Dayton

ADU Pass helps homeowners in Dayton, Hennepin County, Minnesota navigate the permit paperwork for building an accessory dwelling unit. This area covers 1 ZIP code.

1 ZIP code
Hennepin County — county ADU rules and overlays

County ADU ordinance

Hennepin County, MN (1.26M residents including Minneapolis) does not exercise broad zoning authority over its 45 municipalities. Minnesota is a strong municipal-zoning state under Minn. Stat. Ch. 462. Each Hennepin municipality (Minneapolis, Bloomington, Plymouth, Brooklyn Park, Eden Prairie, Maple Grove, Edina, St. Louis Park, Minnetonka, Hopkins, Richfield) sets its own ADU rules. Minneapolis was an early pioneer with its 2018 abolition of single-family-only zoning citywide and ADU enabling provisions in the 2040 Plan.

State-floor overlay: Minnesota has not enacted comprehensive statewide ADU preemption.

County regulatory overlays

Hennepin County administers flood-hazard, and (where mapped) coastal, wildland-fire, historic, and airport overlays that shape ADU project feasibility. The most consistent overlay across the county is FEMA NFIP floodplain regulation; other overlays apply to specific geographies inside the county.

County permitting (unincorporated parcels)

Hennepin County issues building permits for parcels in unincorporated territory through its development services / planning department, with separate review tracks for zoning conformance, building-code compliance, on-site sewage where applicable, floodplain compliance, and addressing. Inside incorporated municipalities, city departments handle their own permits; the county's authority is geographically limited to unincorporated territory. An ADU permit application is typically processed as a residential building permit with a zoning verification step against the county's ordinance for the parcel's zoning district.

DepartmentHennepin County Development Services / Planning Department
Minnesota state — ADU law and programs

State ADU law

Minnesota has NOT enacted a statewide ADU preemption statute as of 2026-04-26. ADU regulation remains a matter of local zoning under each city's and county's general police-power authority (Minn. Stat. ch. 462 for municipal planning, Minn. Stat. ch. 394 for county zoning). Several reform bills are pending in the 94th Legislature (2025-2026 biennium): HF 1987 / SF 2229 (the Minnesota Starter Home Act, chief House author Rep. Kraft), would prohibit municipalities from excluding single-family dwellings, duplexes, ADUs, and townhouses from residential zones; HF 2140 / SF 2231 (the More Homes, Right Places Act) would direct cities to designate higher-density zones along main corridors; HF 1309 / SF 1268 would eliminate parking minimums statewide. As of 2026-04-26 none of these bills has been enacted; HF 1987 cleared the House Housing Finance and Policy Committee in spring 2025 and was referred to House Elections Finance and Government Operations.

State financing programs

Minnesota Housing Finance Agency (Minnesota Housing) does not operate an ADU-specific loan or grant product as of 2026-04-26. ADU construction and rehabilitation can be financed through three general-purpose programs: the Fix Up Loan (statewide home-improvement loan up to 20-year term, secured or unsecured, no income limit on the standard track), the Rehabilitation Loan Program / Emergency & Accessibility Loan Program (RLP/ELP) for low-income owner-occupants (max $37,500, forgivable if owner remains for the loan term, 15 years for real property), and the Start Up first-time-homebuyer mortgage program with down-payment-assistance overlays. None of these is ADU-specific; an ADU project must qualify under each program's general eligibility (primary residence, income caps, etc.). Tribal nations and several counties operate their own rehab loan funds (e.g., St. Paul Homeowner Rehab Loans, Anoka County Rehabilitation Loan Program, Olmsted County Housing Rehabilitation).

State housing programs

Minnesota does not operate a statewide pre-approved ADU plan catalog, an impact-fee waiver statute, or a streamlined-review mandate for ADUs. The 2023 housing omnibus (H.F. 2335 / S.F. 2566, signed 2023-05-25) appropriated approximately $1 billion across Minnesota Housing programs but did not include ADU-specific incentives. The Met Council's housing-action funding for the Twin Cities seven-county region encourages ADU-permissive zoning as part of the Livable Communities Act score, indirectly rewarding cities that adopt ADU ordinances. Pending 2025-2026 legislation (HF 1987 Starter Home Act, HF 2140 More Homes Right Places Act) would establish state preemption-style mandates if enacted but have not yet passed.

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 Code

  • 55327

Post Office

  • 18521 Robinson St, 55327