantial HOA prevalence in Phillips Ranch, Westmont, and newer master-planned subdivisions. State law voids HOA covenants prohibiting ADUs on single-family lots.

Regulatory overlays (6)

  • historic-district — Lincoln Park, Wilton Heights, Hacienda Park historic districts; Downtown Pomona Historic District (Antique Row / Arts Colony) · +21d · +5% cost
    Historic Preservation Commission reviews ADUs in designated districts; objective design rules apply. (map)
  • wui-fire-zone — Northern Pomona foothills along Phillips Ranch / Diamond Bar boundary; small portions of east Pomona near San Jose Hills · +14d · +4% cost
    Most flat-valley Pomona parcels are not in WUI; foothill-adjacent parcels trigger CRC Chapter 7A wildfire-resistant construction. (map)
  • seismic-retrofit-zone — Pomona is in Seismic Design Category D; near the San Jose / Sierra Madre / Chino fault systems · +7d · +3% cost
    Standard CRC seismic detailing; Alquist-Priolo zones do not traverse most residentially zoned parcels. (map)
  • flood-zone — FEMA SFHA along San Jose Creek and Thompson Creek corridors; limited urban flood-zone overlay · +10d · +4% cost
    Most Pomona parcels are in Zone X. Creek-adjacent parcels require FFE review. (map)
  • airport-noise-zone — Brackett Field Airport (KPOC) just east in La Verne; AICUZ noise contours can clip eastern Pomona neighborhoods · +5d · +2% cost
    ALUC review may attach for parcels under 65+ CNEL contours; typically modest sound-attenuation requirements. (map)
  • other — South Coast Air Basin (SCAQMD) Pomona Valley non-attainment overlay - applies to construction equipment emissions on larger projects; Foothill Transit corridor parking-waiver eligibility (1/2 mi rule)
    Most ADU projects are below SCAQMD construction thresholds; transit-corridor parcels get statewide parking waiver. (map)
Technical envelope (climate & building code)

Climate & energy code

IECC climate zone3B
Heating degree days1,450
Cooling degree days1,280
Design low / high36°F / 96°F
Frost depth6"
Wind design speed96 mph
Seismic design cat.D
Annual rainfall17"
Wildfire exposureModerate
Energy codeCalifornia Title 24
Version / adopted2025 / 2026-01-01
Solar requiredyes
EV-ready requiredyes

Building code

Base codeCalifornia Residential Code (CRC)
Version year2,025
Adopted2026-01-01
Fire sprinkleruniversal
Egress window5.7 sqft min
Min ceiling7 ft
Attic R-valueR-38 min
Wall R-valueR-13 min

Amendments:

Contractor market (aggregate)

Licensed residential GCs1,850
ADU-specialist GCs95
Laborer median wage$27/hr

Known issues (1)

  • issue
Los Angeles County — county ADU rules and overlays

County ADU ordinance

Los Angeles County regulates ADUs on unincorporated parcels under Title 22 (Planning and Zoning) of the County Code. The ordinance layers on top of California Government Code sections 65852.2 (ADU) and 65852.22 (JADU) and conforms to AB 68 / AB 881 / SB 13 (2019), AB 345 / AB 976 (2019 owner-occupancy elimination), AB 2221 / SB 897 (2022 permit-timeline tightening), and AB 1033 (2023 optional condo-ADU separation). Per ongoing state ADU reform — including AB 976 (2023 permanent elimination of owner-occupancy requirements), AB 1033 (2023 condo-ADU), AB 2533 (2024 strengthened amnesty / unpermitted-ADU legalization), SB 543 (2024 fee transparency), and AB 1332 (2023 statewide pre-approved plans) — any local provision conflicting with state law is null and void. The county's distinct contributions atop state law are its Hillside Management Area (HMA) design standards, Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone (VHFHSZ) / WUI requirements for extensive back-country parcels, Coastal Development Permit (CDP) requirements in the certified portions of the county's Local Coastal Program (Santa Monica Mountains, Marina del Rey, and unincorporated coastal fringe), historic-district protections in designated Historic Preservation Overlay Zones and National Register districts, and airport-noise compatibility review around Whiteman, Compton/Woodley, Fox Field, General Fox, and the military influence areas.

State-floor overlay: California state law (Gov. Code 65852.2, 65852.22) preempts most local ADU regulation. The state sets ministerial-approval requirements; caps owner-occupancy restrictions (permanently eliminated by AB 976, effective 2024); mandates 60-day permit review timelines (AB 2221 / SB 897); sets minimum allowed sizes (state-floor 850 sqft one-bedroom, 1000 sqft two-bedroom for detached ADUs); forbids parking requirements within 1/2 mile of transit or for ADUs created via garage conversion; caps impact fees at zero for ADUs under 750 sqft (SB 13); requires utility connection handling (AB 2221 / SB 897 prohibit separate sewer/water capacity fees for ADUs under certain thresholds); and preempts local design-review triggers beyond objective design standards. AB 2533 (2024) requires jurisdictions to administratively legalize pre-2020 unpermitted ADUs that meet current state standards. AB 1033 (2023) permits — but does not mandate — cities and counties to opt into an optional program allowing ADUs to be sold as condominium units separately from the primary dwelling. Los Angeles County's ordinance reiterates and applies these state floors, adding only the locally-controlled hillside, fire, coastal, historic, and airport-noise overlays. Where a project is in a VHFHSZ, the Santa Monica Mountains Local Coastal Program jurisdiction, or a Historic Preservation Overlay Zone, state ADU preemption still applies to the ADU allowance itself but does not preempt the county's separate fire, coastal, or historic-preservation authority over site-design standards.

County regulatory overlays

Los Angeles County administers or co-administers an unusually wide set of overlay regimes that materially affect ADU siting on unincorporated parcels, reflecting its combined coastal, mountain, desert, and urban geography: (1) California Coastal Commission jurisdiction in the unincorporated coastal zone, implemented through the county's certified Local Coastal Programs for the Santa Monica Mountains (Malibu/Topanga area) and Marina del Rey; (2) Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (VHFHSZ) designated by CAL FIRE / State Board of Forestry across the Angeles, San Gabriel, and Santa Monica Mountains and the Antelope Valley foothills, driving California Building Code Chapter 7A (WUI) ignition-resistant-construction and Pub. Res. Code 4291 defensible-space requirements; (3) Hillside Management Areas (HMA) defined under Title 22 on parcels with slope 25% or steeper — a county-unique overlay that adds objective hillside design standards on top of state ADU allowance; (4) FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas along the Los Angeles, San Gabriel, Rio Hondo, Santa Clara, and Antelope Valley washes, administered by DPW through the county Floodplain Management program; (5) Historic Preservation Overlay Zones and National Register districts — most concentrated in Altadena, Florence-Firestone, East Los Angeles, and specific unincorporated historic enclaves — where design review applies; (6) Airport Land Use Compatibility Plans administered by the Los Angeles County Airport Land Use Commission for Whiteman (Pacoima), Compton/Woodley, Fox Field (Lancaster), General Fox, Brackett Field (La Verne), San Gabriel Valley, Catalina (Avalon), plus military AIAs around Los Alamitos JFTB, Point Mugu, and the Edwards AFB southern extensions; (7) the Santa Monica Mountains North Area Community Standards District and other Community Standards Districts (CSDs) that add area-specific objective standards on top of the base zone.

  • California Coastal Commission / Santa Monica Mountains and Marina del Rey Local Coastal Programs — State law (Gov. Code 65852.2(j)) preserves the CDP requirement for ADUs in the Coastal Zone notwithstanding otherwise-ministerial ADU preemption. The ADU itself is still allowed by right; the site-specific CDP review addresses visual, habitat, and public-access impacts separately. The Santa Monica Mountains LCP imposes the most distinctive overlay-specific restrictions on ADU siting in LA County — including ridgeline-avoidance setbacks, ESHA buffer requirements, and fuel-modification-zone coordination with LACoFD.
  • CAL FIRE / LACoFD Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones and Hillside Management Area Fire Requirements — The 2025 wildfire season reinforced fire-hardening requirements across the county. LACoFD may impose additional project-specific conditions in post-fire rebuild areas (Eaton Fire / Palisades Fire rebuild zones). Note: the 2024 'Fire Hazard Severity Zone' statewide update (effective 2025) expanded LRA VHFHSZ boundaries in many LA County unincorporated communities; owners should verify current designated status via the OSFM / CAL FIRE web map. The WUI Chapter 7A premium commonly adds 8-15% to ADU construction cost in unincorporated VHFHSZ communities.
  • Hillside Management Area (HMA) — Title 22 objective design standards for sloped parcels — The HMA overlay is largely unique to LA County among California counties of comparable size and often governs the buildable-envelope question before the ADU allowance question. Owners should retain a civil engineer early to verify buildable envelope within HMA constraints; an ADU is still allowed as of right under state law but may be limited to the existing dwelling footprint (conversion) where hillside-envelope constraints preclude a detached addition.
  • FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas — National Flood Insurance Program — Mandatory flood insurance applies to ADUs in SFHA with federally-backed mortgages. Owners should verify effective FIRM panel status before design. Post-2025 wildfire burn scars in the Santa Monica and San Gabriel mountains have elevated debris-flow risk and may result in emergency or post-event FIRM revisions.
  • County Historic Preservation — HPOZ-equivalent protection and National Register districts — ADUs within the footprint of a designated historic structure (attached, conversion, JADU) trigger historic-review for building-envelope modifications. Detached ADUs on historic parcels are generally less restricted as long as they are visually subordinate and set back from the historic structure. National Register listing by itself does not impose private-property regulatory limits; it becomes enforceable only when federal funding or permits are involved — but local HPOZ-equivalent designation does impose objective design review.
  • LA County Airport Land Use Commission — ALUCP review — In a safety-zone inconsistency, the Board of Supervisors may override only by super-majority vote per PUC 21676. Most single detached ADUs outside the innermost safety zones face only noise-attenuation requirements; ADUs in Safety Zone 1 (runway protection zone) may be prohibited, and those in Safety Zones 2-3 may face density limits that preclude new dwelling units.
  • Community Standards Districts (CSDs) — area-specific objective design overlays — CSD standards must remain objective under state ADU preemption. Any CSD provision that would turn a ministerial ADU into a discretionary project or impose non-objective design review is null and void as to ADUs. Applicants and reviewers should cross-reference base zone, CSD, HMA, HPOZ, CDP, and ALUC layers for any given parcel via GIS Net before design.

County permitting (unincorporated parcels)

The Los Angeles County Department of Regional Planning (DRP) is the lead planning / zoning authority for ADU applications on unincorporated parcels, working in tandem with the Department of Public Works — Building and Safety Division (DPW B&S) for building-code plan check and inspection, the Los Angeles County Fire Department (LACoFD — which also serves most contract cities) for fire-defensible-space and WUI review, and the county's Department of Public Health (DPH Environmental Health) where on-site septic or well-water systems are involved. Unincorporated Los Angeles County is vast and diverse: it covers approximately 2,650 square miles and includes dense urbanized fringe areas (East Los Angeles, Florence-Firestone, Willowbrook, West Rancho Dominguez, West Whittier-Los Nietos, Hacienda Heights, Rowland Heights, Altadena, La Crescenta-Montrose, Ladera Heights, View Park-Windsor Hills, Marina del Rey), suburban communities (Walnut Park, Topanga, Agua Dulce, Acton), and extensive rural back-country (Antelope Valley unincorporated — Leona Valley, Littlerock, Llano, Lake Hughes, Green Valley; Angeles and San Gabriel National Forest fringe; Santa Monica Mountains; Santa Clarita Valley unincorporated fringe). ADU permit review therefore traverses materially different zoning, fire-hazard, and overlay regimes depending on where the parcel sits.

DepartmentLos Angeles County Department of Regional Planning (DRP) — lead planning / zoning authority
Address320 West Temple Street, 13th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90012
Phone213-974-6411
California state — ADU law and programs

State ADU law

California has the most aggressive statewide ADU preemption regime in the US, built from ~15 bills passed 2019-2025 and enforced by the Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD). The 2026 HCD ADU Handbook addendum (in effect with the 2025 Title 24 code cycle) is the operative state-level reference. The regime does four things at once: (1) preempts local zoning that would ban or unreasonably restrict ADUs; (2) imposes by-right ministerial approval with short statutory deadlines; (3) caps fees and utility-connection charges; and (4) empowers HCD to void non-compliant local ordinances.

State HOA preemption

California has the strongest statewide HOA-preemption regime in the US for accessory dwelling units, built from two bills: AB 670 (2019) voided ADU-prohibiting covenants on single-family residential lots, and AB 3182 (2020) extended and codified the preemption into the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (Civil Code §§ 4740 / 4741). The combination prohibits common-interest communities from banning ADUs, restricting rentals below 25% of separate interests, or treating ADUs as separate HOA interests. Limits remain: HOAs retain authority over reasonable design standards and statutory height limits, and the 2026 Carlsbad case (CalMatters coverage) established that an HOA's documented design-standards regime can effectively delay or constrain ADU approval short of outright prohibition.

State financing programs

California's flagship state-level ADU financing program — the CalHFA ADU Grant Program — is paused and has not been refunded since the original $100 million allocation was fully deployed 2023-12-28. The program provided up to $40,000 per qualifying homeowner for pre-construction and non-recurring closing costs and financed approximately 2,500 ADUs in two rounds. As of 2026-04, no new funding round has been announced in the state budget. CalHFA continues to publish anti-scam warnings because bad actors actively solicit homeowners claiming access to grant funds that no longer exist. State-level financing activity has shifted to local pilot programs (San Francisco, San Jose, Los Angeles, San Diego) and private financing products (Fannie Mae ADU mortgage, HELOC, construction-to-permanent).

State housing programs

California's state-level ADU programs are concentrated at HCD (technical guidance, ordinance review, enforcement) and the paused CalHFA grant pipeline (covered under stateFinancing). The state does not operate a central pre-approved ADU plan library — instead, AB 1332 (2024) created a preemption framework for local pre-approved plans with a 30-day ministerial-approval deadline, and major cities (Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, Sacramento, Berkeley) have rolled out their own plan catalogs. The California YIMBY coalition and other housing-policy organizations play an influential role in bill drafting; they are not state agencies but effectively drive much of the ADU legislative agenda. The Title 24 code cycle (now 2025, in effect for 2026 permits) is the authoritative building-code baseline.

Federal (United States) — ADU-relevant rules and programs

Federal ADU law

The United States has no federal statute that directly regulates accessory dwelling unit entitlement or design. Land-use authority over ADUs resides with states and local governments under the traditional police power. Federal engagement is limited to financing (Fannie/Freddie/FHA/VA/USDA), flood insurance (FEMA/NFIP), and discretionary housing programs (HUD), which are recorded in sibling sections of this file.

Federal financing programs

Federal housing-finance agencies and GSEs set nationwide underwriting rules that govern whether an ADU can be financed, appraised, and counted toward mortgage qualifying income. The relevant actors are Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHA (HUD), VA, and USDA Rural Development.

Federal tax credits

There is no ADU-specific federal tax credit. ADUs may incidentally qualify for existing federal energy-efficiency and clean-energy tax credits when the ADU construction includes qualifying measures.

Federal housing programs

HUD administers several discretionary programs that can fund ADU-related activity at the grantee's election, but none is an ADU-specific program.

ZIP Codes

  • 91766
  • 91767
  • 91768

Post Office

  • 580 W Monterey Ave, 91769