Skip to main content
REF_07 / ZONING & CODE

HB 1337

Also known as: Washington ADU Reform Act

Washington's 2023 statewide ADU law — two ADUs per lot, no owner-occupancy, no extra parking.

DEFINITION

House Bill 1337, signed into law in 2023 and effective 2024, requires all Washington cities with populations over 2,500 to permit at least two ADUs per residential lot, eliminate owner-occupancy requirements, cap impact fees at 50% of single-family rates, and prohibit additional off-street parking requirements within a half-mile of major transit. HB 1337 is the legal backbone that makes most current Puget Sound ADU strategies viable; cities had until June 2025 to bring their codes into compliance.

Source · Bill text

FAQ

Frequently asked

  • What does HB 1337 mean in the context of an ADU?

    HB 1337 is part of the regulatory and technical vocabulary you encounter when permitting and building an accessory dwelling unit in Washington. Knowing the term matters because reviewers, inspectors, and your lender will use it without explanation. We define HB 1337 in plain English and connect it to the specific code citation, fee, or construction detail that affects your project. Use the related-terms section to navigate adjacent concepts you'll need on the same plan set.

    Go deeper: Read: Bellevue ADU rules — what changed under HB 1337

  • Where does HB 1337 apply in the WA ADU process?

    HB 1337 typically shows up in either the design phase (when the architect or designer is laying out plans against zoning), the permit phase (when reviewers check the submittal against code), or the construction phase (when inspectors verify built conditions match the approved set). The same term can appear in your loan documents if it affects valuation or risk. Each glossary entry maps the term to the exact phase where it matters most.

    Go deeper: Read: Bellevue ADU rules — what changed under HB 1337

  • Why should I care about HB 1337 for my project?

    Misunderstanding HB 1337 is one of the most common reasons ADU projects hit avoidable cost overruns or permit delays. A clear shared vocabulary between you, your designer, and your builder shortens decision time and reduces change orders. Bookmark this glossary and refer back as you progress from feasibility through final inspection.

    Go deeper: Glossary: HB 1337

  • How does HB 1337 affect my ADU budget?

    Most glossary terms map to either a cost line, a review timeline, or a permit fee. Where HB 1337 drives cost, the impact is itemized in our standard fee schedule and itemized at feasibility — so by contract time, HB 1337 is a known number, not a discovered surprise. Click through to the related cost or permit page for the current HB 1337-specific dollar range and timeline.

    Go deeper: Read: Bellevue ADU rules — what changed under HB 1337

  • Is HB 1337 regulated under RCW 36.70A.681?

    WA statewide ADU preemption (RCW 36.70A.681 / HB 1337) covers many ADU-adjacent topics: size caps, setbacks, owner-occupancy, parking, height, lot-size minimums. Whether HB 1337 falls under preemption depends on its specific scope — design review, side-sewer permitting, drainage review, and tree-protection rules are generally NOT preempted, while size/setback/parking generally ARE. Each glossary entry flags the preemption status.

    Go deeper: Read: Bellevue ADU rules — what changed under HB 1337

TERM_HB 1337

Need "Hb 1337" explained for YOUR lot? Get it in plain English.

Definitions help. Applying them to your specific property is what matters. Send the address and we'll explain how Hb 1337 plays out on your build.

  • Plain-English read of "Hb 1337" on your lot
  • Personal reply from a licensed PM
  • One-business-day SLA
Replies within 1 business day
WA Lic. GOLDESA747LZBuilding since 2012
Direct line · Golden State ADU(425) 642-4142

We reply within 1 business day. No spam, ever.

◇ No sales script · No spam · Your details stay with our team