San Fernando Valley · Los Angeles
ADU permits in Tarzana
Tarzana sits between Woodland Hills and Encino on the south-Valley spine, with the same Ventura Blvd dividing line: large R1-1 flats to the north, transitional hillside to the south. Tarzana's original 1920s subdivision (literally Edgar Rice Burroughs's ranch) means some lots have irregular shapes — worth checking before you site the ADU.
Tarzana by the numbers
Rounded figures from the 2020 US Census, LA County Assessor parcel data, and LADBS PermitLA filings. Estimates only — your specific lot can vary widely.
Population
37,000
2020 Census
Single-family homes
~11,000
LA County Assessor
Median lot size
8,000 sqft
Approximate
ADU permits filed 2024
~130
LADBS PermitLA filings — Tarzana ADU volume tracks closely with Encino.
Permit overlays active in Tarzana
These are LA City zoning / regulatory overlays that hit a meaningful share of Tarzana parcels. Each one affects what you can build, how long it takes, or how much it costs. Run your specific address through the feasibility check on the homepage to see which apply to your lot.
Hillside Area
~28% of parcelsSouth Tarzana — Reseda Blvd south of Ventura, then up into the Santa Monica Mountains — is in the Hillside Area. Less aggressive than Encino Hills (more rolling, fewer cliff lots) but still triggers the geotech requirement on steeper parcels.
Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone
~18% of parcelsTarzana's far south parcels along the Mulholland corridor overlap the VHFHSZ. Less coverage than Woodland Hills or Encino south, but still meaningful on south-rim lots.
Wilbur-Tarzana lot irregularities
The original Tarzana subdivision (Edgar Rice Burroughs ranch, parceled in the 1920s) left some lots with odd shapes — particularly along Wilbur Ave and Etiwanda Ave. Setbacks are normal, but the irregular front lot lines can constrain where the ADU footprint can land.
Watch-outs specific to Tarzana lots
Patterns we see across Tarzana permits and corrections. None of these are dealbreakers — they're just the things people get wrong most often when they don't know the neighborhood.
- 01
Reseda Blvd south is hillside transition territory
Lots along Reseda Blvd south of Ventura look flat from the street but often drop sharply at the rear. LADBS uses the rear-yard slope, not the street frontage, for hillside determination — so check your property survey before assuming you're in the flats.
- 02
Medical office concentration on Ventura affects setbacks
Tarzana's stretch of Ventura Blvd has heavy commercial / medical office use abutting residential lots. If your house backs Ventura, the rear-yard ADU setback is enforced more strictly to keep separation from the commercial parcels.
- 03
Older Wilbur-Tarzana lots may need a current survey
Some 1920s-subdivided lots in Tarzana have outdated recorded boundaries that don't match the actual fence lines or improvements. Before drawing the ADU site plan, pay for a current ALTA survey ($1,500–$3,500) — it's the single most common reason Tarzana ADU permits hit corrections in plan check.
What you can build in Tarzana
Tarzana is inside the City of Los Angeles, so LADBS permits apply. Typical zoning in Tarzana: R1-1, RA-1, RE-11. For these single-family zones, current LA City rules allow:
- Detached ADU. Up to 1,200 sqft, 16 ft tall (or 18 ft with second-story setbacks). 4 ft side/rear setbacks. One per lot.
- Attached ADU. Up to 50% of the primary house's living area, max 1,200 sqft. Must share a wall with the existing house.
- JADU (Junior ADU). Up to 500 sqft, inside the existing house footprint. Must have its own entrance. One per lot, in addition to a regular ADU.
- Two units per single-family lot. One full ADU + one JADU on the same SFR lot — allowed under LA's current rules. The combination is the highest density unlock without going SB 9.
- Parking exemption near transit. No replacement parking required if your lot is within ½ mile of a major transit corridor. Most lots within walking distance of Ventura Blvd, Sherman Way, or the Metro Orange Line qualify.
Recent CA + LA laws that affect Tarzana ADUs
California has steadily loosened ADU rules since 2017. LA implements these through local ordinance. Here's what currently applies in Tarzana:
AB 68
20201,200 sqft ADUs by right
Allowed detached ADUs up to 1,200 sqft on any single-family lot, removed owner-occupancy requirements through 2025, and capped permit processing time at 60 days. This is the foundation of the current LA ADU rules.
AB 671
2020Permit fee waivers for moderate-income ADUs
If you rent your ADU below market for the first 5 years, LA waives most permit and impact fees. Practical use is limited but it's the path that exists.
AB 332
2023School impact fees waived under 750 sqft
LAUSD's school impact fee — historically $2–4/sqft — is waived entirely for ADUs under 750 sqft. The YOU-ADU plan (455 sqft) qualifies, as do most JADUs.
SB 9
2022Lot splits + duplex conversions on R1
Separate from ADUs, but worth knowing: you can split certain R1 lots into two and build a duplex on each half. It's narrower than the headlines suggested and most LA homeowners still pursue the ADU path, not the SB 9 path, but check if you have a large flat lot.
AB 1033
2024Sell your ADU as a condo (LA opt-in pending)
Lets cities allow ADUs to be sold separately as condos. LA hasn't opted in yet (as of early 2026). Watch for it — would let homeowners build an ADU and sell it as a standalone unit.
LA Ordinance 187,712
2024Streamlined permits for pre-approved plans
LADBS now offers same-day permit issuance for ADUs built from a pre-approved standard plan (YOU-ADU or any LADBS-licensed designer plan). This is the fastest legal path from contract to building permit.
What's changing in LA permit policy
Recent LADBS bulletins, City Council motions, and ordinances that affect what you can build (and how easily) in Tarzana. Updated quarterly — sourced from public LA city records.
Streamlined permits for pre-approved standard plans
activeOrdinance No. 187,712 · Mar 2024
LADBS now offers same-day permit issuance for ADUs built from a pre-approved standard plan — the City's free YOU-ADU plan or any LADBS-licensed designer plan (ADU1–ADU96). This is the fastest legal path from contract to building permit in LA. Custom-designed ADUs still go through standard plan check.
Read the official text ↗AB 1033 opt-in study — should LA allow ADU condo sales?
pendingCouncil File 23-0843 · Nov 2024
LA City Council motion directing Planning + LADBS to study opting into AB 1033, which would let homeowners sell their ADU as a separate condo unit. Currently pending committee review. If LA opts in, ADUs become tradable real estate — major change for the homeowner economics conversation.
Read the official text ↗Updated ADU Construction Memorandum
activeLADBS Information Bulletin P/BC 2024-160 · Apr 2024
Consolidates LADBS's ADU permit requirements into a single bulletin reflecting recent state law changes (AB 332 school fee waiver, AB 976 permanent owner-occupancy waiver). Worth bookmarking — this is the LADBS staff reference for ADU plan check.
Read the official text ↗School impact fee waiver for ADUs under 750 sqft
activeCalifornia AB 332 · Oct 2023
Permanently waives LAUSD's school impact fee (~$5/sqft) for any ADU 750 sqft or smaller. Saves $3,750 on a 750-sqft ADU; $0 vs. ~$5,000 on an 800-sqft ADU. The threshold is the single biggest fee-savings lever in LA ADU economics.
Owner-occupancy waiver made permanent
activeCalifornia AB 976 · Oct 2023
Permanently removed the owner-occupancy requirement that previously limited ADU rental flexibility. You can build an ADU on your property and rent it out without living on-site yourself. The original AB 68 (2020) waiver was set to sunset in 2025; AB 976 made it permanent.
Cities may opt-in to allow ADU condo sales (LA: not yet opted in)
passedCalifornia AB 1033 · Oct 2023
Allows California cities to opt into a program letting ADUs be sold as condos separately from the primary house. LA hasn't opted in yet (Council File 23-0843 is the pending study). When/if LA opts in, ADUs become standalone sellable units — major change for the build-as-investment conversation.
Streamlined permit timelines + unpermitted ADU amnesty path
activeCalifornia AB 2533 · Sep 2024
Caps local permit processing time at 60 days for non-discretionary ADU permits and creates a path for existing unpermitted ADUs to be legalized without retroactive penalties (if they meet current building code). LADBS implementation of the amnesty portion is rolling out through 2025.
Public schools serving Tarzana
School zone assignments vary by exact address. For your specific lot, use LAUSD's Resident Schools Lookup ↗. The default assignments below cover most of the neighborhood.
District
Los Angeles Unified (LAUSD)
High
Reseda Charter High School / Taft Charter High School
Notable alternatives in the area
- Portola Highly Gifted Magnet
- Tarzana Elementary
What makes Tarzana Tarzana
The places that anchor the neighborhood's identity — useful context if you're marketing a future ADU to renters or thinking about long-term resale value.
Park & recreation
Tarzana Recreation Center + skate park
Pool, skate park, sports courts. The skate park is one of LA's better-maintained public concrete skate facilities.
Historic landmark
Tarzana Safari Walk
The original Edgar Rice Burroughs ranch — the neighborhood is named after Tarzan. A small commemorative walk near Ventura Blvd marks the history.
Commercial cluster
Encino Medical Plaza corridor
Tarzana's stretch of Ventura Blvd has the highest concentration of medical practices in the Valley — anchored by Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center.
Pre-approved plans that fit Tarzana lots
Picking a pre-approved standard plan is the fastest legal path to a permit. These are the options most homeowners in Tarzana consider:
City of Los Angeles
YOU-ADU
City of LA standard plan — free to use.
View City of Los Angeles details →
Welcome Projects
ADU1
LADBS-licensed designer plan — typical fee $2K–$8K.
View Welcome Projects details →
Connect Homes
ADU14 · ADU15
HCD-certified — LADBS skips building plan check.
View Connect Homes details →
Frequently asked questions about Tarzana ADUs
›Can I build an ADU in Tarzana?
Yes — Tarzana is inside the City of Los Angeles, so the same LADBS rules apply as the rest of LA. Most single-family lots in Tarzana (zoned R1-1, RA-1, RE-11) can host one ADU plus one JADU under current law. Run your specific address through the feasibility check on the homepage to confirm your zone and overlays.
›How much does it cost to build an ADU in Tarzana?
Typical all-in cost for a permitted detached ADU in Tarzana runs $150,000–$400,000+ depending on size, finish level, and whether you're on a flat lot or hillside. The free 455 sqft YOU-ADU plan keeps total cost low; HCD-prefab units (Connect Homes, Cover) are turnkey at $190K–$350K. Hillside lots in Tarzana run higher — budget +20% on construction plus $3K–$8K for a soils report. Use the cost calculator linked above for a per-lot estimate.
›How long does the ADU permit process take in Tarzana?
LADBS aims for 60-day plan check on ADU permits — and same-day issuance if you use a pre-approved standard plan (YOU-ADU or a licensed designer plan). In practice, custom plans average 4–7 months from submittal to building permit. Hillside lots in Tarzana typically take 2–4 weeks longer due to the geotech / soils review.
›Do I need a contractor with a specific license for an ADU in Tarzana?
Yes — California requires a B (General Building) license for any structure with two or more trades, which describes essentially every ADU. You can owner-build, but most homeowners hire a licensed contractor. If your lot is in the Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone (common in south Tarzana), make sure the contractor has worked on VHFHSZ jobs before — the fire-rated assembly requirements are easy to fail inspection on.
›Does Tarzana have an HPOZ (historic overlay) I need to worry about?
No — Tarzana doesn't have an active HPOZ, so you skip the historic preservation review entirely. That's a meaningful time and cost savings compared to neighborhoods like Highland Park or Whitley Heights.
›What about the new CA ADU laws — do they apply in Tarzana?
Yes. CA's recent ADU bills (AB 68 from 2020, AB 332 from 2023, AB 1033 from 2024, plus several others) all apply statewide and override stricter local ordinances. LA implemented them via Ordinance 187,712 in 2024, which streamlined permit issuance for pre-approved standard plans. Tarzana sees the full benefit since LADBS is the permitting agency.
›Can I rent out the ADU on Airbnb in Tarzana?
Short-term rentals (under 30 days) are restricted in LA City — you can only Airbnb your primary residence, not an ADU you don't live in, and there's a 120-night cap per year. Tarzana is no exception. Long-term rentals (30+ day leases) are unrestricted and are the more common ADU monetization path.
›Do I need an architect or can I use a draftsperson?
For a pre-approved standard plan (YOU-ADU or a LADBS-licensed designer plan), neither — the plan is already drawn and stamped. For a custom ADU, a licensed architect or civil engineer must stamp the structural drawings. Draftsperson alone is not enough for the structural set. On hillside Tarzana lots, you'll also need a licensed geotech engineer for the soils report.
Nearby San Fernando Valley neighborhoods
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