By Jon Healey | Los Angeles Times
Accessory dwelling units are multiplying across California, boosted by permissive state laws that aim to increase the supply of affordable housing.
Now, a handful of cities are moving to let homeowners sell their backyard cottages and converted garages separately from the houses they live in, potentially transforming ADUs into a new generation of starter homes that cost a fraction of a full-sized house on a full-sized lot. The first to act was the San José City Council, which approved an ordinance (on June 11) authorizing the separate sale of ADUs as of mid-July.
Housing advocates say that Sacramento and Berkeley are also working on measures to allow separate sales of ADUs, and San Diego County is exploring it. Local governments were given the authority to do so last year under Assembly Bill 1033, which also laid out the process homeowners must follow to sell their ADU without selling the land it’s sitting on.
Supporters of AB 1033 say ADUs can help fill a gaping hole in the state’s housing supply when it comes to entry-level housing, a problem exacerbated by high mortgage interest rates. “The majority of the state is unable to afford the majority of homes on the market,” said Rafael Perez, president of the board of the Casita Coalition, a nonprofit coalition that promotes housing solutions.
Starting about seven years ago, California lawmakers steadily removed ADU construction barriers imposed by local governments, going so far as to give homeowners the right to build at least one unit that met some standard requirements. The dwellings, which are usually 600 to 1,200 square feet, have all the basic features of a single family home but are far less expensive to build because there is no additional cost for land.
Since state lawmakers began promoting ADUs, interest has exploded. In L.A. County alone, nearly 60,000 permits for ADUs have been issued since 2018.
The requirement that ADUs be on the same lot as the primary residence, however, has prevented them from being sold separately. Under AB 1033, local governments can solve that problem by allowing homeowners to treat their house and ADU as condominiums, with shared obligations but separate titles.
“This creates an opportunity for new [housing] inventory that is much easier to build,” Perez said. That’s particularly important now, he said, because high interest rates are making houses less affordable and cutting down the number of units on the market, as some homeowners balk at the cost of a loan for a new home.
Perez said that California is the only state that has banned the separate sale of ADUs. “What we’ve seen in other states is that the ADU tends to sell for 40% to 60% of what a single family home in that neighborhood will sell for,” he said.
Meredith Munger, a loan officer at CrossCountry Mortgage in San Diego, estimated that 60% of her customers are building ADUs for family members, and more than half of those want to sell the unit to those relatives. With such a sale, the homeowner would no longer be responsible for the debt incurred in building the ADU, and the relatives would be able to build an equity stake.
“In other states, approximately 50% of ADUs are sold, particularly to young families,” Munger said. “Most of these ADUs are sold by retirees who have long ago paid off their house but don’t want to take care of a large backyard.”
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