Snohomish County Zoning Changes & DecisionsDelivered Same-Day
in the Snohomish County Market
We read every Snohomish County hearing and pull the outcome, the vote split, and the conditions, so you see how this board actually rules.
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How Snohomish County rules on land use
Lead with the live fight, not a rate. Snohomish County just moved an emergency six-month data center moratorium for unincorporated areas into legislative session, so the sell is a front-row seat on the rule-writing that will govern the next wave of data center and large-project siting here, plus first coverage as the Hearing Examiner land-use docket gets added to the record.
- Who decides
- Snohomish County Planning and Development Services (PDS) staff recommends, Snohomish County Hearing Examiner decides
- The pattern
- (none)
Proof
Emergency Ordinance 26-026 data center moratorium referred to GLS
Jun 16, 2026
The Planning and Community Development Committee moved emergency Ordinance 26-026, declaring an emergency and adopting a six-month moratorium (extendable another six months) on data centers in unincorporated Snohomish County, to General Legislative Session. This is a legislative rule-setting action by the Council committee, not a Hearing Examiner application decision, so it is not an approval or denial of a project. It is included as the live named fight to watch.
Full breakdown
Snohomish County land-use applications are not decided at the County Council.
Rezones, variances, and conditional use permits run through the county Planning and Development Services staff and are decided by the Snohomish County Hearing Examiner, with the Council sitting only as the appeal body and as the legislative body for code and comprehensive plan changes.
The meetings we have captured so far are the Council side of that line: the Planning and Community Development Committee, the Public Infrastructure and Conservation Committee, and full Council sessions.
Those rooms move contracts, grants, fee ordinances, and policy referrals, so a verdict on how a board rules on individual applications is not something we can claim yet from this record, and we are still gathering the Hearing Examiner decisions that would support one.
What this record already shows is the legislative engine that sets the rules every applicant then has to clear.
In June 2026 the Planning and Community Development Committee moved emergency Ordinance 26-026, declaring an emergency and adopting a six-month moratorium, extendable another six months, on data centers in unincorporated Snohomish County, into General Legislative Session.
The same body has been working a commercial and industrial zone streamlining ordinance that would replace separate preliminary and final site plan approvals with a single official site plan for projects under five acres, a setback simplification package headed to a July 22 public hearing, and a citizen docket proposal to cut cannabis retail separation from 10,000 feet to 5,000 feet in the Clearview Rural Commercial area.
This is where the conditions of approval for the next cycle of projects are being written. Our read on Snohomish County is straightforward: we are still gathering data in this market.
The legislative track is captured and live, including a named data center fight worth watching, and the next step is adding the Hearing Examiner application decisions that turn this into a true approval-and-conditions verdict.
See Real Meeting Intelligence
Here's what ZoneWire found in the latest Snohomish County meeting
Planning and Community Development Committee - 2026-06-16
The Snohomish County Council Planning and Community Development Committee advanced emergency Ordinance 26-026, a six-month moratorium on data centers in unincorporated Snohomish County (proposed by Council Member Nehring), to the GLS agenda on June 24, 2026 for action; the associ…
See full analysisKey Decisions
- Ordinance 26-020 setback table amendments referred to set public hearing
- Emergency Ordinance 26-026 data center moratorium referred to GLS
- Motion 26-236 referral to Planning Commission held in committee
Public Infrastructure and Conservation Committee - 2026-06-16
Planning and Community Development Committee - 2026-05-19
Public Infrastructure and Conservation Committee - 2026-04-21
Plus every other session we monitor
Every Snohomish County insight is sourced from official public meeting records and analyzed within hours, updated daily.
Snohomish County Council and Planning Commission process rezonings, urban growth area amendments, and conditional use permits under Washington's Growth Management Act. The Paine Field / Boeing Everett area and the SW Urban Growth Area near Lynnwood generate industrial and mixed-use entitlement filings. Light rail extension to Lynnwood City Center and Mariner is driving transit-oriented development zone changes along the I-5 and SR-99 corridors. Unincorporated areas near Maltby, Clearview, and Lake Stevens see active rural-to-urban conversion rezoning proposals.
Recent Zoning Insights in Snohomish County
Planning and Community Development Committee - 2026-06-16
June 16, 2026
Public Infrastructure and Conservation Committee - 2026-06-16
June 16, 2026
Planning and Community Development Committee - 2026-05-19
May 19, 2026
Recent meetings with zoning keywords detected by ZoneWire. Subscribe to get all alerts in real time.
Explore Snohomish County by Keyword
Monthly Zoning Activity
Snohomish County had 2 public meetings in June 2026 with 26 zoning insights detected, down 4% from May.
| Month | Meetings | Zoning Insights | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 2026 | 2 | 26 | |
| May 2026 | 1 | 27 | |
| Apr 2026 | 4 | 15 | |
| Mar 2026 | 3 | 9 | |
| Feb 2026 | 3 | 76 | |
| Jan 2026 | 1 | 0 |
Source: ZoneWire analysis of Snohomish County public meeting transcripts. Updated daily.
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ZoneWire has analyzed 14 Snohomish County council meetings, flagging 153 rezoning, variance, and development items.
Frequently Asked Questions
Zoning in unincorporated Snohomish County is governed by Title 30 of the Snohomish County Code, the Unified Development Code. Title 30 lists all zoning designations in Table 30.21.020 and describes the intent of each zone in SCC 30.21.025. It contains three "Use Matrix" tables (SCC 30.22.100, .110, and .120) for urban zones, rural and resource zones, and other zones, which identify the permitted, conditionally permitted, and prohibited uses for each zone. Dimensional standards such as minimum lot area, setbacks, height, and lot coverage are set out in the "Bulk Matrix" at SCC 30.23.030 with reference notes in SCC 30.23.040.
Property owners can pursue a rezone in two ways: a quasi-judicial (Type 2) rezone, used when the proposal is consistent with the Comprehensive Plan, or a legislative rezone through the docketing process when the change may be inconsistent with the plan (allowing a concurrent Future Land Use Map amendment). For quasi-judicial rezones, the Department of Planning and Development Services (PDS) reviews the application, provides public notice with a 14-day comment period, and transmits a recommendation to the Snohomish County Hearing Examiner, who is required to hold an open-record public hearing. The Hearing Examiner may approve, approve with conditions, remand for further review, or deny the request. Legislative rezones are reviewed by the Planning Commission and County Council through the docketing process.
R-5 is the Rural-5 Acre zone, intended to maintain rural character in areas that lack urban services. It is a rural residential designation established under Title 30, with its intent described in SCC 30.21.025 and its dimensional standards (including minimum lot area) set in the Bulk Matrix at SCC 30.23.030. As one indicator of the zone's density, detached accessory dwelling units are prohibited on R-5 lots less than 5 acres (200,000 square feet) in size. For exact lot-size and setback figures, property owners are directed to consult the Bulk Matrix and reference notes in SCC 30.23.040 or contact PDS.
Critical areas are regulated under Snohomish County Code Chapter 30.62A, adopted pursuant to the Growth Management Act to designate and protect wetlands, fish and wildlife habitat conservation areas, and their buffers. Required buffer widths are established in SCC 30.62A.320 (Table 2a for streams, lakes, and marine waters; Table 2b for wetlands). Development activity requiring a project permit in a critical area or its buffer may require a critical area study prepared by a qualified professional, and no new effective impervious surfaces are allowed within the buffer of streams, wetlands, lakes, or marine waters.
The Comprehensive Plan is the county's long-range blueprint for growth, required and periodically updated under Washington's Growth Management Act (GMA). The most recent update, the 2024 Comprehensive Plan Update, was adopted in December 2024 and covers a 20-year planning horizon through 2044. The GMA framework directs growth into designated Urban Growth Areas (UGAs) where urban services and facilities are provided, and comprehensive plan updates undergo environmental review through the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA).
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