Guide · Edmonds · Snohomish County · Updated July 2026

How many units can you build in Edmonds?

A 2026, parcel-ready guide to middle-housing capacity in Edmonds, WA under Washington's HB 1110 and the city's own adopted code.

If you own or are evaluating a residential lot in Edmonds, the first question is almost always the same: how many homes can legally go on it? Since Washington's HB 1110 middle-housing law took effect, the answer for most Edmonds lots is now more than one. Edmonds allows 2 units per lot by right in its Low Density Residential zones, and up to 4 within a quarter-mile of transit or with one affordable unit.

Edmonds at a glance: 2 units per lot by right, up to 4 with the city's bonus, plus up to 2 ADUs under HB 1337. Source: ECDC 16.20.020 (Ord. 4397).

What Edmonds's adopted code allows

Edmonds allows 2 units per lot by right in its Low Density Residential zones, and up to 4 within a quarter-mile of transit or with one affordable unit.

The details: 4 within a quarter-mile of transit or with one affordable unit. These are Edmonds's city-wide standards, per ECDC 16.20.020 (Ord. 4397); the exact figure for a specific parcel — its zone, lot size, transit proximity, and critical areas — is what a Civexa report resolves.

What actually fits: floor area, height, and setbacks

HB 1110 and the city code set the right to a number of units; the zone's building envelope sets what physically fits. Floor-area ratio, lot coverage, height, and setbacks together decide whether those homes pencil as detached cottages, a townhouse row, or a stacked-flat building. Civexa computes this envelope for Edmonds zone by zone, so the unit count you see is one the zoning can actually hold.

What can shrink it: critical areas

Steep slopes, wetlands, streams, and flood zones can override the unit math on a specific parcel. A lot that qualifies for the maximum on paper may be constrained once environmentally critical areas are mapped. Civexa screens FEMA flood, slope, and county critical-area layers for every Edmonds address so you find this out before you make an offer, not after.

Get the exact number for your Edmonds parcel

The figures above are Edmonds's city-wide rules. The number that matters is the one for your address — its zone, lot size, transit proximity, and critical areas. Civexa turns that into a full feasibility report in about a minute: unit count, buildable envelope, a preliminary pro forma, utilities, and permit path.

Run a Edmonds feasibility report →

Frequently asked

How many units can I build on a residential lot in Edmonds?

Edmonds allows 2 units per lot by right in its Low Density Residential zones, and up to 4 within a quarter-mile of transit or with one affordable unit. That is per ECDC 16.20.020 (Ord. 4397). The exact number for a specific parcel still depends on its zone, lot size, transit proximity, and critical areas — run a Civexa report for the parcel-level figure.

Can I add ADUs on top of that in Edmonds?

Washington's HB 1337 allows up to two accessory dwelling units on a residential lot. In some cities they count toward the middle-housing total and in others they are separate — your Civexa report applies Edmonds's specific rule.

What unlocks the maximum in Edmonds?

4 within a quarter-mile of transit or with one affordable unit.

Other Puget Sound cities

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