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Seattle Zoning Meetings

42 meetings monitored in Seattle, WA

April 15, 20262h 7m19,876 words
79land useindustrialrezoneresidentialapproved
Agenda available
April 14, 20262h 14m19,548 words
6comprehensive plandeferredresidentialpublic hearing
Agenda available
April 7, 20262h 2m18,978 words
5denieddeferredcomprehensive planland use
Agenda available
April 3, 20261h 39m11,887 words
4deniedland useapprovedcommercial
Agenda available
April 1, 20262h 41m24,882 words
39land usepublic hearingrezonezoningresidential
Agenda available
March 31, 20261h 38m15,303 words
4denied
Agenda available
March 24, 20261h 21m12,548 words
7land useapprovedcomprehensive plandeniedindustrial
Agenda available
March 18, 202612m1,875 words
8land useapprovedzoningresidentialoverlay district
Agenda available
March 17, 202645m7,169 words
1comprehensive plan
Agenda available
March 10, 20261h 17m12,808 words
8land usezoningdenied
Agenda available
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Frequently Asked Questions

The Seattle Department of Construction and Inspections (SDCI) administers the city's zoning and Land Use Code. SDCI issues land use, construction, and trade permits, conducts inspections, and ensures compliance with the codes. Seattle's zoning is a city-level function; the legal basis is the Land Use Code in Seattle Municipal Code Title 23, Subtitle III (Land Use Regulations). The Office of Planning and Community Development (OPCD) develops the long-range plans and policies that guide growth, including the Comprehensive Plan.

SDCI directs property owners to the City's official land use (zoning) map, an interactive web application maintained by the department. Zoning districts are adopted by ordinance and specify the types of uses allowed in each district. Seattle's zones fall into major categories including Neighborhood Residential, commercial (such as Neighborhood Commercial), industrial, and downtown zoning, as established in the Land Use Code (SMC Title 23).

A Master Use Permit is the land use application SDCI uses for projects requiring discretionary review under Seattle Municipal Code criteria, and it can involve public notice, a comment period, and appeal rights. There are five decision types: Type I (SDCI decides, not appealable), Type II (SDCI decides after public notice; appealable to the City Hearing Examiner or the Shoreline Hearings Board), Type III (subdivisions decided by the City Hearing Examiner after a public hearing and SDCI recommendation), Type IV Council actions such as rezones (City Council decides after a Hearing Examiner recommendation), and Type V Council actions such as Land Use Code amendments or area-wide rezones (City Council decides after public notice and SDCI recommendation).

As of October 26, 2025, the City adopted temporary rules that pause the requirement for Design Review, making it voluntary for new development proposals, to align with Washington State House Bill 1293. Seattle's Design Review program otherwise offers three pathways: Streamlined Design Review and Administrative Design Review (handled by SDCI staff for many smaller buildings) and Full Design Review (which includes public Design Review Board meetings plus staff review) for larger buildings. SDCI has stated the temporary rules remain in place while it develops long-term updates to the program and its Design Guidelines.

The One Seattle Plan, Seattle's updated 20-year Comprehensive Plan, was adopted by City Council on December 16, 2025 (Council Bill 120985) and took effect January 21, 2026. Accompanying zoning-compliance legislation, effective the same date, consolidated the former neighborhood residential categories into a single Neighborhood Residential (NR) zone to comply with Washington State House Bill 1110 (middle housing). These changes are implemented through the Land Use Code by SDCI and OPCD.

Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Seattle 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.