Linden
Warren County portion
Also in: Fauquier County
ADU Pass helps homeowners in Linden, Warren 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
ADUs are conditionally allowed only on Agricultural-zoned Warren County parcels in the Linden area: attached/interior by-right, detached by Conditional Use Permit with 3.5-acre minimum. Most Linden Warren County parcels are R-1 Residential and currently DO NOT qualify under the county's 2025 ordinance. SB531 (effective 2027-07-01) will require Warren County to permit ADUs by-right in residential districts that permit single-family homes (likely opening R-1 to ADU use); county ordinance compliance work is underway. Applicants should confirm current parcel zoning and the latest ordinance status with Warren County Planning and Zoning before relying on any specific allowance.
Cost scenarios
| Scenario | Sq ft | Permit | Build | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| minimum | 750 | $1,400 | $187,500 | $188,900 |
| midpoint | 1,000 | $1,800 | $270,000 | $271,800 |
| maximum | 1,500 | $2,400 | $435,000 | $437,400 |
Fee breakdown (as of 2026-05)
Permitting process
- Zoning verification with Warren County Planning and Zoning (~5d)
Confirm parcel zoning. Most Linden-area Warren County parcels are A (Agricultural) or R-1 (Residential). Only A-zoned parcels currently qualify for ADUs under the 2025 ordinance; R-1 and other districts will not qualify until Warren County completes SB531 compliance before 2027-07-01. Call Warren County Planning and Zoning at 540-636-9973 or visit 220 N Commerce Ave, Front Royal, VA 22630. - Conditional Use Permit application (detached ADUs only) (~14d)
If proposing a detached ADU on an A-district parcel of 3.5+ acres, file a Conditional Use Permit (CUP) application with Planning and Zoning. Application includes site sketch showing proposed ADU footprint, principal-structure setbacks (50 ft front, 35 ft rear/side), driveway, septic and well locations, and 3.5-acre lot confirmation. Application fee approximately $500-$1,000. - Planning Commission public hearing and recommendation (~30d)
Planning Commission hears CUP application with public-hearing notice published per Va. Code Sec. 15.2-2204 (newspaper publication and adjoining-owner notification). Commission makes recommendation to Board of Supervisors. - Board of Supervisors public hearing and decision (~45d)
Warren County Board of Supervisors holds second public hearing and votes on the CUP. Decision typically lands 60-120 days from initial application depending on advertising and meeting schedule. Approved CUPs run with the parcel; conditions of approval are recorded. - Lord Fairfax Health District septic-system review (~30d)
Most Linden Warren County parcels are on private septic and well. Lord Fairfax Health District (VDH) evaluates whether the existing septic system can accommodate the additional dwelling unit or whether enlargement / alternative system is required. New well yield-test may be required if existing well capacity is marginal. - Building permit application to Warren County Building Inspections (~1d)
After zoning clearance (by-right for attached/interior, or after CUP approval for detached), file building permit application with Warren County Building Inspections. Construction documents must meet Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code (USBC). Sub-permits for electrical, plumbing, mechanical, and (where applicable) gas are filed concurrently. - Plan review (~35d)
Warren County Building Inspections performs USBC plan review. Plan review turnaround typically 30-40 days for first-time review on a residential ADU; corrections may require resubmittal. - Construction inspections and certificate of occupancy (~7d)
Footing, framing, rough MEP, insulation, and final inspections by Warren County Building Inspections during construction. Health District final approval of septic system. Certificate of Occupancy issued at successful final inspection.
Viability (permitted uses)
- Long-term rental: yes Long-term rental of an ADU (30+ days) is permitted under Warren County's 2025 ordinance. The ordinance explicitly contemplates rental compensation.
- Short-term rental: no Warren County's 2025 ADU ordinance explicitly prohibits short-term tourist rental use of accessory dwelling units. Short-term rental (Airbnb, VRBO, less than 30 days) of the primary dwelling or a separate non-ADU structure may be permitted under Warren County's short-term-rental ordinance, but the ADU itself cannot be used for short-term tourist rental.
- Office rental: unclear Renting an ADU to an outside tenant for office use is not a residential use and is not explicitly authorized by the ADU ordinance. Some home-occupation activity may be permitted under separate Warren County zoning provisions. Confirm with Planning and Zoning.
- Home office: yes Owner's own home-office use of an ADU is permitted as an accessory residential use. Customer-traffic-generating businesses require separate home-occupation review.
- Studio / workshop: with-restrictions Owner's artist studio / workshop use is generally permitted as a non-residential accessory use. Outside-customer studio operations require home-occupation permitting.
- Agriculture: yes Linden Warren County A-district parcels typically permit agricultural uses by-right. An ADU on an A-district parcel may serve as farm-related housing (farm-worker dwelling, family farm support) consistent with the ADU ordinance's family/long-term-occupant framework.
- Relative support: yes Family-member occupancy of an ADU is permitted and is the use-case explicitly contemplated by Virginia's family-apartment safe-harbor framework (Va. Code Sec. 15.2-2316.3). Family-member-occupied ADUs face no rent or occupancy caps beyond the ordinance's general 750-1,500 sqft size limit.
Incentives
- Warren County Land Use Taxation (Va. Code Sec. 58.1-3230 et seq.) — Land-use value assessment program available to qualifying agricultural, horticultural, forest, and open-space parcels. Linden-area A-district parcels meeting the use and acreage thresholds may qualify, reducing the property-tax burden on the land portion. Adding an ADU does not typically disqualify a parcel from land-use valuation but the ADU footprint and curtilage may be assessed at fair-market value separately.
Warren County does not operate an ADU-specific incentive program. Virginia statewide does not offer ADU-targeted grants or tax credits. SB531 caps ADU permit fees at $500 statewide effective 2027-07-01, which itself functions as a permit-fee-reduction incentive.
Contacts
Utilities
- Water: Private well (the vast majority of Linden Warren County parcels) - no public water service in the Linden area. Public water service in Warren County is concentrated in the Town of Front Royal and select adjoining service areas served by Warren County Water and Sewer Authority.
New well drill costs in the Blue Ridge / Shenandoah area typically $8,000-$18,000 depending on depth and bedrock geology. Well yield-test required for second dwelling. Existing-well shared use between primary and ADU is permitted if yield capacity supports it; otherwise new well required. - Sewer: Private septic (the vast majority of Linden Warren County parcels) - no public sewer service in the Linden area. Lord Fairfax Health District (Virginia Department of Health) administers on-site sewage approvals.
Existing septic enlargement or new alternative system typically required for a second dwelling on the same parcel. Capacity evaluation by Lord Fairfax Health District; alternative on-site treatment systems may be required on smaller or steep-slope parcels. New conventional system typically $10,000-$18,000; alternative systems $25,000-$45,000. - Electric: Rappahannock Electric Cooperative (REC) (rural electric cooperative serving most of Warren County outside Front Royal town limits) · 21d connect · $1,500
REC serves rural Warren County. New service connection or sub-panel for ADU follows REC residential service standards. Separate meter is optional, not required for a same-parcel ADU; many ADUs are wired off the primary structure's panel with a separate sub-panel and breaker schedule. - Gas: Propane (delivered by regional propane suppliers including Suburban Propane, Amerigas, and local cooperatives). No natural-gas utility service in the Linden area. · 14d connect · $1,200
Propane tank installation (lease or purchase) and underground or above-ground line to the ADU. Cost varies with tank size (typical 500-gallon residential tank). Many Linden-area ADUs use electric heat pumps or wood/pellet stoves in lieu of propane.
Property values & taxes
Linden zip 22642 (which straddles Warren and Fauquier counties) has higher property values on the Fauquier side; Warren-County-side Linden parcels typically run $300,000-$425,000 for single-family homes on 1-5 acres. Warren County's real-property tax rate is comparatively low among Northern Virginia counties (Fauquier ~$0.83, Loudoun ~$0.89, Warren ~$0.57 per $100). Confirm current rate with the Warren County Commissioner of the Revenue.
Construction timeline
Realistic total: best 9mo · typical 13mo · worst 20mo
Detached new build on rural A-district acreage: 6-8 months construction after CUP approval. Best case (small attached/interior conversion, by-right): 9 months from concept to CO. Worst case (large detached with septic replacement, well yield issues, weather-delayed Blue Ridge winter): 18-20 months. Contractor lead time runs higher than urban Northern Virginia due to lower density of ADU-specialized GCs in Warren County.
Modular pathway Virginia Industrialized Building Safety Law (Va. Code Sec. 36-71 et seq.) · inspectors are occasional with modular
Linden mountain parcels with narrow private roads, switchback driveways, and tree canopy may constrain modular delivery; level-site parcels off US-340 / US-522 / I-66 corridors generally accessible.
Financing
Insurance impact
Adding a detached ADU to a Warren County rural parcel typically adds $400-$650 per year to standard homeowner-policy premium (HO-3 with Coverage B 'Other Structures' bumped to cover ADU value). If ADU rented to non-family tenant, switch to dwelling-fire DP-3 or add landlord rider; premium delta then $700-$1,100 per year. Recommend $1M umbrella policy once rental income established.
HOA prevalence & preemption
Approximately 25% of Linden-area Warren County parcels are in HOA-governed subdivisions (mountain subdivisions including Blue Mountain, Apple Mountain, Linden Heights, and similar). Virginia Property Owners' Association Act (Va. Code Sec. 55.1-1800 et seq.) does NOT preempt HOA restrictions on accessory dwellings - homeowners in HOA-governed Linden subdivisions must check their declaration and architectural review for ADU permissions even if Warren County zoning permits one. Larger A-district acreage parcels outside subdivisions are generally HOA-free.
Regulatory overlays (3)
- other — Skyline Drive / Shenandoah National Park viewshed and Appalachian Trail corridor at Manassas Gap (informal NPS consultation; no formal Warren County scenic overlay)
Linden-area Warren County parcels along the Blue Ridge ridgeline may fall within informal viewshed considerations for Skyline Drive, Shenandoah National Park, and the Appalachian Trail at Manassas Gap. Warren County does not impose a formal scenic overlay; NPS consultation is informal. (map) - flood-zone — FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps for Warren County - Linden mountain-ridge geography keeps most parcels above flood elevation; lower-elevation stream-draw parcels may be affected · +7d · +3% cost
Linden's mountain-ridge geography means most parcels are above flood elevation. Lower-elevation Linden parcels in stream draws should be checked against current FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps before ADU siting. (map) - wui-fire-zone — Virginia Department of Forestry wildfire-risk classification - Blue Ridge ridge-top parcels in Linden have moderate wildfire exposure relative to Shenandoah Valley floor · +2% cost
Defensible-space siting recommended on ridge-top Linden parcels though Virginia does not impose California-style Chapter 7A WUI construction requirements. (map)
Technical envelope (climate & building code)
Climate & energy code
Building code
Amendments:
- Amendment — Statewide USBC. Local amendments are limited; Warren County administers but does not amend the USBC.
Legal history (timeline)
Current ordinance: Warren County Zoning Ordinance Article IV (District Regulations) - Accessory Dwelling Unit provisions in the Agricultural (A) District, adopted 2025, last amended 2025
- 1669 — European exploration of Manassas Gap area (Lederer and Catlett) (settlement)
John Lederer and John Catlett documented the Manassas Gap pass through the Blue Ridge in 1669; the area that became Linden developed as an apple-growing region from the mid-1700s through the 1950s with up to 25 commercial orchards.
Effect: Established the rural-agricultural land-use pattern that persists through Warren County's current Agricultural-district zoning classification of most Linden-area parcels. - 1863-07-23 — Battle of Manassas Gap near Linden (historical-event)
Civil War engagement at Manassas Gap; the area was later used by Mosby's Rangers as an operating base.
Effect: No direct ADU regulatory effect; cited because Linden's Civil War / Mosby's Rangers historical context contributes to potential historic-overlay considerations on certain parcels. - 2025-summer — Warren County Board of Supervisors adopts initial ADU zoning text amendment (county-ordinance)
Following Planning Commission review in 2024-2025, the Warren County Board of Supervisors passed a zoning text amendment adding accessory dwelling unit provisions to the Agricultural (A) district: by-right for attached/interior, conditional-use-permit for detached on 3.5+ acres, 750-1,500 sqft size range, principal-structure setbacks, one ADU per lot, short-term-rental prohibited.
Effect: Created the first explicit ADU pathway in Warren County's zoning ordinance. Applies countywide to A-zoned parcels including Linden-area agricultural acreage; R-1, RR, and other districts remain ineligible until SB531 compliance work. - 2026-04-13 — Virginia Governor Spanberger signs SB531 (statewide ADU by-right mandate) (state-law)
Virginia SB531 requires all localities to permit ADUs by-right in residential zoning districts that allow single-family dwellings, caps permit fees at $500, prohibits setbacks more restrictive than for the primary dwelling, and limits other dimensional standards (height, lot coverage, frontage). Effective 2027-07-01. Localities with ADU ordinances on the books as of 2026-01-01 retain some local discretion.
Effect: Sets the deadline by which Warren County must expand ADU eligibility from Agricultural-only to all single-family residential districts (including R-1 and RR). The Linden Warren County footprint becomes substantially more ADU-eligible after 2027-07-01.
Known issues (3)
- policy-review (since 2026-04-13) — Until Warren County amends its ordinance for SB531 compliance, only A-district parcels of 3.5+ acres qualify for detached ADUs. Subdivision-lot owners in Linden are largely shut out of the ADU pathway in 2026. (source)
- other (since 2025) — Adding a second dwelling unit nearly always requires septic-system enlargement or replacement. Older septic systems on Linden mountain parcels may require alternative-system designs costing $25,000-$45,000. (source)
- other (since 2025) — Mountain subdivisions (Blue Mountain, Apple Mountain, others) have private CC&Rs that may ban second dwellings; Virginia does not preempt HOA restrictions on ADUs. (source)
Warren County — county ADU rules and overlays
County ADU ordinance
Warren County, Virginia regulates accessory dwelling units through its Zoning Ordinance, administered by the Department of Planning and Zoning (and the companion Department of Building Inspections) and adopted by the Warren County Board of Supervisors. Virginia is a Dillon Rule state and has NOT enacted a statewide ADU preemption law — Va. Code § 15.2-2280 et seq. delegates zoning authority entirely to localities — so every ADU rule that applies to a Warren County parcel is local. Warren County contains a single incorporated town, the Town of Front Royal (the county seat at the confluence of the North and South Forks of the Shenandoah River), plus five magisterial districts of unincorporated county (Fork, Happy Creek, North River, Shenandoah, and South River). Under Virginia's unusual city/town/county structure, incorporated towns in Virginia remain governed BY their counties for zoning in addition to their own town zoning when a town has adopted one — so for a parcel inside the Town of Front Royal's corporate limits, the Town of Front Royal's ordinance is the primary local rule set, while for an unincorporated parcel anywhere else in the county, the Warren County Zoning Ordinance is the operative rule set. The Warren County Zoning Ordinance permits accessory-dwelling uses (variously termed 'accessory apartments', 'family apartments', 'accessory dwelling units', or 'secondary dwellings' in different ordinance sections) subject to zoning-district conditions in certain districts; the county's Agricultural District (A), Residential (R-1) and related residential districts, and Rural Residential (RR) designations include specific provisions for single-family-dwelling-related accessory units, and an Agricultural-district 'family' dwelling provision historically allowed a second dwelling for a family member on larger parcels. Because Virginia's 2022-2025 General Assembly sessions did not enact statewide ADU preemption, accessory-dwelling approval in Warren County is a locally-administered process without a statewide ministerial-review floor, minimum ADU size, parking cap, or owner-occupancy preemption.
- Warren County Code — Zoning Ordinance (Accessory uses, family apartments, and accessory dwelling provisions)
- Warren County Code — Subdivision Ordinance and supplementary land-use regulations
- Warren County Comprehensive Plan — Land-use and housing elements
- Virginia Code § 15.2-2280 et seq. — State zoning enabling authority (Dillon Rule)
- Virginia Code § 15.2-2316.3 — Statutory safe harbor for family-member accessory dwelling
State-floor overlay: None. Virginia has not enacted a statewide ADU preemption law. Va. Code § 15.2-2280 et seq. delegates zoning authority to localities without imposing a floor on ADU permissibility, ministerial approval, minimum size, or parking. Warren County's Zoning Ordinance is therefore the operative rule set for every ADU question — allowance by district, size limits, owner-occupancy, parking, permit process, and fees are all locally set. ADU bills introduced in the 2022-2025 General Assembly sessions did not advance; the 2026 session had not closed the gap as of 2026-04-21. Additionally, note that the Town of Front Royal (the county's sole incorporated town, the county seat, and the location of roughly one-third of the county's population) maintains its own town zoning — for a town-limits parcel, the Town of Front Royal ordinance and any county supplemental rules apply; for an unincorporated county parcel outside the town limits, only the county ordinance applies.
County regulatory overlays
Warren County, Virginia administers or cooperates in several overlay and environmental-review regimes that can affect ADU siting on unincorporated parcels: (1) FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas along the county's principal watercourses — the North Fork and South Fork of the Shenandoah River (which converge at Riverton, in the Town of Front Royal's northeast quadrant, to form the main stem of the Shenandoah), Happy Creek, Crooked Run, Passage Creek (draining Fort Valley between Massanutten Mountain's Green Mountain and Three Top Mountain ridges, which passes through the extreme western margin of the county), and numerous tributaries — subject to the county's floodplain-management ordinance; (2) Shenandoah National Park / Blue Ridge corridor review — the park's northern entrance and the northern terminus of Skyline Drive sit at Front Royal, and the park's western boundary runs the length of the county's eastern edge along the Blue Ridge, creating a distinctive federal-land interface for Happy Creek district and South River district parcels; (3) historic overlay / advisory review — Warren County has significant Civil War heritage (the 1862 Front Royal battle during Stonewall Jackson's Valley Campaign, and the 1864 Cedar Creek area partially extending from Frederick / Shenandoah into Warren), 18th- and 19th-century agricultural-settlement heritage, and numerous individual properties on the Virginia Landmarks Register and National Register of Historic Places including Front Royal historic resources; (4) karst / sinkhole geology review — portions of the county's valley-floor geology include carbonate bedrock with sinkholes, closed depressions, and compromised septic-drainfield suitability, although the county's eastern quadrant is on Blue Ridge metamorphic geology rather than valley carbonate; (5) George Washington National Forest interface — portions of the county's western margin (Massanutten Mountain / Fort Valley) abut the Lee Ranger District of the George Washington National Forest, creating significant forest / wildland interface; (6) Chesapeake Bay Preservation Act — Warren County lies in the Potomac River drainage (Shenandoah River → Potomac at Harpers Ferry) and within the statewide Tidewater/non-Tidewater reach of the Act's erosion-and-sediment-control and stormwater-management provisions. Unlike California, Virginia does not maintain a Very-High-Fire-Hazard Severity Zone regime triggering mandatory WUI-rated construction.
- FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas / Warren County Floodplain Management Ordinance — Warren County's floodplain-district regulations enforce FEMA NFIP minimum floodplain-management standards. Applicants should confirm effective FIRM panel numbers and BFEs at design time. The North Fork and South Fork Shenandoah and main-stem Shenandoah River have well-mapped floodplain; parcels close to any of these, or to secondary drainages like Happy Creek, are the most likely to face floodplain-district constraints. FEMA is conducting ongoing FIRM updates in the Potomac drainage basin, and effective panels should be verified before design commitments.
- Shenandoah National Park / Blue Ridge corridor federal-land interface — The park and the Appalachian Trail do not impose private-parcel zoning directly, but the park boundary has practical implications for accessory-dwelling siting: Park-facing viewshed concerns may appear in ridgeline-parcel special-use-permit reviews; access-road standards for remote upper-slope parcels can be rate-limiting; and wildfire-interface considerations (while Virginia has no formal VHFHSZ regime analogous to California) are amplified on park-adjacent parcels. Applicants with park-adjacent parcels should expect longer pre-application consultation timelines with Planning and Zoning than applicants on valley-floor parcels.
- Warren County historic-preservation review / Historic overlay and advisory review — Historic-overlay review does not typically prohibit an accessory dwelling outright but may add design-review requirements (materials, scale, siting, fenestration) for construction on or adjacent to designated historic resources. National Register listing alone is honorary and does not by itself impose design review; local historic-district overlay adoption under Va. Code § 15.2-2306 is what creates binding local design review. Applicants with historically-significant parcels should consult Planning and Zoning early to determine whether their parcel is subject to an overlay or only to advisory review.
- Karst / sinkhole geotechnical review (valley-floor carbonate bedrock) — Karst review is not a formal 'overlay' in the zoning-ordinance sense — it is a set of engineering and health-department constraints applied parcel-by-parcel. An accessory dwelling that requires a new or expanded septic drainfield on a karst-affected parcel is the category most likely to face substantive review, including geotechnical investigation, hydrogeologic evaluation, and alternative septic-system design (sand-mound, drip-irrigation, or advanced treatment systems approved by VDH). Groundwater-protection considerations are heightened because karst systems can transmit contamination rapidly from surface infiltration to private wells downgradient.
- George Washington National Forest interface and Massanutten Mountain ridge (forest / wildland interface) — There is no Warren County-specific WUI ordinance comparable to western-state WUI regimes. Construction standards for accessory dwellings on forest-interface parcels follow the general Virginia USBC; voluntary Firewise USA measures (defensible space, ignition-resistant materials, roof and vent design, Class-A roof assemblies) are encouraged but not mandated by county zoning. Access for wildland firefighting apparatus on steep or long-driveway parcels can be a practical permitting consideration that Planning and Zoning or Building Inspections may flag during site-plan review — especially on ridgeline and upper-slope parcels along either the Blue Ridge or Massanutten margins.
- Virginia Chesapeake Bay Preservation Act / stormwater and erosion-and-sediment-control requirements — The ESC / stormwater requirements are land-disturbance-based, not ADU-specific. Their relevance to an accessory-dwelling project depends on the site-disturbance footprint rather than the dwelling program. Applicants should request a pre-application conference with Planning and Zoning if the parcel involves steep slopes, proximity to streams, or significant site grading — situations common on Blue Ridge and Massanutten slopes and on river-frontage parcels in this county.
County permitting (unincorporated parcels)
Warren County, Virginia's Department of Planning and Zoning (zoning, site-plan review, subdivision, and land-use approvals) and the county's Department of Building Inspections (building-permit, plan review, and inspection services under the Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code) jointly administer ADU / accessory-dwelling permitting for parcels in the unincorporated county. Warren County contains a single incorporated town — the Town of Front Royal (the county seat) — which under Virginia law remains inside the county's jurisdiction; Front Royal has its own town zoning and its own Town of Front Royal building-permit administration, but the county retains jurisdiction over unincorporated parcels (the vast majority of the county's approximately 216 square miles, including all parcels in the Fork, Happy Creek, North River, Shenandoah, and South River magisterial districts outside town corporate limits). Warren County's permitting path for an accessory dwelling on an unincorporated parcel is sequenced: (a) zoning determination by Planning and Zoning confirming the parcel's district and the district's accessory-dwelling allowance; (b) special-use-permit or conditional-use-permit application heard by the Planning Commission and decided by the Board of Supervisors when required by the zoning district; (c) building-permit application to county Building Inspections; (d) Lord Fairfax Health District (Virginia Department of Health) approval for on-site septic and private-well where applicable (the majority of Warren County's rural parcels outside Front Royal are on private well and septic, not public water/sewer); (e) inspection and certificate of occupancy.
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
- 22642
Post Office
- 13474 John Marshall Hwy, 22642