California guarantees you can build at least 800 square feet no matter what your local rules say — and the City of LA lets detached ADUs go up to 1,200. Here's how big your unit can actually be.
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"How big can an ADU be?" is one of the most-searched ADU questions in Los Angeles — and the answer is more generous than most homeowners expect. California law sets a floor that no city can dip below, then LA layers a higher ceiling on top. Once you understand both numbers, the size question usually comes down to your budget and your yard, not the code.
State law guarantees you can build an ADU of at least 800 square feet and up to 16 feet tall on any eligible lot — even if local lot-coverage or open-space rules would otherwise say no. On top of that, the City of LA allows detached ADUs up to 1,200 square feet. Keep your unit under 750 sq ft and it's exempt from impact fees. A JADU (carved from the existing house) maxes out at 500 sq ft.
This is the most important number in the whole ADU code, and the one homeowners most often don't know. California law guarantees that you can build an ADU of at least 800 square feet, at least 16 feet in height, with 4-foot side and rear setbacks — and a city cannot use lot coverage, floor-area ratio, minimum lot size, or open-space requirements to stop a unit of that size (aduzoning.org, Holland & Knight).
In plain English: if a builder tells you "your lot's too small" or "the zoning won't allow it," they're almost certainly wrong about an 800 sq ft unit. There's also no minimum lot size for an ADU in California, and they're allowed on any single-family or multifamily lot (Snap ADU). 800 square feet is a comfortable one-bedroom or a tight two-bedroom — enough for a rental, a parent, or an adult child.
The 800 sq ft guarantee only sets the floor. Whether you can go larger depends on LA's local maximum and how much buildable area your setbacks leave you.
Above the state floor, the City of Los Angeles is one of the more generous jurisdictions: a detached ADU can be up to 1,200 square feet (aduzoning.org). That's enough for a genuine two- or even three-bedroom home in the backyard — a real second residence, not just a studio.
A few nuances worth knowing:
A 700–800 sq ft detached ADU is the most common build: large enough for a comfortable one- or two-bedroom, small enough to control cost, and (under 750) potentially exempt from impact fees. Bigger makes sense when you're housing a larger family or maximizing rent.
Here's a size rule that can save you thousands. Under state law (SB 13), ADUs under 750 square feet are exempt from impact fees — the development charges cities and utilities levy on new construction (California HCD ADU Handbook). For ADUs of 750 sq ft and up, impact fees must be charged proportionally to the primary dwelling's size — never a flat full-size fee — but the cleanest way to avoid them entirely is to stay just under the 750 line.
This creates a genuine design decision: a 749 sq ft unit and an 800 sq ft unit are nearly identical to live in, but the smaller one can dodge a fee bill that runs into the thousands. If your goal is a one-bedroom rental, building to ~749 sq ft is often the smartest move. We break the numbers down further in our ADU impact fees guide.
A Junior ADU (JADU) is a separate, smaller category: up to 500 square feet, carved out of the existing footprint of your house (commonly a converted bedroom or a portion of the home with its own entrance). JADUs have their own rules — an efficiency kitchen is allowed, they can share a bathroom with the main house, and owner-occupancy of the property is required (California HCD).
JADUs are cheap and fast because you're not building new structure, just reconfiguring existing space. And in many cases you can have both a JADU inside the house and a detached ADU in the backyard on the same lot. For the full comparison, see ADU vs JADU and what is an ADU.
Send us your address. We'll check your zoning and setbacks for free and tell you the realistic maximum ADU size for your property — before you pay for a single plan.
See if your property qualifies — freeSquare footage is abstract until you map it to bedrooms. Here's a practical guide to what each size delivers in an LA ADU. (Exact layouts vary by builder — these are typical ranges.)
| Configuration | Typical size | Best for | Fee note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio | 350–500 sq ft | Single tenant, home office | Fee-exempt |
| JADU (in-house) | up to 500 sq ft | Aging parent, adult child | Owner-occupancy required |
| 1 bedroom | 500–749 sq ft | Most common rental | Fee-exempt under 750 |
| 2 bedroom | 750–1,000 sq ft | Small family, multigen | Proportional fees may apply |
| 3 bedroom (max) | up to 1,200 sq ft | Full second residence | Highest cost & fees |
Note how the under-750, fee-exempt one-bedroom hits the sweet spot for most LA homeowners: a real, rentable unit at the lowest cost and fee exposure. Going to a two- or three-bedroom is worth it when you're housing family or want maximum rent — LA ADUs commonly rent for $2,000–$4,500/month depending on size and neighborhood (Terner Center).
The code says up to 1,200 sq ft and guarantees at least 800 — but your actual ceiling is whatever your buildable area allows after setbacks, easements, and access. Here's how we figure that out for you, free:
Give us your address. We pull your zoning and lot dimensions, apply the 4-foot setbacks and the state size guarantee, and estimate the largest ADU your property can realistically support.
If it looks viable, a vetted, California-licensed LA builder visits to confirm the size against the actual lot — checking access, slope, and utility capacity so the square footage on paper is the square footage you can really build.
Every builder we connect you with is license-verified with their CSLB number on file. Ready to compare options? See the best ADU builders in Los Angeles or our can I build an ADU? feasibility overview.
Before you spend a dollar on permits, let us check your address — zoning, lot size, setbacks, overlays — and tell you straight whether an ADU is viable. If it looks good, we connect you with a vetted, California-licensed LA builder for a free on-site feasibility assessment. No cost, no commitment.
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