SB 9 — Two-Unit Development & Urban Lot Split

Senate Bill 9 (SB 9), effective January 1, 2022, allows property owners in single-family zones to split their lot and/or build up to two primary dwelling units per parcel. SB 9 works in conjunction with ADU law to significantly increase density on single-family lots.

Urban Lot Split — Diagram

SB 9 — URBAN LOT SPLIT DIAGRAMBEFORE: SINGLE LOTPRIMARYDWELLING1 UNIToriginal parcelSB 9SPLITAFTER: TWO PARCELSPARCEL A (60%)UNIT 1primary dwellingUNIT 2SB 9 second unitADU / JADUoptionalUP TO 4 UNITSPARCEL B (40%)UNIT 1primary dwellingUNIT 2SB 9 second unitADU / JADUoptionalUP TO 4 UNITSTOTAL: UP TO 8 UNITS ON ORIGINAL PARCELSubject to eligibility, setbacks, and applicable zoning standards

Two-Unit Development (§ 65852.21)

StandardRequirementNotes
Units Allowed2 primary units per lotPlus ADUs and JADUs per standard ADU law
Maximum Unit SizeNo state maximumSubject to local zoning (FAR, lot coverage, height)
Setbacks4 ft side and rearNo front setback reduction
HeightPer underlying zoneTypically 28–35 ft in single-family zones
Parking1 space per unit requiredWaived within ½ mile of transit
Design StandardsObjective standards onlyNo subjective architectural review allowed
Owner-OccupancyRequired for 3 years post-approvalApplicant must intend to occupy one unit
Demolition LimitsCannot demolish more than 25% of existing exterior wallsProtects against whole-lot teardowns via SB 9
Tenant ProtectionsNo eviction of existing tenants within prior 3 yearsCannot subdivide if tenant-occupied in past 3 years

Urban Lot Split (§ 66411.7)

StandardRequirement
Split Ratio60/40 minimum — larger parcel ≥ 60% of original
Minimum Lot Size (each parcel)1,200 sq ft
Units per Parcel After Split2 primary units + up to 2 ADUs + 1 JADU = up to 6 total units
Passageway RequiredYes — access to public ROW from each parcel
Map TypeParcel Map or Tentative Parcel Map
TimingMinisterial approval within 60 days
Successive SplitsNot permitted — each original parcel may only be split once under SB 9

Eligibility — Disqualifying Conditions

ConditionEffect
Historic District or LandmarkSB 9 rights do not apply
High Fire Hazard Severity Zone (VHFHSZ)City may deny; case-by-case review
Earthquake Fault ZoneMay require geotechnical study; limits apply
Flood Zone (FEMA AE/VE)Subject to additional state and local restrictions
Prime Agricultural LandExempt from SB 9
Environmental Sensitive Area (ESA)Coastal Commission, wetlands, ESHA — may not qualify

Density Stacking: Maximum Units Per Original Parcel

MechanismUnits AddedTotal Running Count
Original single-family lot11
SB 9 Two-Unit Development+12
JADU (within existing structure)+13
ADU (detached or attached)+14
SB 9 Lot Split → repeat above on 2nd parcelup to +4Up to 8

Disclaimer: SB 9 is subject to ongoing litigation and local interpretation. This guide reflects the law as of early 2026. Consult a licensed architect or land use attorney for specific project advice.