A garage conversion ADU transforms an existing garage into a permitted dwelling unit. Unlike detached new construction, it uses an existing footprint — which changes the structural scope, insulation requirements, and code compliance path. Slab evaluation, ceiling height verification, fire-rated separation, and full utility integration are all required before a garage qualifies as habitable space.
When the existing structure is sound, a garage conversion can move faster and cost less than a ground-up build. When it isn’t, the scope can expand quickly without the right evaluation upfront.
Parking replacement is not required under California’s ADU law for garage conversions.
Cost efficiency compared to detached builds. A garage conversion reuses an existing structure — foundation, framing, and roof are already in place. That reduces the scope of new construction and the associated costs. The savings aren’t automatic, but when the existing structure meets baseline conditions, the project starts further along than a ground-up build.
Potentially faster permitting. Because you’re working within an existing footprint, some jurisdictions across the Peninsula and East Bay process garage conversion applications more quickly than new construction. Less site disruption and fewer structural unknowns can simplify the review path.
Use of existing footprint. Garage conversions don’t require new lot coverage. For properties with limited yard space or tight setback conditions, converting existing square footage avoids the zoning constraints that can slow or block new ADU construction.
Reusing the existing slab, framing, and roof reduces the scope of new construction.
Existing footprint means less site work and potentially shorter permit review timelines.
No additional lot coverage required — sidesteps setback and coverage limitations.
California ADU law eliminates the parking replacement requirement for garage conversions.
Slab evaluation. Most residential garage slabs were not designed for habitable space. Thickness, reinforcement, moisture barriers, and grade level all need to be verified. Some slabs require remediation or overlay before they meet code for a dwelling unit.
Framing and seismic compliance. Garage walls typically lack the bracing and anchoring required for residential occupancy. Framing upgrades, hold-downs, and lateral bracing are common scope items — particularly in older homes across San Mateo and Santa Clara counties.
Ceiling height. Garages often sit lower than residential ceiling height minimums. If the existing height doesn’t meet code, the project scope changes significantly. This should be confirmed before design, not during construction.
Insulation and Title 24. Garages have no insulation by default. Walls, ceiling, and slab all require thermal upgrades to meet California energy code. Title 24 compliance documentation is part of the permit submittal.
We verify slab condition, ceiling height, and structural capacity before design begins.
Plumbing additions. Garages have no plumbing. Kitchen and bathroom rough-in requires new supply lines, drain lines, and venting — often routed through or under the slab. Slab penetrations need to be planned early to avoid rework.
Electrical upgrades. Most garages share a circuit or two with the main house. A converted dwelling unit requires a dedicated subpanel, new circuits for kitchen appliances, bathroom, HVAC, and lighting. Panel capacity in the main house should be confirmed before design is finalized.
Sewer and gas. Sewer tie-in routing depends on the garage’s position relative to the main lateral. Gas line extension — if applicable — requires coordination with the utility provider. Both should be mapped during feasibility, not discovered during construction.
Garage conversions look simple from the outside. The structure is already there. But converting a garage to habitable space involves a full code compliance path — and the sequencing matters.
We assess the slab, framing, ceiling height, and fire separation requirements before anything is designed.This step determines whether the existing structure supports conversion or requires remediation.
Layout, utility routing, insulation strategy, and structural upgrades are designed together — not sequentially added after the floor plan.
Submissions are organized, complete, and responsive. Plan check comments are addressed promptly to reduce review cycles.We manage all city communication on your behalf.
Work proceeds in defined phases — structural upgrades, rough-in, insulation, inspections, finishes — with coordinated trade scheduling throughout.
Garage conversions fail when they’re treated like cosmetic remodels. The garage is a shell — not a habitable structure. Every system needs to be brought up to residential code: structural, thermal, electrical, plumbing, and fire separation.
The most expensive mistakes happen when evaluation is skipped and assumptions carry into the permit process or, worse, into construction.
“Garage conversions reward the right sequencing. Evaluate first. Then design, permit, and build — in that order.”
— Dan Mendez, Owner
Garage conversion requirements vary by city. Ceiling height standards, fire separation interpretations, and plan check timelines differ across jurisdictions. We handle conversions throughout the greater San Francisco area with city-specific permit familiarity.
A garage conversion isn’t always the right fit. We build every ADU type — evaluate which option suits your lot, zoning, and goals.
A fully independent structure with its own foundation and utility connections. Best for properties with adequate yard space.
Detached ADU DetailsBuilt as an extension of the primary home. Shares at least one wall. Often a fit when rear yard space is limited but side access exists.
JADU DetailsPermit coordination, plan check responses, and city communication managed from submission through final inspection.
Permitting ProcessBefore design begins, we evaluate slab condition, framing, ceiling height, fire separation requirements, and utility capacity. Start with a feasibility review to understand what your garage conversion will actually require.
Evaluate first · Plan accurately · Build once
Serving Palo Alto · Mountain View · San Mateo
Walnut Creek · Redwood City · the Bay