City Guide
Building a casita in Glendale, Arizona
Glendale offers some of the more approachable land and home prices in the Valley, which makes a casita one of the higher-leverage ways a West Valley homeowner can add usable square footage — and long-term value — to a property.
How the state ADU law applies in Glendale
Glendale has a population well above 75,000, so it's covered by Arizona's new state ADU statute. That means the city is required to allow, on any single-family lot:
- At least one attached accessory dwelling unit (part of your existing home).
- At least one detached accessory dwelling unit — a true backyard casita.
- A third detached ADU on lots of one acre or more, if one unit is deed-restricted affordable.
The baseline Glendale must follow
- Size: up to 1,000 sq ft on lots ≤ 10,000 sq ft; the lesser of 3,000 sq ft or 10% of net lot area on larger lots — and never more than 75% of the main home's gross floor area.
- Setbacks: Glendale cannot require setbacks greater than 5 feet.
- Parking: Glendale cannot require additional off-street parking beyond what the primary home has.
- Owner-occupancy: Glendale cannot require you to live in the main house.
- Materials: Glendale cannot require exterior materials that match the primary dwelling.
- Height / coverage: Glendale cannot impose stricter height or lot-coverage limits on the ADU than on the primary home.
What the state law guarantees you in Glendale
Glendale is comfortably above the 75,000-population threshold, so Arizona's state ADU statute applies. On a single-family lot the city must allow:
- At least one attached ADU and one detached ADU per lot.
- Size up to 1,000 sq ft on lots ≤ 10,000 sq ft, or the lesser of 3,000 sq ft / 10% of net lot area on larger lots — never more than 75% of the main home.
- 5-foot maximum setbacks.
- No extra off-street parking beyond the primary home.
- No owner-occupancy requirement.
What to confirm with the city
Glendale's specific permit process, submittal checklist, plan-review timeline, impact fees, and any rental-related rules are set locally and can change. Confirm current requirements with Glendale's Planning Division before you commission plans or sign a builder contract. Then pair the numbers with our casita cost guide, the right financing option, and the HOA rules page.
What still varies by city
Even though the state sets the baseline, Glendale's specific permit process, submittal checklist, plan-review timeline, and impact fees are set locally. Building codes, mechanical requirements, and utility connection rules are also administered by Glendale and its utility providers. Confirm the details with the Glendale planning department before you sign anything with a builder.
HOAs still matter in Glendale
Big chunks of Glendale sit inside HOA-governed neighborhoods. The state ADU law does not override private HOA covenants (CC&Rs). Read yours before you start. Our HOA rules page walks through exactly what to look for.
Practical steps for Glendale homeowners
- Pull your CC&Rs and confirm your neighborhood permits detached ADUs (or that you have no HOA).
- Call Glendale planning and ask for their current ADU submittal checklist under the new state statute.
- Get a survey. Setbacks are 5 feet minimum — no guessing.
- Line up financing before you commission plans. See our financing guide.
- Get at least two contractor bids with itemized scope.
What a casita costs in Glendale
Costs in Glendale track the metro Phoenix baseline: roughly $150 to $300+ per square foot, with most detached builds landing between $150,000 and $300,000 all-in. Utility runs, site conditions, HOA design requirements, and contractor overhead drive most of the variance. Read the full Arizona casita cost guide.