California Density Bonus and State Housing Laws — Developer FAQs

Heather Medina, Principal Architect and Owner of ArchiDev Studio, professional headshot
Heather Medina
Feb 14, 2026
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1. What Is California’s State Density Bonus Law?

California Density Bonus and State Housing Laws — Developer FAQs

A developer-focused guide to California density bonus law, streamlined housing approvals, by-right multifamily entitlements, and state housing legislation that can unlock more units beyond local zoning—statewide.

Why this matters: California’s housing laws have evolved rapidly since 2017. Developers who understand the full landscape of density bonus tools, streamlining pathways, and by-right entitlements can unlock significantly more units—and move faster—than those relying on local zoning alone.

1. What Is California’s State Density Bonus Law?

California’s State Density Bonus Law allows qualifying multifamily housing projects to exceed local zoning density limits. In exchange for including affordable units at specified income levels, developers receive a density bonus (up to 50% above the base allowable density—or up to 80% for 100% affordable projects under AB 1763), along with incentives, concessions, and waivers from development standards that would otherwise physically preclude construction of the project at the allowed density and affordability package.

The law is designed to remove regulatory barriers that prevent the construction of housing—particularly affordable housing—by ensuring that local development standards do not make approved projects infeasible.

Authority: AB 1668 (1979), as amended → California Government Code §65915

2. Can State Law Require Waivers from Local Development Standards (Like FAR Constraints)?

Yes. Under Government Code §65915, local agencies are required to grant waivers or reductions of development standards that would physically preclude the construction of a project at the density, affordability mix, and number of incentives/concessions permitted under the density bonus law.

This means that if a local standard—such as a Floor Area Ratio (FAR) cap, height limit, setback requirement, or lot coverage restriction—would prevent the developer from building the number of units allowed by the density bonus, the jurisdiction must waive or reduce that standard. The agency cannot deny the waiver unless it can make specific written findings that the waiver would have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety and there is no feasible alternative to mitigate that impact.

Authority: AB 1668 (1979), as amended → California Government Code §65915

3. What Is the Housing Accountability Act (HAA)?

The Housing Accountability Act (HAA) limits a local jurisdiction’s ability to deny, reduce the density of, or impose conditions that render infeasible a housing development project that complies with applicable, objective general plan, zoning, and subdivision standards and criteria in effect at the time the application is deemed complete.

In practice, this means that if a proposed housing project meets the local rules on the books, the city or county cannot reject it or shrink it based on subjective concerns such as neighborhood character, community opposition, or discretionary aesthetic preferences. The jurisdiction must make specific written findings, supported by a preponderance of the evidence, that the project would have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety.

Authority: SB 167 (2017) + AB 678 (2017) → California Government Code §65589.5

4. What Protections Does SB 330 Provide?

SB 330, the Housing Crisis Act of 2019, restricts local jurisdictions from taking actions that reduce housing capacity and adds procedural protections for housing development applications. It applies statewide and is set to remain in effect through January 1, 2030.

The law prevents jurisdictions from downzoning, imposing moratoriums on housing, or reducing the intensity or density of residential land uses below what was allowed when SB 330 took effect. It also establishes a “preliminary application” process that locks in the standards applicable to a project early in the entitlement process, protecting developers from rule changes during review.

Authority: SB 330 (2019) → California Government Code §66300

5. What Is SB 35 / SB 423 Streamlining?

SB 35 (2017), as amended and extended by SB 423 (2023), creates a ministerial (non-discretionary) approval pathway for qualifying multifamily housing projects. Under this pathway, eligible projects are approved without discretionary review, public hearings, or CEQA analysis—significantly compressing the entitlement timeline.

To qualify, a project must be located in a jurisdiction that has not met its Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA) targets, include a specified percentage of affordable units, pay prevailing wages, and meet other objective standards. SB 423 extended and expanded the program, making it permanent and broadening eligibility criteria.

Authority: SB 35 (2017), amended by SB 423 (2023) → California Government Code §65913.4

6. How Does AB 2011 Create a “By-Right” Path?

AB 2011, the Affordable Housing and High Road Jobs Act (2022), establishes a by-right, ministerial approval pathway for qualifying housing projects on eligible commercial and office-zoned sites. The law is designed to convert underutilized commercial corridors into housing opportunities without requiring a rezone or discretionary review.

Projects must meet affordability thresholds, prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements, and objective development standards. There are two tiers: one for 100% affordable projects and one for mixed-income projects, each with different site eligibility and affordability requirements.

Authority: AB 2011 (2022) → California Government Code §65912.100

7. What Does SB 4 Allow on Faith-Based and Higher Education Lands?

SB 4, the Affordable Housing on Faith and Higher Education Lands Act (2023), enables qualifying affordable housing to be developed as a use by right on land owned by religious institutions and independent institutions of higher education. The law creates a streamlined, ministerial approval pathway for these projects.

The legislation recognizes that many faith-based and educational organizations own underutilized land in established neighborhoods with existing infrastructure and services. By removing discretionary review barriers, SB 4 allows these institutions to partner with affordable housing developers to address the housing crisis without lengthy entitlement processes.

Authority: SB 4 (2023) → California Government Code §65913.16

8. What Is SB 684?

SB 684 (2023) expands ministerial subdivision and approval tools for “missing middle” scale housing—smaller multifamily projects such as duplexes, triplexes, fourplexes, and small apartment buildings that fill the gap between single-family homes and large apartment complexes.

The law streamlines the subdivision and approval process for these project types, reducing the time and cost associated with developing smaller-scale infill housing. It builds on California’s existing framework for ministerial approvals and extends those tools to a broader range of housing typologies.

Authority: SB 684 (2023) → California Government Code §65852.28, §65913.4.5, §66499.41

9. How Does AB 2097 Eliminate Parking Minimums?

AB 2097 (2022) prohibits local jurisdictions from imposing minimum automobile parking requirements on any residential, commercial, or other development project located within one-half mile of a major transit stop. The law applies statewide and removes one of the most significant cost and design barriers to infill housing development.

By eliminating parking minimums near transit, AB 2097 allows developers to right-size parking based on actual demand rather than outdated formulas. This can significantly reduce construction costs (structured parking can cost $40,000–$80,000+ per space), increase the buildable area available for housing units, and support transit-oriented development patterns.

Authority: AB 2097 (2022) → California Government Code §65863.2

10. Can ADUs Be Sold Separately (Condo Exit)?

Yes—but only where the local jurisdiction has opted in. AB 1033 (2023–2024) authorizes local agencies to adopt ordinances allowing Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) to be sold separately from the primary residence when the property is legally subdivided. This creates a “condo exit” strategy for ADU developers, enabling individual unit sales rather than requiring the entire property to be held as a rental.

The law opens a new pathway for small-scale developers and homeowners to build ADUs as for-sale product, increasing the financial viability of ADU construction and expanding homeownership opportunities—particularly in high-cost markets where detached single-family homes are out of reach for many buyers. However, AB 1033 is not self-executing—each jurisdiction must adopt a local ordinance to enable ADU condo sales.

Authority: AB 1033 (2023–2024) → California Government Code §65852.2(a)(10)

11. Can Multifamily Properties Add Up to 8 Detached ADUs?

Yes, with important limitations. SB 1211 (2023–2024) expands the number of detached ADUs that can be added to existing multifamily properties from 2 to up to 8 units. This significantly increases the development potential of older multifamily parcels, particularly garden-style apartment complexes with underutilized open space or surface parking areas.

The law is designed to encourage incremental density on multifamily sites without requiring a full redevelopment. Detached ADUs can be constructed on the same lot as an existing multifamily building, providing additional rental units with relatively low construction costs and minimal impact on existing residents.

Authority: SB 1211 (2023–2024) → California Government Code §66323(a)(4)(A)

12. Do These Laws Apply Outside San Diego?

Yes. All of the laws discussed in this guide are California state statutes and apply statewide to every city and county in California. They are not local programs—they are state-mandated requirements that local jurisdictions must implement and comply with.

That said, eligibility and applicability vary by jurisdiction. Some programs (such as SB 35/SB 423 streamlining) depend on whether a city has met its Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA) targets. Others (such as AB 2097 parking elimination) depend on proximity to major transit stops. And some (such as density bonus waivers) depend on the specific development standards in effect in each jurisdiction.

Disclaimer: This information is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or entitlement advice. California housing law is complex and subject to frequent amendment. Specific applicability depends on project location, site conditions, zoning, and current regulatory requirements.

Always consult with qualified legal counsel, entitlement professionals, and your local planning agency before making development decisions based on the information presented here.

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