How California ADU Law Works — The Framework
California state law sets a floor of rights for every homeowner. Cities can be more permissive but cannot be more restrictive.
California's approach to ADU regulation is unusual in American land-use law: state law sets a minimum floor of homeowner rights that every city and county must honor. A city can choose to allow larger ADUs, fewer setbacks, or more design flexibility than state law requires — but it cannot impose restrictions stricter than state minimums. If a city ordinance conflicts with state ADU law, the state law prevails and the conflicting local provision is void.
An ADU(Accessory Dwelling Unit) is a fully independent dwelling — its own kitchen, bath, and entrance — built as a detached structure, attached addition, or interior conversion. Maximum size: 1,200 sq ft for new construction; no limit for full conversions. A JADU (Junior ADU) is a smaller unit (maximum 500 sq ft) carved entirely from within the existing primary home's footprint — no additions allowed. It must have its own entrance and an efficiency kitchen, and may share a bathroom or have its own. One ADU + one JADU may be built simultaneously on a single-family lot under California law.
This framework, built through a series of bills between 2016 and 2026, has transformed Southern California's housing landscape. The number of ADUs permitted in California increased by over 15,000% between 2016 and 2022. Orange County, Los Angeles County, and Riverside County together account for a significant share of that growth — driven largely by the legal protections that made ADU development predictable, ministerially approved, and financially viable.
When building an ADU in California, two bodies of law apply: California state ADU law (Government Code §§66310–66342, as revised) and your specific city or county's local ADU ordinance. Where they differ, state law controls. Where your city is silent, state law provides the default standards. Where your city is more permissive than state law, the more permissive local standard may apply. The ADU Pro® tracks both state law and local ordinances for every city in our service area and identifies which standards govern each specific project during the site assessment.
The California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) enforces state ADU law compliance by local jurisdictions. Cities that adopt local ADU ordinances that conflict with state law must update them to comply or risk having those ordinances declared null and void. HCD can also refer non-compliant jurisdictions to the California Attorney General for enforcement action — a meaningful threat that has accelerated compliance across Orange County cities.
These laws are genuinely homeowner-protective. Ministerial approval, the 60-day rule, HOA restrictions, impact fee limits, and the elimination of owner-occupancy requirements are all meaningful rights that didn't exist before 2016. But the laws are also complex, frequently amended, and not uniformly implemented by cities even when they're required to comply. An experienced ADU contractor who stays current with both state law and local implementation is the most practical way to ensure these rights actually protect your project.
California ADU Homeowner Rights at a Glance
What state law guarantees you — current as of January 2026 (SB 543 and AB 462 in effect).
| Your Right | Governing Law | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Build 1 ADU + 1 JADU on a single-family lot | AB 68 (2019) / SB 543 (2026) | Guaranteed |
| Build 1 detached ADU + 1 internal ADU + 1 JADU (combined) | SB 543 (2026) | Guaranteed |
| Ministerial (no-hearing) permit approval | AB 3182 (2021) / SB 897 (2022) | Guaranteed |
| 60-day permit decision deadline | AB 3182 (2021) / SB 543 (2026) | Guaranteed |
| 15-day completeness determination deadline | SB 543 (2026 — effective Jan 1) | Guaranteed |
| No impact fees for ADUs ≤750 sq ft | SB 13 (2019) / SB 543 (2026) | Guaranteed |
| No school fees for ADUs/JADUs ≤500 sq ft | SB 543 (2026) | Guaranteed |
| No utility connection fees for ADU conversions | AB 68 (2019) | Guaranteed |
| No owner-occupancy requirement for ADUs | SB 13 (2019) / AB 976 (2024) — permanent | Guaranteed |
| No minimum lot size for ADU construction | AB 68 (2019) | Guaranteed |
| No parking required for ADU conversions or near transit | AB 68 (2019) / SB 897 (2022) | Guaranteed |
| HOA cannot block compliant ADU | AB 670 (2019) / AB 3182 (2021) | Guaranteed |
| 4-foot setbacks only (side + rear) for new detached ADUs | AB 68 (2019) | Guaranteed |
| 800 sq ft detached ADU regardless of lot size constraints | AB 68 (2019) / AB 2221 (2022) | Guaranteed |
| Legalize unpermitted ADU built before Jan 1, 2020 | AB 2533 (2025) | Guaranteed |
| Sell ADU as separate condominium | AB 1033 (2024) | If City Adopted |
| Coastal concurrent permit processing | AB 462 (2025) | Guaranteed |
| Fire sprinklers NOT required if primary home has none | AB 68 (2019) / SB 543 (2026) | Guaranteed |
| No owner-occupancy requirement for JADU with separate bathroom | AB 1154 (2026 — effective Jan 1) | Guaranteed |
California ADU Law Timeline — 2016 to 2026
Every significant bill in chronological order. Ten years of legislation that transformed what was possible for Southern California homeowners.
SB 1069 was the first bill in what would become a decade of progressive ADU reform. It established that local governments could not use subjective, discretionary criteria to block ADU applications. Before SB 1069, many California cities effectively prohibited ADUs by imposing massive parking requirements, enormous setback requirements, or discretionary design review that gave planning commissions unchecked authority to deny applications they didn't like.
Key provisions: Reduced parking requirements for ADUs near transit or in historic districts. Reduced minimum setback requirements. Required that local agencies act on ADU applications within 120 days (later reduced to 60). Allowed ADU construction to proceed while a local agency updated its ADU ordinance. Most importantly, it signaled the direction of travel: the state was going to systematically dismantle local barriers to ADU development.
SB 1069 alone did not transform ADU development. It created openings that were significantly expanded by the wave of bills that followed in 2019–2020. But it established the principle — objective standards, no arbitrary denial — that every subsequent bill built upon.
AB 68, signed alongside AB 881 (its companion bill), is arguably the single most important piece of ADU legislation in California history. It systematically eliminated the most common local barriers cities were using to block ADU development — and did so in a way that was immediately effective, requiring no local implementing ordinance.
The practical impact of AB 68 on the Orange County ADU market was immediate and dramatic. Garage conversions — which were frequently blocked by replacement parking requirements, utility fee requirements, and setback non-compliance — became viable projects almost overnight. The number of ADU permit applications in OC cities surged significantly in 2020 following AB 68's effective date.
SB 13 addressed two of the most significant financial barriers to ADU development: impact fees and owner-occupancy requirements. Before SB 13, cities could charge ADU projects the same development impact fees charged to a new single-family home — often $20,000–$45,000 in Orange County cities. SB 13 effectively eliminated this barrier for smaller ADUs.
The impact fee change is one of the most financially significant provisions in all of California ADU law. An ADU under 750 sq ft — which covers the majority of garage conversions and compact new-construction ADUs — saves $18,000–$42,000 in impact fees across most OC cities compared to what was charged before SB 13. This alone made hundreds of ADU projects financially viable that weren't before.
Before AB 670, Homeowners Associations throughout Orange County — particularly in the master-planned communities of Irvine, Mission Viejo, Rancho Santa Margarita, and Aliso Viejo — could and did use their CC&Rs to effectively prohibit ADU construction. Their governing documents predated California's ADU reform laws, and HOA boards argued that their older CC&R provisions superseded newer state law.
AB 670 resolved this conflict by adding Civil Code §4751, making explicit that any provision in a CC&R, deed restriction, or similar document that "effectively prohibits or unreasonably restricts" the construction of an ADU or JADU on a single-family lot is void and unenforceable to the extent of that prohibition.
What HOAs can still do under AB 670 (and its expansion, AB 3182):
- Require architectural review committee (ARC) approval with objective design standards
- Require matching exterior materials, compatible roof forms, consistent color palettes
- Require appropriate landscaping and screening of mechanical equipment
- Set reasonable aesthetic standards consistent with the community's design guidelines
What HOAs cannot do under AB 670:
- Categorically ban ADU or JADU construction on single-family lots
- Require homeowner votes or super-majority approval for ADU construction
- Charge special assessments or additional membership fees for ADU projects
- Impose design standards so onerous they constitute a practical ban
- Enforce any CC&R provision that "effectively prohibits" ADU development
AB 670 gave homeowners a powerful legal tool, but enforcement was not always straightforward. AB 3182 (2021) strengthened the framework significantly by requiring HOAs to update their governing documents and by clarifying enforcement mechanisms.
AB 3182 is the bill most specifically relevant to homeowners in the planned communities of Orange County — Irvine, Mission Viejo, Rancho Santa Margarita, Aliso Viejo, Laguna Hills, Laguna Niguel, and Lake Forest. It built on the foundation AB 670 established and gave it real enforceability.
The practical importance of AB 3182 for Orange County homeowners cannot be overstated. A large fraction of OC's single-family housing stock sits in HOA-governed planned communities. Before AB 670 and AB 3182, ADU development in these communities was practically impossible — HOA boards routinely denied architectural review applications citing CC&Rs that predated the state reform legislation.
If your HOA is threatening to block your ADU project through its architectural review process or citing CC&R provisions, call The ADU Pro® at (877) 398-8002. We navigate this situation regularly and can help you understand your rights and the appropriate response.
SB 9 — the California HOME Act — is the state's most sweeping single-family zoning reform in decades. While it operates independently of ADU law, it belongs in any complete California ADU law guide because it directly intersects with how homeowners can maximize residential density on a single lot.
What SB 9 allows:
- A city must ministerially approve the construction of a duplex on a single-family lot in an urbanized area — without requiring a conditional use permit, variance, or design review hearing
- A city must ministerially approve splitting a single-family lot into two separate parcels in an urbanized area — each of which can then independently have a duplex
- No voter approval, CEQA environmental review (in most cases), or planning commission hearing required
SB 9 + ADU rights combined: After a lot split under SB 9, each resulting parcel is treated as a separate single-family lot for ADU purposes under state law. Each parcel can then have 1 ADU + 1 JADU. The theoretical maximum on one original lot: 2 duplexes (4 units from SB 9) + 2 ADUs + 2 JADUs = 8 units total. Infrastructure, lot coverage, and parking constraints limit real-world outcomes — but the legal entitlement is real.
Important eligibility restrictions: SB 9 does not apply to lots in historic districts, very high fire hazard severity zones, farmland, wetlands, or within 1 mile of a military installation that objects. The applicant must attest to owner-occupancy of one of the resulting units for 3 years following the lot split — a significant difference from ADU law, which prohibits owner-occupancy as a condition.
For Orange County and LA County homeowners with larger lots outside HOA restrictions, SB 9 creates meaningful development potential. The ADU Pro® evaluates SB 9 feasibility alongside ADU options during the free site assessment.
AB 2221 and SB 897 (both effective January 1, 2023) addressed the remaining technical barriers cities were using to slow or block ADU applications. Together they established the current height rules, the objective-standards requirement, and the nonconforming conditions rule that governs ADU permitting today.
Height limits under AB 2221 (current standard):
- 16 feet: Standard height limit for all new detached ADUs
- 18 feet: Allowed if the ADU is within ½ mile of major transit or the lot has an existing multi-story multifamily building
- 25 feet: Allowed for attached ADUs, subject to the underlying zone's height limits (the lower of the two applies)
- Local agencies must allow at least these heights and cannot impose lower limits
SB 897 — Objective Standards Requirement: Required that all local ADU development standards involve no personal or subjective judgment — they must be "uniformly verifiable by reference to an external and uniform benchmark." This eliminates design review criteria like "compatible with neighborhood character" or "consistent with existing architectural style" — which were historically used as pretextual grounds to deny ADU applications that plan checkers or city planners personally objected to.
SB 897 — Nonconforming Conditions: Before SB 897, many cities required homeowners to bring any existing nonconforming conditions on the property into code compliance before an ADU permit would be issued. This was a significant barrier — a 1960s home with a non-conforming setback, old utility infrastructure, or outdated electrical panel could find its ADU permit held hostage to a $30,000–$80,000 home renovation. SB 897 eliminated this: cities cannot deny an ADU application due to nonconforming conditions unless those conditions represent a genuine health or safety hazard.
SB 13 had eliminated owner-occupancy requirements for ADUs from 2020 through January 1, 2025 — but with a sunset clause that would have allowed cities to reinstate these requirements after 2025. AB 976 removed that sunset date, making the prohibition on owner-occupancy requirements for ADUs permanent under California law.
This matters enormously for investors and landlords. Without AB 976, cities could have required the property owner to live in the primary dwelling or ADU as a condition of renting the ADU — effectively preventing investment properties from having ADUs. AB 976 closed that potential return to restriction permanently.
Note on JADUs (different rules): AB 976 applies to ADUs but not JADUs, which historically had a separate owner-occupancy requirement. AB 1154 (effective January 1, 2026) further narrowed the JADU owner-occupancy rule by limiting it only to JADUs that share sanitation facilities with the primary dwelling. JADUs with their own bathroom can no longer have owner-occupancy conditions imposed.
AB 1033 created a new legal category in California real estate: the separately-conveyable ADU. For the first time, a homeowner who builds an ADU can potentially sell it as an independent unit — like a condominium — to a different owner, while retaining the primary home.
Important limitation: AB 1033 does not automatically allow ADU sales in every city. It authorizes — but does not require — cities to adopt a local ordinance enabling this. As of early 2026, not all California cities have adopted the required ordinance. The ADU Pro® can advise on whether your specific city has adopted an AB 1033-compliant ordinance.
What AB 1033 ADU sales require: The ADU must be converted to condominium ownership, which involves: a Condominium Plan recorded with the county; CC&Rs establishing the relationship between the two units; a common interest development recorded with the California Bureau of Real Estate; and separate title for each unit. This is a significant legal process with costs of $8,000–$20,000 beyond the ADU construction cost.
Despite the complexity, AB 1033 creates an interesting exit strategy for ADU investors and a potential "gentle density" path for neighborhoods where lot splits (under SB 9) may not be feasible.
SB 1211 primarily affects multifamily property owners — apartment building owners and small multifamily investors — rather than single-family homeowners. It dramatically increased the ADU development potential of existing multifamily lots.
Before SB 1211: Multifamily lots were limited to 2 detached ADUs (plus internal conversions of non-habitable spaces). A 10-unit apartment building could add only 2 detached backyard ADUs.
After SB 1211: Multifamily lots can add up to 8 detached ADUs, provided the number of new ADUs does not exceed the total number of existing dwelling units on the property. That same 10-unit building can now add up to 8 detached ADUs.
SB 1211 also added the first statutory definition of "livable space" to clarify what counts for ADU size calculations — an important technical clarification that SB 543 built upon with the "interior livable space" specification.
AB 2533 addressed one of the most common situations in Southern California housing: existing unpermitted garage conversions, casitas, and secondary units that were built before the current ADU reform era — sometimes decades ago — and have never been permitted. Hundreds of thousands of such units exist across Orange County, LA County, and the Inland Empire.
What AB 2533 changed:
- Extended the amnesty eligibility window from ADUs built before January 1, 2018 to ADUs built before January 1, 2020
- Prohibited cities from denying legalization permits solely because the unit violates building or safety standards — unless the violation is necessary to protect health and safety (i.e., the unit is "substandard" under Health & Safety Code §17920.3)
- Required cities to provide homeowners with a checklist of substandard conditions that must be addressed before legalization
- Allowed homeowners to hire a private contractor for a confidential pre-application inspection before submitting a formal legalization application
- Prohibited charging impact fees, connection fees, or capacity charges for legalization applications that do not require new utility connections
- Prohibited any fines or penalties against homeowners who voluntarily apply to legalize unpermitted ADUs
If you have an existing unpermitted garage conversion, in-law unit, or secondary structure on your Southern California property, AB 2533 provides a realistic, penalty-free path to legalization. The ADU Pro® evaluates existing unpermitted structures during the free site assessment and provides an honest assessment of legalization feasibility and cost.
Before AB 1332, every ADU project — regardless of how simple or repetitive the design — required a full set of custom architectural and engineering drawings reviewed from scratch by the city's plan check department. For a standard 400 sq ft detached studio ADU with a cookie-cutter layout, this process added 6–12 weeks and $3,000–$8,000 in design fees. AB 1332 created a structural solution: pre-vetted, city-approved ADU design templates that homeowners can use directly, bypassing the custom plan check entirely.
What AB 1332 requires:
- Every California city must create a pre-approved ADU plan program and post the approved plans publicly on its website — deadline was January 1, 2025
- Applications submitted using a pre-approved plan must be processed ministerially — no discretionary review, no architectural design hearing
- Cities may develop their own plans or adopt plans produced by the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD)
- Pre-approved plans must cover at minimum one detached and one attached ADU option
Real-world impact: Pre-approved plans are typically available for studio to one-bedroom detached ADUs in the 400–600 sq ft range — the most common ADU category in Orange County. Using a pre-approved plan can reduce total permit processing time by 4–8 weeks and save several thousand dollars in design fees. For investors doing multiple standardized ADU projects, the savings compound significantly.
What pre-approved plans do not cover: Garage conversions, attached ADUs, two-bedroom detached ADUs over 600 sq ft, and custom-design ADUs generally cannot use pre-approved plan programs and require full architectural and plan check review. AB 1332 creates a fast lane for standard projects — not a universal solution for all ADU types.
The ADU Pro® maintains current knowledge of pre-approved plan availability in every city in our service area and advises clients on whether a pre-approved plan is the most cost-effective path for their specific project and site conditions.
SB 543 (signed October 10, 2025, effective January 1, 2026) is the most significant ADU reform bill since AB 68 in 2019. It addresses one of the most common practical frustrations in the ADU permit process — the "incomplete application" game — while also making significant clarifications on size measurements, fee exemptions, and the types of ADU combinations allowed on single-family lots.
The 15-day completeness rule is particularly significant for the ADU permit process because incomplete determinations were, until January 1, 2026, the primary mechanism by which cities delayed ADU permit timelines beyond the 60-day window. SB 543's fix — automatic deemed-complete if no determination is issued in 15 days, plus the restriction that resubmittals can only be reviewed for specifically identified items — substantially closes this loophole.
AB 462 was signed as an urgency measure — effective immediately upon signing on October 10, 2025 — addressing the coastal zone's historically extreme permit timeline disadvantage for ADU projects. Before AB 462, ADU owners in coastal cities like Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, Dana Point, and Seal Beach faced a sequential permitting process: first obtain city planning approval, then apply for a Coastal Development Permit (CDP) from the local coastal authority or the California Coastal Commission. This sequential process could add 3–9 months beyond the already-lengthy city permit process.
AB 462's key change: The coastal development permit application must now be processed concurrently with the city's planning/zoning permit application — both running simultaneously. The coastal authority must approve or deny the CDP within 60 days of receiving a complete application. If the coastal authority fails to act within 60 days, the application is deemed approved by operation of law.
Disaster area exception: AB 462 also created a narrow but important exception to the rule that ADUs cannot receive a Certificate of Occupancy before the primary dwelling: in counties subject to a governor-declared state of emergency (after February 1, 2025) where the primary dwelling was substantially damaged or destroyed by the emergency event, an ADU can receive its C of O independently of the primary dwelling. This provision was enacted with the January 2025 Los Angeles wildfires in mind.
Junior ADUs have historically operated under a separate and more restrictive owner-occupancy rule than ADUs. While AB 976 (2024) permanently eliminated owner-occupancy requirements for ADUs, JADUs remained subject to a state-imposed requirement that the property owner live either in the primary dwelling or in the JADU itself. AB 1154 substantially narrowed this rule.
The pre-AB 1154 rule: All JADUs — regardless of their bathroom configuration — required the property owner to occupy either the JADU or the primary home. This prevented investors and absentee owners from renting both units simultaneously.
The post-AB 1154 rule (effective January 1, 2026): Owner-occupancy is only required for JADUs that share a bathroom with the primary dwelling. The logic is straightforward: when a JADU shares sanitation facilities with the main home, the two households are physically intertwined in daily life, and some owner presence is a reasonable policy. But when a JADU has its own dedicated bathroom, it is a fully self-contained unit — functionally indistinguishable from a small ADU — and the owner-occupancy requirement serves no practical purpose.
What this means for JADU design decisions:
- JADU sharing a bathroom with primary home: Owner-occupancy of either unit still required by state law
- JADU with its own dedicated bathroom (even a compact 3/4 bath): No owner-occupancy condition — property owner can rent both units and live elsewhere
For homeowners deciding on JADU design, adding a dedicated bathroom — even a minimal 3/4 bath with toilet, sink, and shower — eliminates the owner-occupancy requirement entirely and gives the JADU full investment flexibility. The cost difference is typically $8,000–$18,000 for the bathroom addition; the financial benefit of unrestricted rental income typically justifies the investment. The ADU Pro® designs JADUs with this consideration explicitly in mind.
Your HOA Rights — A Plain-Language Summary
The most practically important set of legal protections for the majority of Orange County homeowners, who live in HOA-governed planned communities.
If you live in a planned community in Orange County — an Irvine Company neighborhood, a William Lyon development, or any of the master-planned communities in Mission Viejo, Rancho Santa Margarita, Aliso Viejo, Laguna Niguel, or Laguna Hills — your HOA cannot block your ADU. This protection comes from two bills working in combination: AB 670 (Civil Code §4751) and AB 3182.
What this means in practice: Your HOA can require you to submit an Architectural Review Committee (ARC) application. They can require matching materials, a compatible roof form, and consistent colors. They can require you to maintain landscaping around the ADU. What they cannot do is vote to block a compliant ADU application, impose standards so burdensome they function as a practical ban, require a community vote, or cite older CC&R provisions that predate the reform legislation.
If your HOA takes any of these prohibited actions, you have legal recourse under Civil Code §4751. The ADU Pro® can provide a letter citing the applicable code sections that many HOA boards respond to immediately — in some cases without the homeowner needing to involve an attorney. When HOA boards persist, the homeowner's attorney can seek injunctive relief citing the void-and-unenforceable language of §4751.
Impact Fees, Utility Fees & School Fees — What You Owe
Before the 2019–2020 reform package, impact fees and utility connection fees were the most significant financial barriers to ADU development in Orange County. A homeowner wanting to add a modest 700 sq ft garage conversion ADU in Irvine could face $35,000–$55,000 in fees before spending a dollar on design or construction. California law has fundamentally changed this picture:
- Impact fees — ADUs ≤750 sq ft interior livable space: Completely exempt. Zero impact fees. Cities, school districts, and special districts cannot charge any development impact fee or connection fee on an ADU or JADU of 750 sq ft or less. (Gov. Code §66333, as amended by SB 13 and SB 543)
- Impact fees — ADUs >750 sq ft: Only proportional fees are permitted, calculated as: (ADU sq ft ÷ primary home sq ft) × applicable fee for a new single-family home. Example: 1,000 sq ft ADU on a 2,500 sq ft home = 40% of the new-home impact fee.
- Utility connection fees — ADU conversions: No separate water, sewer, or other utility connection fee may be charged for an ADU that is created through the conversion of existing space and uses existing utility connections. (Gov. Code §66333)
- School impact fees — ADUs and JADUs ≤500 sq ft: Completely exempt from school district development fees as of January 1, 2026 (SB 543). These fees, typically $4.00–$6.50 per sq ft in OC school districts, represent $2,000–$3,250 in savings for smaller ADU conversions.
- Water meter applications — Detached ADUs: Most water districts require a new water meter for a detached ADU even if the lot already has a water service. This is not an "impact fee" and is not prohibited by state law — the water district can charge for the physical meter, the connection to the main, and any required capacity charge. These vary by district and are a legitimate permitted cost.
Owner-Occupancy — The Complete Picture
As of January 1, 2024 (AB 976), no California city can require you to live in your primary home or your ADU as a condition of building or renting an ADU. You can own the property as an investor, live elsewhere, and rent out both the primary home and the ADU simultaneously. This right is permanent — it cannot be reversed by future local ordinance.
For JADUs, the rule is slightly more complex after AB 1154 (effective January 1, 2026): owner-occupancy of either the primary home or the JADU is only required if the JADU shares sanitation facilities (a bathroom) with the primary dwelling. JADUs with their own dedicated bathroom — which is most JADUs that represent a true separate unit — cannot have owner-occupancy conditions imposed by local agencies.
All ADU rentals in California must be for terms of at least 30 days. Short-term rentals (Airbnb, VRBO, etc.) are not permitted in any ADU by state law, regardless of whether your city otherwise allows short-term rentals. This prohibition is uniform across the state and is not something a city can override.
Unpermitted ADU Amnesty — AB 2533 in Plain Language
Estimates suggest hundreds of thousands of unpermitted secondary units exist across Southern California — garage conversions, casitas, basement apartments, and in-law suites built before the current ADU reform era. If your property has one of these units completed before January 1, 2020, AB 2533 creates a realistic, penalty-free legal path to bring it into compliance — without fines, without prohibitive fees, and without the risk that voluntary disclosure triggers a demolition order.
The legalization process under AB 2533 works as follows: You (or your contractor) submit an application to the building department disclosing the existence of the unpermitted unit and requesting legalization. The city must process this application ministerially. The city cannot deny the application simply because the unit was built without a permit. The city can — and will — inspect the unit and identify any conditions that must be corrected to bring the unit out of "substandard" status (Health & Safety Code §17920.3 conditions: inadequate egress, structural hazards, inadequate plumbing, etc.).
You are not required to bring the unit into full compliance with today's building code for everything. The standard is "not substandard" — not "built exactly as it would be permitted today." In practice, this usually means smoke and CO detectors, egress windows in sleeping rooms meeting minimum size requirements, basic electrical safety (no exposed wiring, GFCI in wet locations), and adequate ventilation. Rarely does it require a full upgrade to current energy code or structural engineering review unless there is an obvious structural concern.
The amnesty application does not trigger impact fees, connection fees, or penalties from the city. The ADU Pro® evaluates existing structures and provides a candid legalization assessment during the free site assessment.

