Greensboro ADU Permit Fees & Cost Calculator
Greensboro allows ADUs in residential districts and requires a residential building permit, but the official fee schedule for ADU-specific permitting and any utility or impact charges was not found in the provided results.[5] Available third-party sources suggest permit and plan-review costs can vary widely by project valuation, so exact fees should be verified with the City of Greensboro and local utilities.[1][3]
Free ADU fee calculator
Estimate local ADU fees
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
Third-party sources conflict on Greensboro ADU rules, including owner-occupancy and size standards; those zoning details should be verified directly with the city before relying on them.
No official utility-provider fee pages were included in the provided results, so utility connection costs remain unverified.
No school-district fee was identified in the provided results; Greensboro/Guilford school-related charges, if any, should be checked with the school district or county
The city’s official ADU page in the provided results does not include a fee schedule, so no exact permit or utility amounts are reported.
ADU-specific impact fees were not identified in the provided official sources; the absence of evidence here is not proof that no fees exist.
Greensboro fee estimates should be verified against the current city, utility, and school district fee schedules before filing.
FAQs
Are Greensboro 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 Greensboro?
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.