Getting Started with Cottage Court Starter Homes

This is an item in our Local Government Toolkit

A “cottage court” is a cluster of homes arranged around a shared courtyard, clubhouse, garden, or other amenity. Typically, the homes are on lots about 2,000 sq. ft. in size and often achieve privacy through extensive use of trees and vegetation. A “starter home” lacks an official definition but is generally understood as a smaller home on a smaller lot, like a three-bed, two-bath house under 1,500 square feet.

Even if interest rates drop and the cost of construction lowers, there are a number of things that officials like yourself still need to do to help make starter homes possible:

  1. Don’t mandate anything. Those who want to and can afford to build large estates and farms absolutely must retain the freedom to do so.
  2. Reduce Minimum Lot Sizes. A half-acre of land in Utah’s population centers can cost $300,000 or more. With costs this high, property owners need the freedom to create smaller lots. For cottage courts, we recommend a minimum lot size of 1/25th acre (1,742.4 sq. ft.).
  3. Reduce Other Requirements. For cottage courts to exist, requirements that homes border a street, lot widths, and setbacks will all need to be relaxed or eliminated.

We advocate approaching starter homes and reduced lot sizes with the following principles in mind:

(Really) Local Control: People have ultimate control and use their property, which means subdividing and building starter homes should be on the table.

Impact: Concerns about insufficient parking, noise, and other potential nuisances should not be the basis for rejecting cottage court starter homes. Valid concerns can be addressed in a well-crafted ordinance.

Are you a local elected official and interested in chatting with us more about this topic? Please reach out to us at localgovt@libertas.institute—we’d love to chat!

Resources:

Op-eds and Articles:

About the author

Libertas Institute Staff

Share Post:

Fighting for a Future Where Individuals Are Fully Liberated to Pursue Their Dreams, Free from Coercion and Control.

You Might Also Like

Public schools need to adapt. In the meantime, policymakers should expand school choice so families can find learning environments that fit their children.
If the United Kingdom, once the richest country in the world, were an American state, it would now be the poorest one.
Public disorder concerns are real, and residents deserve effective responses. But overcriminalization is at its most counterproductive reaches people not causing harm while leaving the underlying disorder untouched.

Help us Nail and Scale Policies to Reduce Government Control

Your tax-deductible contributions to Libertas Institute increase freedom across the country.