Sperryville
ADU Pass helps homeowners in Sperryville, Rappahannock County, Virginia navigate the permit paperwork for building an accessory dwelling unit. This area covers 1 ZIP code.
Map
ADU details
ADU legality: allowed-with-restrictions
Sperryville is a CDP at the Shenandoah National Park gateway with no separate town government. Rappahannock County V (Village) and A (Agricultural) district zoning controls. Heavy STR-tourism market; STR oversight is becoming an active County topic. SB 531 statewide preemption effective 2027-07-01.
Cost scenarios
| Scenario | Sq ft | Permit | Build | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| minimum | 400 | $1,500 | $110,800 | $112,300 |
| midpoint | 800 | $1,500 | $221,600 | $223,100 |
| maximum | 1,200 | $1,500 | $332,400 | $333,900 |
Fee breakdown (as of 2026-05)
Permitting process
Viability (permitted uses)
- Long-term rental: yes Long-term rental of an ADU is permitted in V and A districts; Virginia Residential Landlord and Tenant Act governs.
- Short-term rental: with-restrictions Sperryville is the highest-STR-density community in Rappahannock County given Shenandoah NP gateway location. STR-marketed ADUs may face emerging County conditional-use permit requirements; transient occupancy tax administered by County Commissioner of the Revenue. Confirm current STR status with Planning before assuming by-right Airbnb operation.
- Office rental: with-restrictions Detached office rental requires home-occupation review under the County zoning ordinance.
- Home office: yes Home occupation permitted with standard limitations on signage and customer traffic.
- Studio / workshop: yes Personal studio is a permitted accessory use; Sperryville has an established artist community including the Copper Fox Distillery, Sperryville Artisan Trail, and several gallery spaces.
- Agriculture: with-restrictions A-district perimeter parcels accommodate agricultural and forestry use; V-district village-core parcels have limited agricultural allowances.
- Relative support: yes Family / multi-generational accessory dwelling is a common pattern on larger A-district perimeter parcels.
Incentives
Contacts
Staff: Rappahannock County Planning and Zoning Office (Zoning permit authority for all unincorporated parcels including Sperryville), Rappahannock County Building Inspections (Building permit authority for Sperryville parcels), Virginia Department of Health Lord Fairfax Health District (Well and septic construction permits for Sperryville rural and village parcels), Sperryville Volunteer Fire Department (Access and water-supply consultation for ADU projects in the Sperryville response district)
Utilities
- Water: Private well - no central water in Sperryville; some village-core parcels share legacy private water systems · 60d connect · $11,500
- Sewer: Private septic - no central sewer in Sperryville; VDH Lord Fairfax District permits septic construction. Thornton River setbacks and soil constraints add complexity on some parcels. · 70d connect · $19,500
- Electric: Rappahannock Electric Cooperative (REC) · 35d connect · $2,800
- Gas: Bottled propane (no natural-gas distribution to Sperryville) · 14d connect · $1,900
Property values & taxes
Construction timeline
Realistic total: best 10mo · typical 16mo · worst 26mo
Modular pathway inspectors are novice with modular
Financing
Insurance impact
HOA prevalence & preemption
Sperryville has very few HOAs; most parcels are larger rural lots or older village-core lots without homeowners associations.
Regulatory overlays (2)
- other
Many parcels along the Thornton River and on the Skyline Drive viewshed carry conservation easements that restrict accessory dwellings. Sperryville-area easements often include specific design and viewshed conditions on top of the standard limits. (map) - flood-zone
Thornton River runs directly through Sperryville's village core. Parcels along the river and Beech Spring Run carry FEMA SFHA designation. (map)
Technical envelope (climate & building code)
Climate & energy code
Building code
Amendments:
- Amendment
Contractor market (aggregate)
Legal history (timeline)
Current ordinance: Rappahannock County Zoning Ordinance - V (Village) and A (Agricultural / Conservation) district accessory dwelling provisions, adopted 1969-09-01, last amended 2024-01-01
- 1969-09-01 — Rappahannock County Zoning Ordinance original adoption (county-ordinance)
Rappahannock County adopted comprehensive zoning in the late 1960s establishing the V (Village) district that covers Sperryville's commercial core alongside A (Agricultural) for outlying parcels.
Effect: Sperryville's mixed-use Main Street pattern is preserved by the V district designation distinct from the broader A district. - 2019-01-01 — Rappahannock County short-term rental regulations review (county-ordinance)
Rappahannock County began active review of short-term rental regulation given concentrated STR growth in Sperryville-area parcels along US 211 and the Thornton River corridor.
Effect: STR permitting and oversight remains a live policy topic for the County Planning Commission and Board of Supervisors. - 2026-04-14 — Virginia SB 531 signed (statewide ADU by-right preemption effective 2027-07-01) (state-statute)
Statewide ADU mandate in single-family districts; $500 fee cap; January 2026 grandfather clause.
Effect: Rappahannock County will need conforming review of its A and V district ADU provisions ahead of 2027-07-01.
Known issues (3)
- other — An ADU built today as an STR may face conditional-use permit requirements in the next 24-36 months. Plan for an LTR fallback financial model in case STR rules tighten.
- other — Flood-zone parcels add 30-90 days to permitting and $25,000-$50,000 to construction cost not reflected in headline numbers.
- policy-review — Projects permitted before July 1, 2027 follow current county rules; later projects may benefit from the $500 statewide fee cap.
Rappahannock County — county ADU rules and overlays
County ADU ordinance
Rappahannock County permits an 'accessory dwelling' or 'accessory family dwelling' as a supplementary use to a single-family detached dwelling on parcels of sufficient size in the county's Conservation, Agricultural, and primary residential districts, subject to the county's distinctive preservation-oriented standards. The Rappahannock framework follows a more restrictive variant of the Virginia rural-county pattern, reflecting the county's deliberate posture of restricting density to preserve its rural, scenic, and agricultural character: one ADU per parcel; the ADU must be clearly accessory (subordinate in size and use) to a principal single-family dwelling; a base size cap typically more restrictive than peer counties (commonly in the 600-900 square-foot range, materially smaller than the 800-1,200 cap typical in Caroline, Fauquier, or Culpeper); configuration options including attached, interior-conversion, and detached, but with detached subject to scrutiny on visual / scenic impact in the conservation districts that cover much of the county; the ADU must meet the principal-dwelling setbacks for the underlying district rather than reduced accessory-structure setbacks; and the ADU cannot be subdivided off or sold separately from the principal dwelling. Because Virginia has no statewide ADU preemption (see state file stateAduLaw, citing Va. Code § 15.2-2280 et seq. as the local-zoning enabling statute), Rappahannock's ordinance is the authoritative regime on every parcel in the unincorporated county. Confirm the current ordinance text and minimum-lot-size requirements with the Rappahannock County Planning office before relying on a specific size threshold or configuration rule — Rappahannock's preservation-oriented amendments are an active policy area and the ordinance is amended periodically.
County regulatory overlays
Rappahannock County administers an overlay portfolio shaped by its mountainous Blue Ridge geography, federal park lands, and preservation orientation: (1) the Floodplain Overlay District tied to FEMA-mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas along the Hazel River, the Hughes River, the Thornton River, the Rush River, the Rappahannock River (small portion of the eastern county boundary with Culpeper County), and other Blue Ridge-front interior streams; (2) Shenandoah National Park boundary — the entire western boundary of Rappahannock County is the National Park boundary along the Blue Ridge crest, with approximately 25% of the county's land area inside the park; the National Park Service has no zoning authority over private adjacent parcels, but informal scenic-corridor consultation is customary for ridgeline-visible construction; (3) the county's distinctive Conservation district zoning, which is not formally a state-or-federal-mandated overlay but functions as a county-imposed preservation overlay on much of the rural land area, with larger minimum lot sizes, stricter scenic-impact review, and more restrictive accessory-use rules than standard rural districts; (4) historic-resource sensitivity at the Town of Washington National Historic District (the entire small Town of Washington is a National Register district, surveyed and platted by George Washington in 1749 — reportedly the first town surveyed by Washington), at Sperryville Historic District, and at scattered National Register properties across the county; (5) Rappahannock County's role in the Northern Virginia / Shenandoah Valley wine and cider tourism corridor, with several wineries and tasting rooms on agricultural-zoned parcels under Virginia's farm-winery and farm-cidery enabling statutes. Rappahannock is NOT a Tidewater Chesapeake Bay Preservation Area locality — Rappahannock sits in the Northern Piedmont west of the CBPA designation boundary. Rappahannock has no coastal-commission jurisdiction, no CalFire-equivalent WUI regime, and no seismic-retrofit overlay.
County permitting (unincorporated parcels)
The Rappahannock County Building Official issues residential building permits for every parcel in the unincorporated county. Parcels inside the Town of Washington route through the town's own permitting instead. An ADU permit bundle on an unincorporated-county parcel typically includes: (1) a Zoning Compliance verification / Zoning Permit from Planning and Zoning confirming the ADU meets the supplementary-regulation standards (size cap, one-per-parcel, principal-dwelling setbacks, district eligibility, and any Conservation-district scenic-impact considerations), (2) a Building Permit from the Building Official with stamped plans, (3) trade permits for Electrical, Plumbing, and Mechanical filed by licensed Virginia contractors, (4) a Virginia Department of Health construction permit for well and/or septic on essentially every unincorporated-county parcel (Rappahannock's public water/sewer footprint is minimal), (5) a Floodplain Development Permit if any portion of the parcel is within a FEMA-mapped Special Flood Hazard Area along the Hazel River, the Hughes River, the Thornton River, the Rush River, the Rappahannock River (small portion of the eastern county boundary), and other interior streams that drain the Blue Ridge front, (6) for parcels along or visible from Skyline Drive in Shenandoah National Park, possible coordination with the National Park Service for adjacent-lands consultation, and (7) for parcels in the Conservation district, additional review for scenic-corridor and viewshed impact may apply.
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 Code
- 22740
Post Office
- 43 Main St, 22740