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SeaTac skyline at golden hour
REGION / SEATAC, WA

SeaTac
ADU Builder.

Design-build DADU, AADU, garage conversion & addition contractor — SeaTac, WA

SeaTac is the airport-corridor cap-rate play: low land basis, deep long-term tenant demand from Port of Seattle and airline employees. Sound-attenuation construction is the only complication and we build it into every spec.

8–12 wk
Permit Timeline
7,200 sqft
Lot Minimum
5+
Neighborhoods
12 yrs
Local Experience
ZONING / LOCAL CODE

UL-7,200 / UL-12,000 — ADU + DADU permitted under SMC 15.10

We file in SeaTac every month — we know which lot configurations sail through and which need pre-application meetings to avoid corrections.

NEIGHBORHOODS WE SERVE
  • ·Angle Lake
  • ·Bow Lake
  • ·Riverton Heights
  • ·McMicken Heights
  • ·Sunset Park

Building in SeaTac

FIELD_NOTES
WHY_HERE

What we lean into

  • Lowest land basis of any major Puget Sound city — strongest cap rates
  • Port of Seattle and airline employees drive 24/7 tenant demand
  • DADU permitted by right in all UL zones
  • Light rail (Angle Lake Station) keeps the area transit-connected
WATCH_OUT

What we plan around

  • FAA Part 77 surfaces and aircraft noise (NEM 65–75 dB) cover most of the city
  • Sound-rated assemblies (STC 45+) required throughout the noise overlay
  • Some lots in Bow Lake have soil contamination from former service stations — Phase I ESA recommended
  • Tree retention: 25% canopy on lots ≥7,200 sqft
CHECKLIST_01 / SEATAC_FEASIBILITY

SeaTac ADU Permit Checklist

Two-page fillable PDF tuned to SeaTac, WA — owner & site fields, project intent, and the local site conditions we always pre-screen (UL-7,200 / UL-12,000). Fill it on any device, email it back, and we'll set up a free 30-minute feasibility call.

  • · Pre-mapped to SeaTac zoning & 8–12 wk permit window
  • · Editable on Preview, Acrobat, Chrome — no signup
  • · Email back to hello@goldenstateadubuilders.com
FILE / seatac-adu-permit-checklist.pdf
Email completed PDF →

Or call (206) 555-0192

Cost to build an ADU in SeaTac

PRICE_GUIDE

Indicative turn-key ranges for SeaTac, WA — design, permits, construction and finish carpentry included. Final number depends on lot conditions, finishes and the 8–12 wk SeaTac permit timeline.

DADU
$325K – $525K

6–8 months · 400–1,000 sqft

DETACHED ADU in SeaTac
AADU
$185K – $345K

4–5 months · 300–800 sqft

ATTACHED ADU in SeaTac
Garage
$145K – $235K

3–4 months · 200–600 sqft

GARAGE CONV. in SeaTac
Additions
$220K – $750K+

Project dependent · Custom

MODERN ADDITIONS in SeaTac
CLIENT_REPORT
Golden turned a permitting nightmare into a finished, beautiful backyard cottage. They were on schedule every single week, and the fixed-price contract held to the dollar.
Marcus Henderson
Homeowner · Ballard, Seattle · 2023
REF_4492
We interviewed five general contractors. Golden was the only one who walked our lot before quoting. Their structural engineer caught a foundation issue everyone else missed.
Sade Okafor
Owner-Architect · Bellevue · 2023
REF_4376
They converted our garage into a long-term rental that pays our mortgage. Permitted, built, and tenant-ready in 14 weeks — and the finishes look like a custom home.
Jin & Lauren Park
Investor Homeowners · Kirkland · 2024
REF_4218

SeaTac ADU FAQ

FAQ_03
01

How loud is it really to live in a SeaTac ADU?

With proper STC 45+ assemblies (laminated glass, mass-loaded drywall, roof underlayment) interior noise stays at conversational levels even directly under approach paths. Tenant satisfaction is comparable to non-airport locations.

02

What does the sound-attenuation premium cost?

$8–18K depending on overlay tier (NEM 65, 70, or 75 dB). Builds inside NEM 70+ zones see the largest premium.

03

Is owner-occupancy required?

No.

Build in SeaTac.
Free site walk.

REQUEST CONSULTATION
FAQ

Frequently asked

  • How much does an ADU cost in SeaTac, WA in 2026?

    Turn-key ADUs in SeaTac run roughly $295–$465 per square foot all-in for 2026 contracts, depending on lot access, foundation type, and finish package. A 600 sqft one-bedroom DADU typically closes between $215K and $310K including permits, side-sewer connection, and electrical service work. The biggest swing factors in SeaTac are soils (pier-and-beam adds $18–32K over a slab), required stormwater detention on lots over 2,000 sqft of impervious, and whether a panel upgrade to 200A is needed. Our SeaTac feasibility report gives you a ±15% number in two weeks for $1,500, credited to the build contract.

  • How long does the ADU permit take in SeaTac?

    Median SeaTac ADU permit issuance is currently 8–16 weeks from a clean submittal in 2026, faster on pre-engineered catalog plans. The bottlenecks are almost never the zoning review — they are side-sewer capacity letters, drainage review on lots with steep slopes, and addressing assignments. We pull a pre-application meeting with SeaTac planning before drawings start, which typically saves one full review cycle (4–6 weeks). RCW 36.70A.681 requires most WA jurisdictions to permit ADUs ministerially when zoning is met, which has trimmed median timelines roughly 30% versus 2022.

  • What size DADU can I build on my SeaTac lot?

    Under HB 1337 / RCW 36.70A.681, SeaTac must allow at least one DADU up to 1,000 sqft on any residential lot zoned for single-family, with height to 24 ft and standard 5 ft side/rear setbacks unless local code is more permissive. Many SeaTac zones allow a second ADU (a stacked DADU or AADU + DADU combo). Your ceiling is usually lot coverage, not the 1,000 sqft cap — once you add the primary house footprint plus the new DADU plus impervious driveway and walks, you frequently hit the lot-coverage ratio before the size cap. Our zoning lookup checks both.

  • Do I need to live on the property to build a SeaTac ADU?

    No. Owner-occupancy requirements were preempted statewide by RCW 36.70A.681 — SeaTac cannot impose an owner-occupancy condition on either the primary or accessory unit. That means you can build a DADU and rent both units, build a DADU for a family member while living off-site, or build to sell. Short-term rentals (≤30 days) are still governed by local STR codes, which vary; long-term rentals (30+ days) face no special restriction beyond standard landlord-tenant law (RCW 59.18).

  • Can I subdivide and sell the ADU separately in SeaTac?

    Yes, in most SeaTac zones, since the 2023 unit-lot subdivision and condominiumization changes paired with HB 1110 middle-housing reform. The two common pathways are: (1) unit-lot subdivision — carving a new fee-simple lot around the DADU, requires a short plat (~4–6 months) and shared-driveway easements; (2) condominium declaration under RCW 64.34 — faster (~2 months) but lenders sometimes resist financing a 2-unit condo. We model both at feasibility because the right answer depends on your hold-vs-sell horizon and current lender appetite.

  • What is the rental income from a SeaTac ADU?

    2026 SeaTac ADU rent comps for a 1-bedroom DADU built to current finish standards land in a wide band depending on submarket — generally $1,950–$3,200/mo for a long-term lease, with mid-term (30–90 day) commanding 10–25% premium. Net operating income after vacancy (5%), management (8%), maintenance reserve (5%), and property tax/insurance increment typically hits 62–70% of gross. At today's construction cost and rent comps the unleveraged cap on a new SeaTac DADU pencils 4.8–6.4%, with leveraged cash-on-cash 7–11% using a HELOC or renovation loan.

  • Will an ADU raise my SeaTac property taxes?

    Yes, but predictably. The county assessor adds the marginal improvement value (typically 55–70% of construction cost, not 100%) to your assessed value, and the levy rate applies to that increment under RCW 84.40.0301. For a $270K-cost DADU in SeaTac, expect roughly $1,900–$3,100/yr of additional property tax depending on your levy code area. The increment is partially offset because King and Pierce County both classify newly created ADUs into a single building-permit assessment cycle, not a full reassessment of the primary house.

  • What's the first step to build an ADU in SeaTac?

    Start with a paid feasibility study — not a plan set. The feasibility deliverable is a 12–20 page report covering SeaTac zoning analysis, setbacks and lot-coverage math, water meter sizing, side-sewer capacity, electrical service amperage, critical-areas screening, three layout options, and a ±15% budget. It costs $1,500 and is credited to the construction contract. This step eliminates the two most expensive surprises — an undersized water service and an unmappable side sewer — before you spend $15K+ on full design. Schedule a free 20-minute scoping call to confirm fit.