SPEC_C / ISSAQUAH · DADU · Verified 2026-01-15
Issaquah DADU Builders — Detached ADU Cost, Permits & Timeline
Issaquah has aligned with HB 1337, but the geography is the story — the city sits in a bowl between Squak, Cougar, and Tiger mountains. A DADU is a standalone backyard cottage on the same lot as the main house — separate roof, separate entry, full kitchen and bath. Issaquah permits detached adu (dadu) on most single-family lots under its current code. DADUs on flatter Highlands lots, basement conversions in Olde Town stock, and AADUs above garages.
SPEC_C.01 / ZONING — Issaquah, King County
Is a dadu allowed in Issaquah?
Issaquah allows detached ADU (DADU) on single-family lots (up to 1,000 sf), no owner-occupancy requirement, and no off-street parking required near transit.
- Max ADU size
- 1,000 sf (verify against city code)
- Parking
- No off-street parking required within ½-mile of major transit per HB 1337; otherwise city standard parking rules apply.
- Owner-occupancy
- Not required
- Height
- DADU heights per IMC 18; commonly 24 ft, with view-corridor and slope adjustments.
- Setbacks
- 5 ft side/rear typical for DADUs.
- Lot coverage
- Coverage per IMC zone.
- Minimum lot size
- No explicit ADU minimum lot size under current IMC.
- Tree retention
- IMC tree-retention enforced on canopy-heavy hillside lots; large mature trees common.
- Critical areas
- Issaquah Creek and tributaries; steep slopes on three sides of the city.
- Alley access
- Limited alleys; most lots front-load.
Feasibility blockers to map early
- steep slope (Squak, Cougar, Tiger mountains)
- stream buffers (Issaquah Creek)
- large mature trees
- Issaquah Creek and tributaries; steep slopes on three sides of the city.
- IMC tree-retention enforced on canopy-heavy hillside lots; large mature trees common.
SPEC_C.02 / PERMIT — Issaquah Permit Center
Issaquah dadu permit timeline
Plan review (typical)
10–24 weeks
Issaquah Permit Center standard ADU intake via MyBuildingPermit.
With one correction cycle
12–32 weeks
Includes one typical correction cycle.
Permit difficulty
7/10
Higher = more plan-check + design-review friction.
Documents you'll submit
- Site plan with parcel dimensions, structures, setbacks, and tree retention
- Architectural plans (floor plans, elevations, sections)
- Structural plans stamped by a WA-licensed engineer where required
- WSEC energy compliance worksheet
- Stormwater / drainage review per city threshold
- Utility plan (sewer / water / electric)
- DADU site plan showing separation from primary structure and any easements
- Independent utility connections (sewer, water, electric) or shared-service detail
Common plan-check corrections
- Setback or lot-coverage encroachment on site plan
- Energy-code U-value / glazing percentage mismatch
- Missing structural calcs for shear walls or beams
- Stormwater BMP not selected or sized for the impervious area
- Tree retention plan missing or critical-root-zone fencing not shown
- Setback or coverage error on detached structure
- Stormwater BMP missing for added impervious
Inspection sequence
- 01Foundation / footing
- 02Underfloor framing & insulation
- 03Rough-in: framing, mechanical, plumbing, electrical
- 04Insulation & vapor barrier
- 05Drywall / wallboard
- 06Final building, plumbing, mechanical, electrical
- 07Certificate of occupancy / final approval
Why Issaquah reviews can slow
- steep-slope geotech
- Issaquah Creek buffer reviews
- tree-retention plans
SPEC_C.03 / COST — Issaquah cost tier 5/5
Issaquah dadu cost range
$297k–$551k · typical $403k
Drivers: site access, foundation, utility upgrades, and finish level.
What moves your number
- Foundation type (slab vs stepped)
- Crane / site access
- Sewer routing length
- Finish level
Utility & site notes for this city
- PSE coordination standard; older Olde Town lots commonly need 200A upgrade.
- Panel upgrades typically $5–9k.
- Sammamish Plateau Water & Sewer District in parts; side-sewer review required.
- Steep-slope shoring and crane access can add $30–80k on hillside parcels.
Ranges reflect typical 2026 project budgets and exclude land. Your exact cost depends on site access, foundation, utility upgrades, finish level, and city review depth — confirm with a feasibility study before committing.
SPEC_C.04 / TIMELINE — typical end-to-end ~62 weeks
Issaquah dadu schedule, phase by phase
- 01FeasibilityParcel + zoning + utility verification.1–4 weeks
- 02DesignSchematic → permit-ready set.4–12 weeks
- 03EngineeringStructural runs in parallel with design.2–6 weeks
- 04Permit reviewIssaquah Permit Center standard ADU intake via MyBuildingPermit.10–24 weeks
- 05Corrections & resubmittalCycle depends on correction depth.2–8 weeks
- 06ConstructionDetached scope; conversions sit at the lower end.18–38 weeks
- 07Final sign-offFinal inspections and certificate of occupancy.1–4 weeks
Issaquah-specific delay risks · steep-slope geotech · Issaquah Creek buffer reviews · tree-retention plans
Weather note · Excavation, foundations, and exterior weatherization sequence best Apr–Oct; framing and finishes continue year-round under temporary weather protection.
SPEC_C.05 / COMPARE — DADU vs the other ADU types in Issaquah
Why pick a dadu over the alternatives in Issaquah?
| vs. | Cost | Speed | Privacy | Resale | Best when |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AADU | Higher — full new foundation + envelope. | Slower — ground-up build. | Better — no shared walls. | Strongest resale separation. | Backyard space + alley/side access available. |
| Garage Conversion | Higher — no reused shell. | Slower — full new structure. | Better — siting flexibility. | Higher — true second dwelling. | Lot can absorb a new footprint. |
| Basement ADU | Higher — no reused shell. | Slower — full new structure. | Much better — separate building. | Higher — visible second unit. | You want a true backyard cottage, not a downstairs unit. |
SPEC_C.06 / FIT — Is a dadu right for your Issaquah lot?
Best-fit profile for a Issaquah dadu
Pick a DADU when privacy, long-term rentability, and resale value matter more than speed or lowest cost. Avoid it on very tight lots, lots with deep critical-area buffers, or sites with no alley access and a long sewer run.
- Rental income
- Strongest of the four for long-term rental income — full privacy, full appliance set, dedicated yard space and parking when allowed.
- Aging parents / multigen
- Excellent for aging parents who want independence with proximity — single-level layouts with no shared walls or stairs.
- Tight lot
- Hardest of the four on a tight lot — DADU footprint plus required setbacks and tree retention can consume most rear-yard space.
- Alley access
- Ideal when alley access exists — separate guest entry, easier construction staging, and cleaner utility tie-ins.
- Lower budget
- Highest baseline budget of the four — foundation, framing, roof, siding, and full MEP are all new.
- Privacy
- Best privacy of all four — no shared walls, no shared entry, no shared mechanical chase.
- Speed to occupancy
- Slowest of the four — full ground-up build, full inspection sequence, full weather exposure during framing.
- Utilities already nearby
- Sewer routing length and side-sewer condition drive a meaningful share of the budget.
SPEC_C.07 / SOURCES — verified .gov / city / state references
Official sources for Issaquah ADU rules
- Issaquah Permit CenterPermit authority for Issaquah ADUs.
- Issaquah ADU infoCity landing page; ADU standards in IMC 18.
- MyBuildingPermit.comPermit intake for Issaquah.
- RCW 36.70A.681 — Accessory Dwelling UnitsState law setting the floor for ADU regulations cities must meet.
- HB 1337 (2023) — Bill textAuthoritative text of the 2023 ADU reform: two ADUs per lot, 1,000 sf min, no owner-occupancy, parking limits near transit.
- WA Department of Commerce — ADU resourcesState guidance and model code for cities implementing HB 1337.
- WA State Energy Code (Residential)ADUs must meet WSEC; the residential provisions drive insulation, glazing, and HVAC requirements.
Issaquah DADU FAQ
Does Issaquah allow two ADUs per lot?
Yes — under HB 1337 alignment, one AADU and one DADU.
How big can my Issaquah DADU be?
Up to 1,000 sf of gross floor area.
Do Issaquah Creek buffers affect my lot?
Parcels within mapped buffers require setback compliance and may need water-quality stormwater treatment.
Do I need a separate sewer line for a DADU?
Not always. Most Puget Sound cities allow a shared side-sewer with a cleanout and an as-built that proves capacity. A separate line is required only when the existing line is undersized, in failing condition, or the city explicitly demands one.
Can I rent the DADU short-term?
Short-term rental rules are city-specific and change. Seattle, Bellevue, Tacoma and most Tier-1 cities allow long-term rentals; short-term (STR) usually requires a separate license, an owner-occupancy attestation, or both. Confirm with the city before underwriting an STR pro forma.
How big can a DADU be in Washington?
HB 1337 sets a statewide floor of at least 1,000 sq ft of allowed gross floor area for an ADU. Individual cities may allow more (Seattle and Bellevue both go above 1,000 sf on many lots), but the city's specific max controls — always verify against the linked municipal code.
Go deeper: Read the DADU vs AADU in Puget Sound: which to build (2026) guide
What kind of foundation does a DADU need?
A stem-wall foundation on continuous footings is most common in the Puget Sound, with stepped foundations on sloped sites. Pin or pier foundations are sometimes used on tree-protection lots to limit critical-root-zone disturbance, but they require engineering.
Go deeper: Read the Foundation inspection checklist for Puget Sound homes guide
Other ADU types in Issaquah
Same dadu in nearby cities
SPEC_C.08 / NEXT
Plan your Issaquah dadu the right way
A 45-minute feasibility call confirms zoning, utility, and budget reality before you spend on design. Golden State ADU has been licensed in Washington since 2012 (LIC SEATTI*752N6).
More for Issaquah dadu planning
INTERNAL_LINKS / Deep Map