Washington DC Setbacks

Setback Requirements in Washington DC, DC (2026)

Front, side, and rear setback requirements by zoning district for Washington DC, DC. Source-cited from official municipal code.

Setbacks by Zoning District

ZoneFrontSideRearNotes
R-1-A35 feet12 feet25 feet11 DCMR — R-1-A Residential low density. Large lot single-family detached. Found in upper NW DC (Chevy Chase, Spring Valley). Minimum lot area 10,000 sqft.
R-1-B25 feet8 feet20 feet11 DCMR — R-1-B Residential. Standard single-family detached. Upper NW and far NE/SE neighborhoods.
R-215 feet6 feet15 feet11 DCMR — R-2 Residential. Single-family and semi-detached (twins). Common in outer neighborhoods.
R-30 feet0 feet15 feet11 DCMR — R-3 Row Residential. Classic DC row house zone — zero front and side setbacks (built to lot line). Capitol Hill, Columbia Heights, Petworth, Shaw, and most central DC neighborhoods. Rear yard 15 ft minimum.
R-40 feet0 feet12 feet11 DCMR — R-4 Row Residential higher density. Similar to R-3 but allows more density. Common in denser inner neighborhoods.

All setbacks measured from property line. Verify with DC Department of Buildings (DOB) before submitting permit applications.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I build an ADU (accessory dwelling unit) in Washington DC?

Yes. DC allows ADUs under 11 DCMR (DC Municipal Regulations, Title 11 — Zoning). You can build a detached ADU up to 1,000 sqft or an attached/internal ADU up to 35% of your primary unit floor area. No owner-occupancy requirement. No parking required. DC does not impose impact fees. Historic district constraints apply to roughly 30% of DC properties — check your property at historicpreservation.dc.gov before planning. Permit through DC Department of Buildings via the DC Access portal.

What makes Washington DC a unique jurisdiction for zoning and permits?

Washington DC is not a state or a county — it is the federal capital district. DC operates under the Home Rule Charter (1973) which grants the DC Council authority over most local matters including zoning, but Congress retains oversight. This means DC has no state to preempt its zoning rules — all regulations come from DC's own Zoning Commission under DC Municipal Regulations Title 11. Federal property (parks, monuments, government buildings) occupies large portions of DC and is exempt from DC zoning. The DC Historic Preservation Office, Advisory Neighborhood Commissions (ANCs), and Board of Zoning Adjustment are the key regulatory bodies.

Are Airbnb and short-term rentals allowed in DC?

Yes, with a Basic Business License plus Short-Term Rental endorsement ($104/year). Primary residence requirement: the property must be your primary domicile — you cannot operate an STR from an investment property. Hosted rentals (you're present) have no nightly cap. Unhosted rentals (you're absent) are capped at 90 nights per year — this is a hard cap with enforcement. DC Hotel and Transient Accommodations Tax (14.95% combined) applies. License number must be displayed on listings. Apply through DC DLCP (dlcp.dc.gov).

How does DC's historic preservation system affect renovations?

Washington DC has one of the most extensive historic preservation systems in the US — approximately 30% of DC residential properties are in a historic district or individually designated. If your property is in a historic district (Georgetown, Capitol Hill, Dupont Circle, and 25 others) or individually listed in the DC Inventory of Historic Sites, all exterior changes require a Certificate of Appropriateness (CoA) from the DC Historic Preservation Review Board (HPRB) or Mayor's Agent. This applies to ADUs, additions, roofing changes, and even window replacements. Check historicpreservation.dc.gov before planning any exterior work.

What is the SREC market in DC and why is DC solar economically attractive?

DC's Solar Renewable Energy Certificate (SREC) market is one of the best in the US. DC has an aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) with a solar carve-out, creating high SREC prices — often $350-$400+ per certificate. Each 1,000 kWh of solar generation earns one SREC. Combined with net metering at retail rates, DC solar systems often have 7-10 year payback periods. The SolarCheck program and DC's Solar for All program support solar adoption. Permits through DC Department of Buildings. Historic district constraints affect many DC properties — plan accordingly.

How does DC's no-impact-fee policy compare to other major cities?

Washington DC does not charge development impact fees for ADUs or residential additions — a significant cost advantage. Compare this to Austin TX ($3,000-$15,000 in impact fees for an ADU), Denver CO ($5,000-$12,000), or Portland OR ($8,000-$15,000). In DC, you pay DC Department of Buildings permit fees (based on construction value), DC Water connection fees for new plumbing, and construction costs — but no transportation, school, or park impact fees. This makes ADU economics more favorable in DC than in many western cities despite higher overall construction costs.

Source: Washington DC Zoning Code — Setback Requirements. Last verified April 6, 2026. View source

Last updated: April 6, 2026
Setback Requirements in Washington DC, DC (2026) | PropertyZoned