Tiny home zoning in British Columbia: the complete 2026 guide
What changed in 2025–2026
BC's small-scale multi-unit housing legislation reshaped what's allowed on a typical residential lot. In many municipalities you can now add a laneway home or a detached suite where you previously couldn't — but the details vary block to block, and “allowed” is not the same as “permitted without work.”
Municipality-by-municipality breakdown
Vancouver, Victoria, Kelowna and Nanaimo all treat laneway and detached units differently. We keep a living table of setbacks, height limits, and parking requirements for the major BC municipalities, updated as bylaws change.
On wheels vs. on foundation
A tiny home on wheels is, legally, closer to an RV than a house — which helps in some places and hurts in others. A home on a foundation is real property and triggers the full permit path. Which one is right depends entirely on where you want to put it.
Tell us your address and we'll match you with builders who know your municipality.
Check my lot