Willards

ADU Pass helps homeowners in Willards, Wicomico County, Maryland navigate the permit paperwork for building an accessory dwelling unit. This area covers 2 ZIP codes.

2 ZIP codes
Wicomico County — county ADU rules and overlays

County ADU ordinance

Wicomico County permits one 'accessory apartment' per lot under § 225-60 as a special exception use on parcels with a detached single-family dwelling or a two-family dwelling. The accessory apartment must be smaller than the principal dwelling and is capped at 50% of the living area of the detached principal dwelling. Section 225-60.C imposes architectural-compatibility design standards (exterior finish materials, roof pitch, trim, windows, eaves) requiring the accessory apartment to visually match the principal dwelling. For attached accessory apartments (§ 225-60.D) only one street-facing facade entrance is permitted unless the dwelling already had additional entrances pre-conversion. For detached accessory apartments (§ 225-60.E) the unit must sit at least 60 feet from the front lot line (or 85 feet from road center, whichever is greater) or at least 6 feet behind the principal dwelling, and side/rear setbacks match the base-district requirement for the principal dwelling. The detached ADU footprint may not exceed the principal-dwelling footprint, and combined detached accessory-structure footprints may not exceed 25% of the lot area. Accessory apartments are prohibited on sites with a Type II or Type III home-based business. § 225-59 general rules also cap rear-yard accessory-structure coverage at 35% and prohibit use of a utility trailer, truck body, manufactured home, shipping container, storage box, or travel trailer as the accessory structure. Wicomico's existing 50%-of-principal living-area cap is more restrictive than the Maryland HB 1466 / SB 891 (Maryland ADU Act of 2025) 75%-of-primary ceiling and the act's unreasonable-restriction floor, and the special-exception trigger itself is among the most restrictive HB 1466 disfavors; Section 225-60 must be revised by the statewide 2026-10-01 local-compliance deadline. Critical-Area parcels are additionally subject to Chapter 125 (Critical Area Resource Protection), which constrains lot coverage and Buffer encroachment within 1,000 feet of tidal water.

County regulatory overlays

  • other — Buffer Management Plans add 60-90 days to permitting timelines on Critical Area parcels. RCA-classified parcels face the lowest allowed density; the existing § 225-60 50%-of-principal cap stacks with Chapter 125 lot-coverage limits on small RCA lots.
  • flood-zone — Federally backed mortgages on A / AE / VE parcels require flood insurance. Accessory apartments in AE zones incur elevation-and-foundation cost premiums that frequently exceed the base § 225-60 design-compatibility cost. The Maryland Flood Mapping site (mdfloodmaps.net) hosts the current effective FIRMs.
  • wetland-overlay
Maryland state — ADU law and programs

State ADU law

Maryland enacted statewide ADU preemption with the Accessory Dwelling Units Act of 2025 — HB 1466 / SB 891 (cross-filed) — passed by the General Assembly in the 2025 Regular Session and effective 2025-10-01. Counties and municipalities with planning and zoning authority must adopt local laws compliant with the Act by 2026-10-01. The Act establishes that it is the policy of Maryland to promote and encourage ADU creation on land with a primary single-family detached dwelling. ADUs are defined as secondary units on the same lot/parcel/tract as a primary single-family detached dwelling, no greater than 75% of the size of the primary dwelling. Counties and municipalities cannot prohibit ADUs or impose unreasonable restrictions on their construction or rental. The 2025 ADU Act ALSO amends the Maryland HOA Act (Title 11B of the Real Property Article), prohibiting community associations from prohibiting or unreasonably restricting ADU construction and rental. The state has been preparing this framework since 2023 (SB 382 created the ADU Policy Task Force, which issued its final report 2024-05-31).

State HOA preemption

Maryland enacted HOA preemption for ADUs as part of the 2025 ADU Act. HB 1466 / SB 891 amended the Maryland Homeowners Association Act (Real Property Article, Title 11B), adding the ADU definition at §11B-101(a-1) and prohibiting HOAs from prohibiting or unreasonably restricting the construction or rental of ADUs on lots with primary single-family detached dwelling units. HOAs retain authority to (a) treat an ADU as a separate lot for voting and assessment purposes (optional, not required) and (b) impose reasonable design and architectural standards consistent with the community's overall character. The HOA preemption became effective 2025-10-01.

State financing programs

Maryland does not currently operate an ADU-specific statewide loan, grant, or forgivable-loan program tied to the 2025 ADU Act. The Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) administers a broad portfolio of homeownership, rental development, and home-repair financing — including the Maryland Mortgage Program, Settlement Downpayment Loan Program, Project Restore (commercial-to-residential conversions), and various Energy & Home Repair loan products. None target ADU construction directly, though Project Restore can fund ADU-like conversions, and the Energy & Home Repair Loan can fund ADU-related electrical, HVAC, and weatherization upgrades.

State housing programs

Maryland's primary state-level ADU program is the 2025 ADU Act framework: statewide preemption requiring local jurisdictions to adopt compliant ordinances by 2026-10-01, including HOA preemption. The Maryland Department of Planning maintains an ADU resource hub with technical assistance for local governments. Maryland does not currently operate a statewide pre-approved ADU plan catalog, an ADU rebate, or an impact-fee waiver statute, but the local-compliance window through 2026-10-01 is expected to produce additional ADU-specific incentive programs.

  • ADU Act 2025 Statewide Floor (HB 1466 / SB 891) — Counties and municipalities with planning/zoning authority must adopt compliant ordinances by 2026-10-01, allowing ADUs on every single-family-detached lot at up to 75% of primary dwelling size. Bars prohibitions and unreasonable restrictions. Includes HOA preemption.
  • Maryland Department of Planning ADU Resource Hub — Resource hub with model ordinances, FAQs for local governments (HB 1466 FAQ), task-force final report, and statewide ADU ordinance inventory.
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

  • 21850
  • 21874

Post Office

  • 36311 Richland Rd, 21874