ADUFee.com
Last reviewed 2026-05-27Medium confidence

Concord ADU Permit Fees & Cost Calculator

Concord publishes an official planning fee schedule and permits portal, but the accessible search result does not expose the underlying line-item ADU permit amounts. A secondary source suggests ADU permit costs in Concord are commonly around $1,000 to $2,500, but that figure should be verified against the city fee schedule before use.

ADUFee.com is not affiliated with Concord. Estimates are informational and should be verified with the city, utility providers, and qualified professionals.

Free ADU fee calculator

Estimate local ADU fees

Medium confidence

Step 1 of 5: Location

The calculator uses staged city data from the ADUFee database with visible confidence levels and dated source tracking.

Fee overview

The available official search results do not expose the actual Concord fee amounts, so numeric fee fields are left null.

The $1,000 to $2,500 figure from a third-party blog should not be treated as an official fee schedule.

ADU eligibility and dimensional rules are separate from fees and may be set by city zoning and building code provisions not shown in the fee search results.

The queried city is Concord, North Carolina, not Concord, California.

The ADU may require standard residential building, plan review, fire, and utility-related permits or fees, but the exact applicability depends on the project type and site conditions.

Concord fee estimates should be verified against the current city, utility, and school district fee schedules before filing.

FAQs

Are Concord ADU fee estimates official?

No. ADUFee.com provides planning estimates only. Final fees are set by the city, utility providers, school district, and other agencies.

What sources are used for Concord?

The database stores city, state, utility, school, county, and other source links where available. Each estimate should still be verified locally.

Can ADU fees vary within North Carolina?

Yes. Permit, utility, school, inspection, and impact fees can vary by jurisdiction, parcel, project size, utility provider, and local interpretation.