Richmond

Henrico County portion

ADU Pass helps homeowners in Richmond, Henrico County, Virginia navigate the permit paperwork for building an accessory dwelling unit. This area covers 7 ZIP codes.

7 ZIP codes

ADU details

ADU legality: allowed-with-restrictions

Stateunclear (Virginia accessory-dwelling framework (Dillon Rule, Va. Code Title 15.2)) — Virginia operates under the Dillon Rule with no statewide ADU preemption. Section 15.2-2280 delegates zoning authority to localities. Section 15.2-2305 expressly authorizes counties and cities to permit accessory apartments in single-family detached dwellings. Each Virginia locality determines its own ADU rules.
Countywith-restrictions (Henrico County zoning has no effect within Richmond's city limits) — Richmond is one of Virginia's 38 independent cities and is governed by its own zoning ordinance; Henrico County zoning does not apply inside Richmond. This research file lives in the henrico-county folder as a cross-reference because Henrico County wraps Richmond on the north, east, and west sides, and Richmond's residential market intersects extensively with Henrico's inner suburbs (Lakeside, Highland Springs, the Glen Allen corridor, and the West End / Three Chopt Road area).
Cityallowed (Richmond Code of Ordinances Section 30-446 et seq. (Accessory Dwelling Units; adopted by Richmond City Council Sept 25, 2023)) — Richmond's by-right ADU framework was enacted by the City Council in September 2023. One ADU per parcel is permitted in every residential zoning district. The size cap is the greater of 33% of the principal dwelling's floor area or 500 sqft. The ADU must share the lot with a single-family dwelling (existing or proposed). Detached ADUs are governed by Article VI, Division 9. Driveway access, fire-apparatus reach, and hydrant proximity must satisfy Department of Public Works and Department of Fire and Emergency Services standards. The ongoing Code Refresh comprehensive rezoning is expected to be adopted in spring 2026 and would broaden allowances to permit duplex + ADU, or two distinct dwellings, by-right on many parcels.

Richmond's ADU framework opened the city to investor-pathway ADU construction in 2023. From a Henrico County reader's perspective, the Richmond profile is materially more permissive than the surrounding Henrico unincorporated suburbs (Henrico County's accessory-dwelling rules and short-term-rental rules are more restrictive). Cross-county ADU investors commonly consider Richmond city parcels for new construction and Henrico parcels for owner-occupied accessory dwellings.

Cost scenarios

ScenarioSq ft PermitBuildTotal
minimum 200 $3,600 $60,200 $63,800
600 600 $3,600 $180,600 $184,200
1000 1,000 $3,600 $301,000 $304,600
Fee breakdown (as of 2026-05)
Plan review$900
Building permit$1,900
Impact fees$800
Total$3,600

Permitting process

Typical duration110 days
Backlog32 days

Viability (permitted uses)

  • Long-term rental: yes Long-term rental of an ADU is fully permitted. The Virginia Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (Va. Code Section 55.1-1200 et seq.) governs.
  • Short-term rental: with-restrictions Richmond's separate short-term-rental ordinance (also adopted September 2023) requires registration with the Commissioner of the Revenue and remittance of Richmond Transient Lodging Tax. STR of an ADU is permitted subject to that registration. Compared with Henrico County's restrictive STR rules (60-day annual cap, hosted-only, owner-primary-residence-only), Richmond city STR allowances are materially more permissive.
  • Office rental: with-restrictions An ADU cannot operate as a standalone commercial office; the residential framework requires the ADU to be a dwelling. A home occupation may be conducted from an ADU subject to Richmond's home-occupation conditions.
  • Home office: yes Home occupation is permitted in residential districts subject to Richmond's standard home-occupation conditions (no on-site employees, no customer traffic generators, no exterior signage).
  • Studio / workshop: yes Personal studio (artist, music, craft, woodworking) is a permitted accessory use to an ADU under the residential-use framework.
  • Agriculture: with-restrictions Richmond is fully urbanized; agricultural use generally not applicable. Urban-agriculture (community gardens, limited fowl) is regulated by separate Richmond ordinances.
  • Relative support: yes Family / multigenerational accessory dwelling is the most common use pattern under Richmond's 2023 ADU framework and is fully by-right.

Contacts

DepartmentCity of Richmond Department of Planning and Development Review; Zoning Administration; Permits and Inspections

Staff: Richmond Zoning Counter (Zoning Administrator / ADU intake) planninganddevelopment@rva.gov, Richmond Permits and Inspections (Building Official), Richmond Assessor of Real Estate (City Assessor's Office), Richmond Commission of Architectural Review (Historic Preservation Staff)

Utilities

  • Water: Richmond Department of Public Utilities (city-owned water utility) · 30d connect · $3,800
  • Sewer: Richmond Department of Public Utilities (city-owned sewer collection and treatment) · 35d connect · $5,200
  • Electric: Dominion Energy Virginia · 21d connect · $2,300
  • Gas: Richmond Gas Works (city-owned natural-gas distribution utility) · 21d connect · $1,700

Property values & taxes

Median value$329,950
Median tax$3,960/yr
Effective rate1.2%

Construction timeline

Detached build28 weeks
Conversion15 weeks
Contractor lead4 months

Realistic total: best 8mo · typical 12mo · worst 20mo

Modular pathway inspectors are experienced with modular

Richmond's urban core narrow streets and historic-district CAR constraints typically rule out modular delivery in Church Hill, Fan, Jackson Ward; West End, Manchester, and east-side neighborhoods are modular-feasible. Cardinal Homes (Wylliesburg) is the closest in-state modular factory.

Financing

Insurance impact

Annual premium delta$580
Landlord policyrecommended
Umbrella threshold$1M umbrella when renting; James-River-adjacent SFHA parcels require NFIP flood insurance.

HOA prevalence & preemption

State HOA preemptionno

Virginia has no HOA-ADU preemption. Richmond's older urban neighborhoods (Fan, Church Hill, Museum District, Jackson Ward) typically have no HOAs; West End and Stratford Hills have some HOA-governed pockets.

Regulatory overlays (3)

  • historic-district
    Richmond's many locally-designated historic districts cover a large share of single-family housing stock. Commission of Architectural Review (CAR) Certificate of Appropriateness is required for visible exterior changes; detached ADUs in these districts must be CAR-approved. (map)
  • flood-zone
    Richmond's James River frontage, Shockoe Bottom, and Manchester south-side have substantial FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area exposure. Floodplain Development Permit and finished-floor-above-BFE elevation are required for ADUs on those parcels. (map)
  • wetland-overlay
    Richmond is within the Tidewater CBPA area. James River and tributary stream frontages carry RPA buffer designation requiring Water Quality Impact Assessment for non-trivial site disturbance. (map)
Technical envelope (climate & building code)

Climate & energy code

IECC climate zone4A
Heating degree days4,100
Cooling degree days1,750
Design low / high16°F / 94°F
Frost depth15"
Design snow load20 psf
Wind design speed115 mph
Seismic design cat.B
Annual rainfall44"
Wildfire exposurelow
Energy codeIECC
Version / adopted2021 / 2024

Building code

Base codeIRC
Version year2,021
Adopted2024
Fire sprinklernone
Egress window5.7 sqft min
Min ceiling7 ft
Attic R-valueR-49 min
Wall R-valueR-20 min

Amendments:

  • Amendment
  • Amendment

Contractor market (aggregate)

Licensed residential GCs410
ADU-specialist GCs18
Laborer median wage$20/hr

Known issues (3)

  • other — Pre-application review is strongly advised throughout 2026 to determine whether a project is governed by the current 2023 ordinance or by the new comprehensive code.
  • other — Total project timeline lengthens to 14-20 months for historic-district ADUs.
  • other — Material yield differential between Richmond city ADUs and Henrico County ADUs; relevant when comparing nearby parcels straddling the city-county line.
Henrico County — county ADU rules and overlays

County ADU ordinance

Henrico County regulates accessory dwellings under its Chapter 24 Zoning Ordinance. As of 2026-04-21, Henrico has NOT enacted a modern ADU-preemption-style ordinance permitting detached ADUs ministerially on single-family-residential parcels. The county's long-standing framework permits accessory 'family member' dwellings and limited accessory apartments under narrow conditions — typically in agricultural (A-1) zones and through provisional-use or special-exception review in residential (R) districts — with owner-occupancy, relatedness, size, and minimum-lot-area conditions. The Zoning Ordinance Update (ZO Update) initiative, underway since approximately 2022 and led by the Henrico Planning Department and Planning Commission, has periodically considered broader ADU allowances; however, as of this research date no by-right ministerial ADU entitlement statute has replaced the existing conditional framework. Virginia is a Dillon Rule state with no statewide ADU preemption (see state research file), so Henrico's local rules are effectively the only floor: where Chapter 24 does not explicitly allow a second dwelling, it is prohibited. Applicants planning an accessory dwelling in Henrico should (a) confirm the parcel's current zoning classification on the county's GIS viewer, (b) consult Chapter 24 Article III (Districts) for the governing use table, (c) verify whether the proposed use fits a permitted or conditional category, and (d) engage Planning staff pre-application. Because Chapter 24 is under active review, the specific code citation and any by-right/conditional pivot may shift between the research date and any later applicant filing.

State-floor overlay: Virginia has NOT enacted a statewide ADU preemption law. Va. Code § 15.2-2280 et seq. delegates zoning authority to counties, independent cities, and towns, subject to planning-commission procedure and advertised public hearing. No state floor mandates ADU permissibility, ministerial review, minimum allowed size, parking-requirement ceilings, or removal of owner-occupancy requirements. Localities can and do prohibit ADUs entirely under this framework. ADU preemption bills have been introduced in the 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025 Virginia General Assembly sessions without enactment. Henrico County's Chapter 24 therefore operates without a state ceiling on local restrictions — whatever Henrico's ordinance says controls. See src/data/state-adu-research/virginia.json for the full statutory framework.

County regulatory overlays

  • wetland-overlay — Applicants should always pull a parcel's RPA/RMA overlay on the county GIS viewer before siting any detached accessory dwelling; a structure inside the RPA buffer will trigger administrative-review requirements at minimum, and frequently leads to relocation of the proposed building envelope outside the buffer as the cheapest compliance path. The Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) provides statewide CBPA guidance at deq.virginia.gov/our-programs/water/chesapeake-bay.
  • flood-zone — FIRM maps published by FEMA are the authoritative flood-zone source; the county's GIS viewer overlays current effective FIRMs on the parcel layer. Finished-floor elevation requirements for residential construction in SFHAs typically require the lowest floor (including basement) to be at or above the base-flood elevation (BFE), with Henrico commonly imposing a 1-foot freeboard above BFE per its local ordinance. Flood-zone status also affects flood-insurance cost under NFIP Risk Rating 2.0.
  • airport-noise-zone — Applicants building an accessory dwelling near RIC should check parcel status against the Airport Safety Overlay on the county GIS viewer. Height restrictions are the most common constraint for parcels within transitional surfaces; residential-use compatibility and a real-estate disclosure obligation apply within the designated noise contours. The county does not prohibit residential use within noise zones but does require acknowledgement.
  • historic-district — Register-listed (National or Virginia) status alone does NOT by itself create a local review requirement; only locally-designated historic-overlay district status does. However, federal preservation tax incentives and state rehabilitation tax credits do apply to register-listed properties and can materially improve the economics of an ADU-adjacent rehab if the property qualifies.

County permitting (unincorporated parcels)

Every parcel in Henrico County is unincorporated (the county contains no incorporated towns and no independent cities are located inside its boundaries), so the county's Department of Planning and Department of Building Construction and Inspections (Building Inspections) are the sole permitting authorities for any accessory-dwelling construction in Henrico. The combined permit path is a two-track review: (a) a zoning-compliance determination confirming the proposed accessory dwelling fits a permitted or conditionally permitted category under Chapter 24 (handled by the Planning Department's zoning-plan-review staff), and (b) a building-code plan review and inspection cycle confirming compliance with the Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code (USBC), which incorporates the Virginia Residential Code and associated state-adopted supplements (handled by Building Inspections). For parcels where Chapter 24 does not permit a second dwelling by right, the applicant must first obtain a provisional-use permit, special-exception approval, or zoning variance through the Board of Zoning Appeals or the Planning Commission / Board of Supervisors, depending on the procedure Chapter 24 specifies for the use category. Henrico uses an online permit portal (Citizen Self Service) for building-permit intake and an in-person pre-application conference process (offered free of charge to applicants) for zoning questions.

DepartmentHenrico County Department of Planning (zoning compliance, subdivision, comprehensive plan) and Henrico County Department of Building Construction and Inspections (building plan review, permits, inspections)
AddressWestern Government Center: 4301 East Parham Road, Henrico, VA 23228 (Planning); 4301 East Parham Road, Henrico, VA 23228 (Building Inspections). The Western Government Center houses most county development-review functions.
Phone804-501-4602 (Planning) / 804-501-4360 (Building Inspections / Permit Center)
Virginia state — ADU law and programs

State ADU law

Virginia has NOT enacted a statewide ADU preemption law. Virginia is a Dillon Rule state — localities possess only those powers expressly granted by the General Assembly — and the statutes granting zoning authority (Va. Code § 15.2-2280 et seq.) leave ADU regulation to local ordinances. ADU permission, setbacks, parking, size, and owner-occupancy rules therefore vary by county, independent city, and town. Virginia is unique in that it has 38 independent cities that function as counties (neither in nor subordinate to the surrounding county), meaning 'the county' for any given Virginia property may be an independent city rather than a true county. Several ADU preemption bills have been introduced in recent General Assembly sessions (2022 through 2025) without enactment; none have advanced past committee as of the Assembly's 2026 regular session adjournment.

State financing programs

Virginia does not operate an ADU-specific statewide loan, grant, or forgivable-loan program. Virginia Housing (formerly the Virginia Housing Development Authority, VHDA — rebranded 2020) administers general first-time-homebuyer, down-payment-assistance (DPA), mortgage-credit-certificate, and rehabilitation products that can be applied to ADU-adjacent purchases or improvements when eligibility criteria are met, but none target ADU construction as a distinct product. The Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) administers federal HOME and CDBG pass-through funds that local jurisdictions can direct toward ADU-adjacent rehab, but there is no state-level ADU-dedicated line item. Federally available products (FHA 203(k), Fannie Mae HomeReady and HomeStyle Renovation, Freddie Mac CHOICERenovation) remain the primary ADU financing path for Virginia homeowners.

State housing programs

Virginia does not run a state-level pre-approved-ADU-plan catalog, statewide impact-fee-waiver statute for ADUs, or streamlined-review mandate. State-level programs that touch ADU-adjacent policy are coordinated primarily through the Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) and Virginia Housing, and act by funding or assisting local jurisdictions rather than by preemption. Local ADU activity — Arlington County's Accessory Dwellings program (detached ADUs permitted since 2008, liberalized 2020), Alexandria's accessory-dwelling ordinance, Fairfax County's accessory-living-unit program, and Charlottesville's 2021 zoning-code changes — is authorized under the localities' Va. Code § 15.2-2280 zoning authority, not by state mandate.

  • DHCD Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Program — Federal CDBG funds administered by DHCD to eligible non-entitlement Virginia localities for community-revitalization, housing-rehab, and infrastructure projects. Not ADU-specific. Participating localities can direct CDBG funds toward housing-rehab projects where local policy supports ADUs.
  • DHCD HOME Investment Partnerships Program — Federal HOME funds administered by DHCD to Virginia participating jurisdictions and non-profits for affordable-housing acquisition, rehab, and new construction. Not ADU-specific; can be directed to ADU-adjacent rehab at local discretion.
  • Virginia Housing Commission — Permanent advisory commission of the General Assembly that studies housing-policy questions and recommends legislation. Has periodically studied ADU preemption and missing-middle housing without recommending statewide enactment as of 2026-04-21.
  • Local ADU ordinances under Va. Code § 15.2-2280 authority — Not a state program — listed here because Virginia ADU policy is executed entirely at the locality level under the § 15.2-2280 zoning grant. A homeowner seeking to build an ADU consults the zoning ordinance of the specific county, city, or town where the parcel is located.
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

  • 23075
  • 23222
  • 23223
  • 23227
  • 23230
  • 23231
  • 23250

Post Office

  • 1801 Brook Rd, 23232
  • 2220 Dabney Rd, 23230
  • 414 N 25th St, 23223
  • 5327 Chamberlayne Rd, 23227
  • 805 Glenburnie Rd, 23226

Locale Names