Special Use Permit Decisions in Chesterfield County
How special use permit requests are decided across Chesterfield County, VA council meetings, the vote and the conditions on the record
Meetings
0
Mentions
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Year
2026
Special Use Permit is one of the most actively tracked zoning topics in Chesterfield County, VA. ZoneWire has analyzed 0 council meetings and detected 0 instances of special use permit activity. Below are the most recent discussions.
What is Special Use Permit (SUP)?
A permit for a use that requires individual review due to its potential impact on surrounding properties.
A Special Use Permit (SUP) is functionally similar to a Conditional Use Permit (CUP) - the terminology varies by jurisdiction. In both cases, the permit authorizes a land use that is allowed in the zoning district but requires individualized review and conditions to ensure compatibility with the surrounding area.
A permit for a use that requires individual review due to its potential impact on surrounding properties. In Chesterfield County, VA, local government bodies regularly discuss special use permit as part of zoning and land use decisions.
ZoneWire has analyzed 0 meetings in Chesterfield County and detected 0 mentions of special use permit.
Recent Zoning Opportunities in Chesterfield County
These parcels came up for a zoning decision in Chesterfield County in the last 30 days, often before they hit the market. See what changed, how the vote went, and hear the moment it happened. According to ZoneWire's analysis of official public meeting records, each decision below links to its timestamped source.
Chesterfield County · Jun 24, 2026
Approved · Unanimous
11.31 acres rezoned EC to WD
2136 Ruffin Mill Road, Bermuda District
11.31 ac · EC to WD
Zoning change from EC to WD (11.31 acres), approved unanimously on Jun 24, 2026 in Chesterfield County.
Entitlement
Your move: Entitlement cleared. The parcel just got more buildable.
Recent Special Use Permit meetings in Chesterfield County
No meetings with special use permit activity found yet. Check back soon. We're monitoring every session.
Why Track Special Use Permit?
In most jurisdictions, these terms are interchangeable. The key distinction is:
Special Use Permit Regulations in Virginia
Virginia sets the regulatory framework that governs how special use permit decisions are made at the county and municipal level. State statutes define zoning authority, hearing requirements, and appeal processes that directly affect special use permit outcomes in Chesterfield County.
A Special Use Permit (SUP) is functionally similar to a Conditional Use Permit (CUP) - the terminology varies by jurisdiction. In both cases, the permit authorizes a land use that is allowed in the zoning district but requires individualized review and conditions to ensure compatibility with the surrounding area. ZoneWire tracks special use permit activity across Chesterfield County, VA public meetings.
ZoneWire monitors Chesterfield County, VA planning and council meetings, transcribes them, and flags special use permit activity. As of the latest update we have analyzed 0 meetings and detected 0 special use permit mentions.
Tracking special use permit in Chesterfield County surfaces zoning and development signals early, so developers, investors, and brokers can evaluate parcels and approvals before they reach the broader market.
Rezoning and other zoning amendment applications are reviewed at a public hearing by the Planning Commission, which votes to recommend approval (with conditions), denial or deferral. That recommendation then goes to the Board of Supervisors, which holds a second public hearing and makes the final decision to approve (with conditions), deny or defer the request. To start the process, applicants contact the Planning Department at 804-748-1050.
The Planning Commission meets at least once a month, normally on the third Tuesday, beginning at 6 p.m. in the Public Meeting Room at 10001 Iron Bridge Road, Chesterfield, VA 23832. The Commission has five members serving four-year terms and advises the Board of Supervisors on zoning cases, amendments to the zoning and subdivision ordinances, and comprehensive planning.
The county estimates the zoning process takes a minimum of four months to complete. The workflow includes an initial contact and staff evaluation, a pre-application meeting, online application submission through the Enterprise Land Management portal, Technical Review Committee evaluation, a community meeting if needed, a Planning Commission public hearing, and a final Board of Supervisors public hearing.
Chesterfield County's zoning amendment applications include rezoning, conditional use, zoning deviation, resource protection area exceptions, and amendment of conditions for prior zoning cases. These are processed by the Planning Department and heard by the Planning Commission and Board of Supervisors as described in the county zoning ordinance.
Yes. Through the Zoning Ordinance Modernization (ZOMod) project, a comprehensive re-write of regulations that had largely remained unchanged since the 1970s, Chesterfield County adopted a new zoning ordinance codified as Chapter 19.2 of the County Code, replacing the former Chapter 19.1. The new ordinance became effective January 1, 2026, and streamlined residential, commercial and employment use definitions while adding requirements for amenity space, pedestrian connections and environmental stewardship.
Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Chesterfield County at no cost, with the agenda for each meeting. ZoneWire Pro adds full transcripts, zoning and development analysis, and keyword alerts for $129 per market per month.
In Chesterfield County, 83% of land-use board decisions were approved over the last 24 months. Special exception / conditional use clear 96%, Industrial / warehouse 100%. ZoneWire analyzed 72 land-use board decisions in Chesterfield County over the last 24 months. Here are the most active project types and how often each one clears.
Project type
Decisions
Approval rate
Special exception / conditional use
23
96%
Industrial / warehouse
11
100%
Land use / comp-plan amendment
10
50%
Multifamily / attached housing
8
63%
Variance
6
100%
1 decisions that went against the odds
These are the denials and deferrals in categories that usually sail through, the deals worth understanding before you commit capital.