Skip to content
 

New Hampshire Says Yes to ADUs

By allowing accessory dwelling units (or secondary residences) on single-family lots, a state law helps create needed housing for people of all ages

Towns, cities and communities throughout New Hampshire are experiencing one of the biggest housing policy changes in their state — or any state.

As of June 1, 2017, a new law requires local zoning ordinances to allow Accessory Dwelling Units (commonly referred to as ADUs) nearly everywhere single-family houses are permitted.

FREE PUBLICATION: Learn how to download or order The ABCs of ADUs

The law, which does provide for some local exceptions, originated with the New Hampshire Home Builders Association, then drew strong support from a broad coalition of housing advocates, including Housing Action New Hampshire and New Hampshire's Business and Industry Association, which together convinced the state legislature that ADUs would help create needed low-cost housing by allowing homeowners to add in-law apartments, au-pair suites, or spaces for young adults moving home after college or moving into a community to start a new job.

An illustration showing a small green house next to a large red house is used here to represent the accessory dwelling unit concept.

Image from 123rf

An ADU is a smaller home or apartment located on the property of, or attached to, a larger home.


What is an ADU?

The New Hampshire law defines an ADU as "a residential living unit that is within or attached to a single-family dwelling, and that provides independent living facilities for one or more persons, including provisions for sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation on the same parcel of land as the principal dwelling…"

According to Paul Morin, a leader of the builders association effort, the legislation stemmed in large part from the frustration of building contractors who, because of local prohibitions or limitations on ADUs, couldn't construct the type of housing options their clients desired.

Like most states, New Hampshire was initially reluctant to override local land use regulations. So how did builders, business associations and housing advocates prevail?

"Develop a strong and broad-based coalition, not just the usual suspects," advises Ben Frost, who helped draft the bill and worked hard for its passage.

Frost, an attorney and executive with the New Hampshire Housing Finance Authority, notes, "Mandates are hard for local communities to swallow, so there has to be very strong business community support for such a measure. Overwhelming numbers are hard to ignore." AARP New Hampshire also took part in the effort.

According to the 2014 study Housing Needs and Preferences in New Hampshire by the New Hampshire Center for Public Policy Studies, an aging population, a mismatch of housing stock with residents' needs and desires, and a desire by older adults to age in place or community were identified needs. The legislation was responsive to those issues, says Frost, and to a very low rental vacancy rate statewide.

New Hampshire has "a graying population and people with a wish to age in place," Feltes said. He sees the measure as a way to dramatically increase the housing supply in a way that will particularly help seniors, people with disabilities and caregivers.

There was some opposition. The city of Portsmouth expressed concern about overcrowding, short-term rentals and parking. A potential source of opposition, the New Hampshire Municipal Association, was consulted early and, with its concerns addressed, did not oppose the bill, says Frost.

The law permits some local differences, including allowing a detached unit, above a garage, for instance. It directs communities that "One accessory dwelling unit shall be allowed without additional requirements for lot size, frontage, space limitations or other controls beyond what would be required for a single-family dwelling without an accessory unit."

What's Allowed and Where

The New Hampshire law states that "One accessory dwelling unit shall be allowed without additional requirements for lot size, frontage, space limitations or other controls beyond what would be required for a single-family dwelling without an accessory unit."

Unlike some local ADU ordinances, the New Hampshire law prohibits communities from requiring that the units have fewer than two bedrooms, be smaller than 750-square-feet, or that a person related to the owner live in the added unit. However, towns and cities may create parking requirements, limit ADUs to one per home and require that the design fit with the neighborhood. Local municipalities can also choose to require the property owner to live in one of the units.

(If such a rule is created, it may or may not dictate which of the units the property owners select. Flexibility is helpful since living in the larger unit makes sense at some stages of life, while living in the smaller unit makes sense at others, such as if the property owners are empty nesters.)

Livability and housing advocates have long considered ADUs to be part of a sensible housing policy because such residences:

  • Can be helpful to people of all ages and abilities 
  • Provide an affordable housing option 
  • Use existing housing stock efficiently
  • Increase the housing supply without further land development
  • Improve a homeowner's cash flow  

Senator Feltes' advice to policymakers seeking to replicate New Hampshire's ADU policy is to "focus on the need for seniors to live independently, on those with disabilities and on caregivers." Contrary to being a usurpation of local control, the ADU law is seen by some as an effort to "enhance private property rights," observes Feltes. 


The Need for ADUs

A bungalow style house can be an accessory dwelling unit

Image from 123rf

A bungalow-sized house makes a perfect ADU.


From New Hampshire SB 146, later codified at New Hampshire RSA 674:71-73

Findings: The general court declares that:

I. There is a growing need for more diverse affordable housing opportunities for the citizens of New Hampshire.

II. Demographic trends are producing more households where adult children wish to give care and support to parents in a semi-independent living arrangement.

III. Elderly and disabled citizens are in need of independent living space for caregivers.

IV. There are many important societal benefits associated with the creation of accessory dwelling units, including:

(a) Increasing the supply of affordable housing without the need for more infrastructure or further land development.

(b) Benefits for aging homeowners, single parents, recent college graduates who are saddled with significant student loan debt, caregivers, and disabled persons.

(c) Integrating affordable housing into the community with minimal negative impact.

(d) Providing elderly citizens with the opportunity to live in a supportive family environment with both independence and dignity.   


Peter Morelli is a freelance writer and livable communities consultant based in Portland, Maine.

Page published May 2017

Our Free Publications!

See the complete list at AARP.org/LivableLibrary

Follow Us

Contact Us

 
  • Email AARP Livable Communities at Livable@AARP.org.

  • Ask about the AARP Livability Index by completing this online form.

  • AARP Members: For questions about your benefits, AARP The Magazine or the AARP Bulletin, visit the AARP Contact Us page or call 1-888-OUR-AARP (1-888-687-2277).