Yuba City permitted 16 ADUs from 2013 to 2024 — among the most active markets in California. Here's what it costs, what's allowed, and who builds them.
All-in design-build estimates (architecture + permits + construction + soft costs). Real quotes vary by lot conditions, finishes and contractor — get at least three before signing.
Per-square-foot ranges reflect 2026 pricing in the default market. Permit fees ($5–25k), site work ($10–40k) and high-end finishes can push totals 20–40% higher. See cost methodology for the full regression model and the 8 California builder-pricing sources it's calibrated against.
California state law sets a floor that every city must meet. Yuba City may allow more than the minimums shown — confirm with the Yuba City planning department before finalising plans. See how we verify city-specific ordinance data.
| Rule | Standard |
|---|---|
| ADUs allowed on single-family lot | Yes — required by state law |
| Max units per lot | 1 ADU + 1 JADU on single-family; up to 2 detached ADUs + JADU on multifamily |
| Owner-occupancy required | Not allowed to require for ADUs (state preempts) |
| Side setback (detached) | 4 feet |
| Rear setback (detached) | 4 feet |
| Max height | 16 ft — 18 ft if within 0.5 mi of major transit |
| Off-street parking | None required if within 0.5 mi of public transit (state law applies in most metros) |
| Max ADU size | 850 sqft for studio/1BR; 1,000 sqft for 2+BR (city may allow more) |
| Min lot size | No minimum required by state |
| Permit timeline (ministerial) | 60 days from complete application (state law) |
Annual ADU permits issued, 2013–2025. Sources: Big West Coast ADU Dataset for 2013–2022 and the California HCD Annual Progress Report (April 2026 snapshot) for 2023–2025.
*Partial year. HCD's 2025 APR snapshot (April 2026) reflects jurisdictions that filed by the April 1 deadline; remaining cities continue to report through mid-2026.
Active CA-licensed B-class general contractors with ADU-specialist branding, sourced from the CSLB Public Data Portal snapshot from April 28, 2026. Click any license number to verify current status at the CSLB Instant License Check — status can change at any time. See builder-directory methodology.
We don't yet list ADU specialists with offices in Yuba City. Builders from neighbouring cities often serve this area — check our full builder directory or contact your local planning department for referrals.
Most Yuba City ADU projects fall in a $100,000–$400,000+ range, all-in (design + permits + construction). The big drivers are size, type (detached costs more than a garage conversion), and finish level. See the per-type cost table above for typical ranges in this market.
Yes — every ADU in California requires a building permit. Yuba City processes ADU applications under the state's 60-day ministerial review rule (no public hearings, no discretionary review for code-compliant designs). Permit fees vary but typically run $5,000–$25,000 depending on size and impact fees.
State law guarantees a minimum allowance of 850 sqft (studio/1BR) or 1,000 sqft (2+BR). Many California cities allow larger detached ADUs — check the Yuba City planning department or the ordinance link in our rules table above for the local maximum.
No, not for an ADU. AB-976 (effective 2023) extended the state's ban on owner-occupancy requirements for ADUs through January 1, 2030 — California cities may not require an owner to live on the property as a condition of permitting an ADU during that window. JADUs are different: owner-occupancy of either the primary residence or the JADU itself is required by state law throughout the JADU's life.
A JADU (Junior ADU) is a unit ≤500 sqft created within an existing single-family home, sharing a wall with the main residence. JADUs are cheaper and faster to build, but they require owner-occupancy of either the main house or the JADU. Most homeowners build a separate ADU for rental flexibility.
According to the California ADU permit dataset compiled by BuildinganADU.com, Yuba City permitted 7 ADUs in 2023, the peak year on record (2013–2022). California-wide ADU permits have grown roughly 20× over that period — homeowner demand is outpacing every other housing-supply tool the state has tried.