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Permitting · 9 min read · May 31, 2026 · 299 words

Irvine and Orange County ADU guide 2026: HOA reality, master-plan permitting

Why [Irvine](/adu/irvine) ADUs run a different playbook than LA County — HOA architectural review, master-plan setback rules, and the 2026 cost ranges across Irvine, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Anaheim Hills.

Key takeaways

  • Irvine — $345K–$425K (800 sq ft detached); HOA review 6–12 wks.
  • Newport Beach — $425K–$510K; coastal + HOA overlap on Balboa peninsula.
  • Costa Mesa — $315K–$385K; minimal HOA exposure, ministerial permits.

Answered in this guide

Jump straight to the question you came in with — every answer is on this page, with links onward to the deeper guide.

  1. What is SB-9 and does it apply to me?
  2. What about hillside or coastal lots?
  3. I'm in an HPOZ — can I still build?
  4. Do you handle the permitting?
  5. What setbacks and height limits apply?
  6. How long does an ADU project take in Los Angeles?

More across the studio · the full FAQ map · the reference desk

Orange County ADUs operate on a fundamentally different playbook than LA County. Most OC residential parcels sit inside a master-planned community with an active HOA — and HOA architectural review is the binding constraint, not city permitting. California state law (AB 670) prohibits HOAs from blanket-banning ADUs, but they retain extensive design-review authority. This guide walks the practical reality across Irvine, Newport, Costa Mesa and Anaheim Hills.

2026 cost ranges

  • Irvine — $345K–$425K (800 sq ft detached); HOA review 6–12 wks.
  • Newport Beach — $425K–$510K; coastal + HOA overlap on Balboa peninsula.
  • Costa Mesa — $315K–$385K; minimal HOA exposure, ministerial permits.
  • Anaheim Hills — $325K–$395K; HOA review universal, hillside fire common.

Most OC HOAs require: matching exterior material palette, matching roofline pitch and material, garage-door visibility limits, and front-elevation review when the ADU has any street-visible face. Submit a complete design package — site plan, all four elevations, material samples, exterior color — at the same time as the city plan check. Approval typically runs 6–10 weeks parallel to city review. AB 670 specifically prohibits arbitrary HOA bans, but enforcement requires escalation; budget legal review where the HOA is hostile.

Irvine: the master-plan model

Irvine is a fully master-planned city — every neighborhood is governed by a Master Property Owners Association (MPOA) or village association with binding architectural standards. Quail Hill, Northpark, Northwood and Turtle Rock all run their own architectural committees. The City of Irvine permits ministerially in 8–12 weeks, but the HOA review is the binding path. Detached 800 sq ft 1-BR rents at $2,900–$3,500/mo in 2026.

Sources

  1. Irvine ADU information · City of Irvine
  2. California HCD ADU resources · California HCD

Next chapter · 01 of 02

Permitting · 11 min read

The 2025 LA ADU permitting rulebook, decoded

California's statewide ADU law is the layer beneath every OC HOA conversation — read it before negotiating with your HOA.

What [LADBS](https://www.ladbs.org/) and California's HCD actually require in 2025 — by-right approvals, setbacks, owner-occupancy, and the rules that quietly changed this year.

FAQ · Permitting

Common questions on permitting

The questions readers send us most after this guide.

  1. What is SB-9 and does it apply to me?
    SB-9 (the California HOME Act) lets eligible single-family lots split into two parcels and/or add a duplex. We assess eligibility during the feasibility call — roughly 60% of LA single-family lots qualify on paper, fewer in practice once HPOZ, hillside, and coastal overlays are applied. SB-9 projects can stack with an ADU for up to four units on what was a single-family lot.
  2. What about hillside or coastal lots?
    Hillside requires a Methane District review (where applicable) plus a haul route plan if grading exceeds 1,000 cubic yards. Coastal Zone projects (anything west of Lincoln Blvd in Venice, for example) need a Coastal Development Permit on top of standard LADBS approval. Both are workable; both add 60–90 days.
  3. I'm in an HPOZ — can I still build?
    Yes, but with design review. Historic Preservation Overlay Zones require Certificate of Appropriateness from the cultural heritage commission before permits issue. We've shepherded projects through Miracle Mile, West Adams, Whitley Heights, and Spaulding Square HPOZs. Add 8–12 weeks for the COA process.
  4. Do you handle the permitting?
    Yes. We file with LADBS or your local building department, manage plan check, coordinate utility upgrades, schedule inspections, and deliver final sign-off. You don't visit the counter, we do.
  5. What setbacks and height limits apply?
    Statewide ADU law (AB 68/881) overrides most local restrictions: 4-foot side and rear setbacks, 16-foot height for detached one-story, 18-foot for two-story within ½ mile of transit. Front setbacks follow the underlying zone. We model your envelope at the schematic stage.
  6. How long does an ADU project take in Los Angeles?
    Most detached ADUs run 9–13 months from contract to certificate of occupancy. Garage conversions are typically 4–6 months. Permitting alone is usually 60–120 days at LADBS depending on whether we use a pre-approved standard plan or a custom design that needs full plan check.

Reference desk · Permitting

More answers from the California reference desk

City-specific questions pulled from our 5,000-answer FAQ corpus — every link opens a deeper desk page.

Browse the full reference desk →

  1. How long does a ADU permit take in Beverly Hills?
    City of Beverly Hills Community Development runs plan check 120–180 days on a complete, code-conformant submittal for a ADU. First-cycle approvals depend on three things: a stamped structural set, a Title 24 energy report bound into the package, and a site plan with verified setbacks. Most slippage comes from missing one of those three on first submittal.
  2. Who is the permitting authority for a ADU in Beverly Hills?
    Plan check, building permits, and final inspections go through City of Beverly Hills Community Development. For state-law ADU scopes there is no discretionary design review — submit to the building counter and timelines are governed by California Government Code §65852.2 ministerial requirements. Outside of pure state ADU law (additions, full remodels, hillside scopes), expect at least one planning-zoning touch.
  3. Why do ADU permits get rejected in Beverly Hills?
    In Beverly Hills, the five most common first-cycle corrections are: (1) Title 24 energy compliance not bound to the submittal, (2) site plan setback math off by inches, (3) structural calcs not stamped by a CA-licensed engineer, (4) utility load calculations missing for the panel upgrade, and (5) drainage/grading not addressed for impervious-surface adds. Fixing all five before submittal cuts 120–180 days off the schedule.
  4. Does state ADU law override Beverly Hills rules for my ADU?
    For qualifying ADU and JADU scopes, California Government Code §65852.2 and §65852.22 preempt most local discretionary review — Beverly Hills cannot impose owner-occupancy requirements (banned by AB 976), most parking minimums near transit, or stylistic design review. Local jurisdictions still control building-code application, Title 24, utility connection, and impact fee schedules. Non-ADU scopes (full additions, remodels, hillside builds) remain fully under local control.
  5. Are pre-approved standard plans available in Beverly Hills for a ADU?
    Where Beverly Hills has adopted a pre-approved standard ADU plan program, using one cuts plan check by 30–60 days and removes the structural review fee. For programs that exist (LADBS, San Jose, San Diego), the trade-off is that floor-plan changes void the pre-approval. Most owners are better off using a standard plan as a starting point and accepting the layout it ships with.
  6. How long does a garage conversion permit take in Beverly Hills?
    City of Beverly Hills Community Development runs plan check 120–180 days on a complete, code-conformant submittal for a garage conversion. First-cycle approvals depend on three things: a stamped structural set, a Title 24 energy report bound into the package, and a site plan with verified setbacks. Most slippage comes from missing one of those three on first submittal.
  7. Who is the permitting authority for a garage conversion in Beverly Hills?
    Plan check, building permits, and final inspections go through City of Beverly Hills Community Development. For state-law ADU scopes there is no discretionary design review — submit to the building counter and timelines are governed by California Government Code §65852.2 ministerial requirements. Outside of pure state ADU law (additions, full remodels, hillside scopes), expect at least one planning-zoning touch.
  8. Why do garage conversion permits get rejected in Beverly Hills?
    In Beverly Hills, the five most common first-cycle corrections are: (1) Title 24 energy compliance not bound to the submittal, (2) site plan setback math off by inches, (3) structural calcs not stamped by a CA-licensed engineer, (4) utility load calculations missing for the panel upgrade, and (5) drainage/grading not addressed for impervious-surface adds. Fixing all five before submittal cuts 120–180 days off the schedule.
  9. Does state ADU law override Beverly Hills rules for my garage conversion?
    For qualifying ADU and JADU scopes, California Government Code §65852.2 and §65852.22 preempt most local discretionary review — Beverly Hills cannot impose owner-occupancy requirements (banned by AB 976), most parking minimums near transit, or stylistic design review. Local jurisdictions still control building-code application, Title 24, utility connection, and impact fee schedules. Non-ADU scopes (full additions, remodels, hillside builds) remain fully under local control.
  10. Are pre-approved standard plans available in Beverly Hills for a garage conversion?
    Where Beverly Hills has adopted a pre-approved standard ADU plan program, using one cuts plan check by 30–60 days and removes the structural review fee. For programs that exist (LADBS, San Jose, San Diego), the trade-off is that floor-plan changes void the pre-approval. Most owners are better off using a standard plan as a starting point and accepting the layout it ships with.
  11. How long does a JADU permit take in Beverly Hills?
    City of Beverly Hills Community Development runs plan check 120–180 days on a complete, code-conformant submittal for a JADU. First-cycle approvals depend on three things: a stamped structural set, a Title 24 energy report bound into the package, and a site plan with verified setbacks. Most slippage comes from missing one of those three on first submittal.
  12. Who is the permitting authority for a JADU in Beverly Hills?
    Plan check, building permits, and final inspections go through City of Beverly Hills Community Development. For state-law ADU scopes there is no discretionary design review — submit to the building counter and timelines are governed by California Government Code §65852.2 ministerial requirements. Outside of pure state ADU law (additions, full remodels, hillside scopes), expect at least one planning-zoning touch.

Sources & further reading

  • California Government Code §65852.2 — statewide ADU framework (ministerial review, 60-day clock).
  • LADBS — Accessory Dwelling Unit information bulletins and current permit fee schedule.
  • HCD — California Department of Housing & Community Development, ADU handbook (2024 update).
  • Internal data: 120++ ADU projects delivered across Los Angeles County, 2018–2025.

Continue your read · the editorial path

We chained these chapters in the order LA homeowners actually need them. Each one picks up where the last one left a question open.

  1. 02 / 02

    Permitting · 7 min

    ADU vs JADU in California: the structural, legal, and cost differences

    An ADU and a Junior ADU (JADU) sound similar but follow different rules for size, kitchen, owner-occupancy, and cost. A side-by-side breakdown so you pick the right one.

    Read chapter →

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