Attainable Housing

On June 13, 2024, the Montgomery County Planning Board unanimously approved the Attainable Housing Strategies Initiative report. The report recommends allowing more types of housing—like duplexes, triplexes, and townhouses—in neighborhoods that for decades have only allowed single-family detached homes. It also recommends allowing small apartment buildings in certain areas along major transit corridors.

The County Council has begun worksessions to consider introducing legislation implementing these changes, and will hold public listening sessions to inform their work on attainable housing this September.

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  • Contact the County Council

    Contact the County Council to share why you support attainable housing.

  • Sign up for an attainable housing listening session

    Register for a Council & Planning listening session this September!

  • Sign up for Montgomery for All updates

    Stay up to date on opportunities to support attainable housing.

  • Read our Attainable Housing fact sheet

    Learn more about what attainable housing means, and why we support it.

Attainable housing means better housing options for more people.

Attainable housing means building a wider variety of housing types that meet the needs of people of diverse ages, incomes, and household sizes. This includes small-scale or “missing middle” homes like duplexes, triplexes, and quadplexes, as well as medium-scale options like cottage courts or small apartment buildings, like those found in older neighborhoods in Silver Spring and Takoma Park.

These options tend to be smaller and more affordable than a single-family detached home—which today is the only housing option in many Montgomery County neighborhoods.

Attainable housing realigns our land use choices with our values of inclusivity and equity.

Our zoning status quo is working against our county’s goals of housing affordability and racial and economic inclusion—even in neighborhoods that were once considered affordable.

Housing prices have been consistently rising faster than inflation in Montgomery County since the mid-1990s—meaning that the average home sold today is affordable to an ever-smaller and more affluent set of households.

Inflexible zoning in many neighborhoods means that even as our county’s needs have changed over the decades, options that exacerbate our housing affordability crisis—like tearing down a modestly-priced home to build a larger and more expensive home—are automatically permitted, while attainable housing options that support greater inclusion and more affordable housing are forbidden.

What zoning changes does the Attainable Housing Strategies Report recommend?

In short, the Attainable Housing Strategies report recommends:

  • Allowing duplexes by-right in the R-40, R-60, R-90, and R-200 zones.

  • Allowing triplexes by-right in the R-40, R-60, and R-90 zones, and in the R-200 zone near transit.

  • Allowing quadplexes by-right near transit in R-40, R-60, R-90 zones, and R-200 zones.

  • Optional method for development of affordably-priced medium-scale housing like small apartment buildings on certain sites within 500 feet of major transit corridors identified by the Thrive 2050 general plan.

  • Additional recommendations to support affordability and equity, including creating a new minor subdivision type to support attainable housing types as a pathway to homeownership.

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