Topic · Municipal planning departments
Zoning classifications by city
Zoning is city-specific. Cities publish zoning maps with codes like R-1 (single-family residential), C-2 (general commercial), or I-1 (light industrial).
Last verified 2026-05-13 · methodology
What zipradar shows
Pages translate the city's zoning code into plain English for the ZIP's dominant classifications, with a link to the planning department's official map.
Refresh cadence
Annual plus ad-hoc rezonings. zipradar honors the regulator's publishing cadence; stale data is flagged rather than silently served.
Limitations
Top-25 cities covered at launch. Houston has no zoning laws (special handling). Elsewhere, zipradar links to the planning department's portal.
Primary source
Look up zoning by ZIP
ZIP 10001
New York, NY
Zoning →
ZIP 11201
Brooklyn, NY
Zoning →
ZIP 10016
Manhattan (Murray Hill), NY
Zoning →
ZIP 02108
Boston, MA
Zoning →
ZIP 02139
Cambridge, MA
Zoning →
ZIP 19103
Philadelphia, PA
Zoning →
ZIP 15222
Pittsburgh, PA
Zoning →
ZIP 20001
Washington, DC
Zoning →
ZIP 07302
Jersey City, NJ
Zoning →
ZIP 06103
Hartford, CT
Zoning →
ZIP 60601
Chicago, IL
Zoning →
ZIP 60614
Chicago (Lincoln Park), IL
Zoning →
Key terms
Plain-English definitions for the regulator acronyms + technical terms used on this page. Each links to its full glossary entry with sources.
R1 zoning (single-family residential)
Most-restrictive residential zoning — single-family detached only, minimum lot size, minimum setbacks.
ADU (Accessory Dwelling Unit)
Secondary independent dwelling on a single-family parcel — granny flat, in-law unit, garage conversion, detached cottage.
As-of-right (zoning)
Land use permitted by zoning code without requiring a discretionary review, variance, or special exception.
Variance (zoning)
Discretionary zoning-board approval relaxing a specific rule (setback, height, lot coverage) for a specific parcel.
Setback
Minimum distance a building must sit from a lot line — front, side, rear setbacks defined per zoning district.
ADA compliance (Americans with Disabilities Act)
Federal accessibility requirements for commercial properties + multi-family rentals — ramps, doorways, parking, restrooms.
Read more on zoning
Editorial deep-dives explaining how the data is sourced, where its limits sit, and what to actually do with it.
Property tax millage — what 'mill' means and how your bill is computed
Plain-English guide to property tax millage rates, assessment ratios, and homestead exemptions. How county assessors compute your annual property tax bill.
Deed records — what they show and what they don't
Plain-English guide to county deed records: what gets filed, how to look up a property's history, and why zipradar aggregates only counts (never owner names).
Zoning codes — what R-1, C-2, M-1, MU mean and why your house is one
Plain-English guide to common US zoning codes: R-1 / R-2 / C-1 / C-2 / M-1 / MU. Why zoning matters for your home, your neighbors, and what you can build.
Homestead exemption — state-by-state property tax savings
Every US state offers a homestead exemption that reduces property tax for owner-occupied homes. State-by-state amounts and how to file.
NCES Common Core of Data — what district boundaries actually mean for buyers
How NCES district boundaries, school ratings, and student-teacher ratios feed real-estate decisions — and what the data does NOT tell you.
County assessor data — how millage rates and assessments actually combine
Property tax = assessment × millage rate, but the math has caveats. Here's how zipradar pulls + normalizes county assessor data across the top 50 metros.
Zoning overlays — historic, flood, environmental layers that change what you can build
Base zoning codes (R-1, C-2, M-1) are only half the story. Special overlays — historic districts, floodplain, conservation, scenic — add a second rule layer. Here's what each one does.
EPA Superfund + Brownfields — what 'contaminated site nearby' actually means
EPA's National Priorities List (Superfund) flags the most contaminated sites in the US. Brownfields tracks lower-tier abandoned-industrial sites. Here's how to read both.
HOA + deed restrictions vs. zoning — three regimes that govern what you can do
Zoning, HOA covenants (CC&Rs), and deed restrictions are three separate regimes. Each one can override the others on different things. Here's how to read all three.
Permit history + unpermitted work — what to verify before close
How to pull permit history from city building departments, why unpermitted additions hurt resale + insurance, and the gotchas before closing on a renovated property.
Zoning by state
State-level rollup of zoning for every 51 live state.
- AL — Alabama
- AK — Alaska
- AZ — Arizona
- AR — Arkansas
- CA — California
- CO — Colorado
- CT — Connecticut
- DE — Delaware
- DC — District of Columbia
- FL — Florida
- GA — Georgia
- HI — Hawaii
- ID — Idaho
- IL — Illinois
- IN — Indiana
- IA — Iowa
- KS — Kansas
- KY — Kentucky
- LA — Louisiana
- ME — Maine
- MD — Maryland
- MA — Massachusetts
- MI — Michigan
- MN — Minnesota
- MS — Mississippi
- MO — Missouri
- MT — Montana
- NE — Nebraska
- NV — Nevada
- NH — New Hampshire
- NJ — New Jersey
- NM — New Mexico
- NY — New York
- NC — North Carolina
- ND — North Dakota
- OH — Ohio
- OK — Oklahoma
- OR — Oregon
- PA — Pennsylvania
- RI — Rhode Island
- SC — South Carolina
- SD — South Dakota
- TN — Tennessee
- TX — Texas
- UT — Utah
- VT — Vermont
- VA — Virginia
- WA — Washington
- WV — West Virginia
- WI — Wisconsin
- WY — Wyoming