Geraldine
ADU Pass helps homeowners in Geraldine, Chouteau County, Montana navigate the permit paperwork for building an accessory dwelling unit. This area covers 1 ZIP code.
Map
Chouteau County — county ADU rules and overlays
County ADU ordinance
Chouteau County (Fort Benton county seat — 'the birthplace of Montana,' head of Missouri River steamboat navigation; north-central Montana wheat country; ~5,750 residents; spans the Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monument and the Bear Paw / Highwood Mountain foothills) does not maintain a comprehensive countywide zoning code. Land use in unincorporated Chouteau County is largely unregulated except for state-level subdivision review under the Montana Subdivision and Platting Act (MCA Title 76 Ch. 3) and floodplain regulation under MCA Title 76 Ch. 5. Fort Benton (~1,460 residents) is well below the 5,000-population threshold for Montana SB 323 (duplex preemption) and SB 245 (commercial multifamily preemption); however, Montana SB 528 (2023, Mont. Code Ann. § 76-2-345) ADU preemption applies to ALL incorporated Montana cities regardless of population, so Fort Benton, Big Sandy, and Geraldine are all bound by the state ADU floor. Unincorporated Chouteau County is not subject to SB 528.
State-floor overlay: Montana SB 528 establishes a state ADU floor for Fort Benton, Big Sandy, and Geraldine. Unincorporated Chouteau County is not subject to the preemption.
County regulatory overlays
Chouteau County's overlay landscape is dominated by FEMA NFIP floodplain regulation along the Missouri, Marias, Teton, and Judith Rivers, plus the federal Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monument administered by BLM (377,000 acres; designated 2001), and scattered ICBM launch-facility easements from Malmstrom AFB's 341st Missile Wing (silos in northern Chouteau County). The Lewis & Clark National Historic Trail follows the Missouri River through the county.
- FEMA NFIP Special Flood Hazard Areas in Chouteau County — Fort Benton's historic riverfront sits inside SFHA; new ADUs on those parcels face significant elevation requirements.
- Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monument — Visual-resource management and cultural-resource (Lewis & Clark, Nez Perce Trail) considerations apply to construction on visible inholdings.
- Malmstrom AFB ICBM launch-facility easements — ADU construction on a parcel containing or adjacent to a silo easement requires coordination with the Air Force Real Property Office.
- Wildland-Urban Interface (Bear Paw Mountains, Highwood foothills, Missouri Breaks)
- Fort Benton Historic District (NHL) and Lewis & Clark NHT — ADU additions inside Fort Benton's historic district require city Certificate of Appropriateness review.
County permitting (unincorporated parcels)
Chouteau County does not operate a county building department for residential construction in unincorporated areas; building-code enforcement is delegated to the State of Montana (Department of Labor & Industry, Building Codes Bureau) only for certain commercial or state-jurisdiction projects. Single-family residences and ADUs in unincorporated Chouteau County are typically constructed without municipal-style plan review. State-level oversight applies to on-site septic (DEQ Subdivision review), well construction (DNRC water rights), and floodplain development (county floodplain administrator under MCA Title 76 Ch. 5). The Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monument administered by BLM imposes federal land-management constraints on inholdings and adjacent parcels.
Montana state — ADU law and programs
State ADU law
Montana has enacted strong statewide ADU preemption through Senate Bill 528 (2023), codified at Mont. Code Ann. § 76-2-345. SB 528 is part of the 2023 'Montana Miracle' housing reform package (also including SB 323 duplex preemption and SB 245 commercial-zone multifamily). SB 528 requires every Montana city to allow at least one ADU by right on any lot containing a single-family dwelling, with size capped at the lesser of 1,000 sq ft or the floor area of the primary dwelling. ADUs may be attached, detached, or internal. Cities are prohibited from requiring additional parking, fees, design-match to the primary dwelling, owner-occupancy, occupant-relationship limits, or impact fees specifically for ADUs. ADUs must still meet building, fire, and public-health codes. Effective 2024-01-01. The Montana Supreme Court (September 2024) lifted a Gallatin County district-court injunction obtained by Montanans Against Irresponsible Densification (MAID), allowing the law to take effect; a Daily Montanan March 2025 ruling confirmed the affordable-housing bills are a 'legitimate government concern.' The 2025 session continued the reform trajectory (HB 533 wildfire-insurance transparency); no rollback bills have advanced as of 2026-04-26.
State HOA preemption
Montana's HOA statute Mont. Code Ann. § 70-17-901 (https://mca.legmt.gov/bills/mca/title_0700/chapter_0170/part_0090/section_0010/0700-0170-0090-0010.html) prohibits an HOA from adopting or enforcing a covenant amendment that imposes more onerous use restrictions than those in place when a member acquired their interest, unless the affected member consents in writing. After 2019-05-09, an HOA also may not enforce a covenant in a way that limits uses that were allowed when the member acquired the property. This is a one-way ratchet protecting existing uses, not an affirmative ADU preemption: an HOA's pre-existing covenant prohibiting ADUs remains enforceable against owners who took title with that restriction in place. SB 528's text expressly addresses municipal zoning, not private covenants, and § 70-17-901(2) carves out covenants required to comply with applicable federal, state, and local laws — but a covenant banning ADUs is not 'required' by SB 528, so the carve-out does not flip pre-existing ADU bans. A homeowner subject to an HOA covenant prohibiting ADUs has no state-law remedy under current Montana law and must seek the consent or amendment process within the association.
State financing programs
Montana Board of Housing (MBOH) under the Montana Department of Commerce does not operate an ADU-specific loan or grant product as of 2026-04-26. Construction or rehab of an ADU on a primary residence may be financed indirectly through MBOH's Regular Bond Loan Program (30-year, low-interest first mortgage geared to first-time buyers under income and purchase-price limits) or the Bond Advantage / MBOH Plus Down Payment Assistance Programs (up to 5% / $15,000 in DPA). All MBOH first-mortgage products require qualifying for an underlying FHA, VA, RD, or HUD-184 loan; an existing ADU on the property is generally permissible. The Department of Commerce's Coal Trust Multifamily Loan Program funds rental housing developments which can include ADU-style units in multi-unit projects but is not a homeowner-facing instrument.
State housing programs
Montana does not operate a statewide pre-approved ADU plan catalog as of 2026-04-26. The 2023 Montana Miracle reform package (SB 528, SB 323, SB 245, SB 382) established the country's most aggressive state preemption of single-family-only zoning, but did not pair the preemption with a state plan library, impact-fee waiver fund, or per-ADU rebate. SB 382 (the Montana Land Use Planning Act, https://archive.legmt.gov/bills/2023/BillPdf/SB0382.pdf) restructures comprehensive-planning requirements for cities of 5,000+ residents toward a more streamlined, plan-then-permit model. Implementation by the Department of Commerce and the Department of Environmental Quality continues; the DEQ Energy Code office published an ADU best-practices guide in fall 2023.
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
- 59446
Post Office
- 159 Broadway Ave W, 59446