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How Long Does It Take to Build an ADU in San Diego?
The real answer: 10–12 months for a typical detached ADU, start to finish. Here's every phase, what eats the most time, and the one delay most contractors don't warn you about.
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The most common question we get before a project kicks off is some version of: "How soon can we have this thing built?" The honest answer isn't what most contractors give you — a vague "6 to 18 months" that covers everything from a garage conversion to a two-story custom ADU. This guide gives you real phase-by-phase numbers based on what we see on actual San Diego projects, plus the one delay that catches more homeowners off guard than any other.
A typical detached ADU in San Diego takes 10–12 months from first consultation to move-in ready. That breaks down as: design and drawings (10–16 weeks), city permitting (60–90 days), construction (3–5 months), and final inspections (2–4 weeks). The single biggest wildcard is San Diego Gas & Electric — a new meter/service connection can add 6–12 weeks to your project and there is no way to rush it.
The 10–12 month picture
Here's roughly how the phases stack against each other on a typical project. Some overlap is possible — for example, your contractor can begin site prep while final permit corrections are processed — but plan conservatively until your permit is in hand.
Phase 1: Feasibility & design
This phase covers everything from your first site visit through permit-ready drawings. It's longer than most people expect because every IL Total Design & Build project starts from scratch — we don't use stock floor plans. Custom design means your ADU is built for your specific lot, your setbacks, your existing structures, and your goals. That takes time to do right.
What happens in this phase:
- Initial feasibility consultation and site assessment
- Zoning and setback verification (lot coverage, FAR, height limits)
- Architectural design and floor plan development
- Structural engineering calculations
- Title 24 energy compliance documentation
- Final permit-ready drawing set
The 10–16 week range is wide because complexity drives it. A straightforward 600 sq ft detached unit on a flat lot in a standard zone moves faster than a hillside lot with retaining walls, a coastal zone setback constraint, or a unit requiring a new electrical service.
Phase 2: City permitting
California law requires cities to approve or deny a compliant ADU application within 60 days. In practice, the City of San Diego typically hits that window on well-prepared submissions — but "well-prepared" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. Applications with incomplete documents, missing calculations, or plans that don't reflect the actual site conditions will come back with correction letters, and each round adds 2–4 weeks.
The City of San Diego also operates a pre-approved plan program (AB 1332) that can cut permit time to approximately 30 days. Because IL Total projects are fully custom, we submit standard applications — but a clean, complete first submission typically resolves in 60–90 days without multiple correction rounds.
What happens in permit review:
- Pre-screen: city confirms all required documents are included (2–4 weeks)
- Plan check: structural, zoning, fire, energy compliance reviewed
- Correction letter (if issued): typically 1–2 rounds on complex projects
- Fee payment and permit issuance
Phase 3: Construction
Construction for a standard detached ADU (roughly 400–900 sq ft) runs 3–5 months once the permit is issued and the site is mobilized. This is faster than most homeowners expect — but it's also the phase where the SDG&E wildcard hits hardest (more on that below).
Typical construction sequence:
- Site prep & foundation: grading, trenching, slab or pier work (2–5 weeks depending on soil and site conditions)
- Framing: walls, floors, roof structure (2–4 weeks)
- Rough mechanicals: plumbing, electrical, HVAC rough-in, sheathing, windows (3–6 weeks)
- Inspections at rough stage (city inspectors must approve before closing walls)
- Insulation, drywall, interior finishes: flooring, cabinets, fixtures (4–8 weeks)
- Exterior: siding, roofing, paint, landscaping restoration
- Utility connections: water, sewer, electrical service (timeline varies — this is the big one)
Two-story ADUs, units with complex rooflines, or projects requiring significant site work (retaining walls, extensive grading) can push construction to 5–7 months. Garage conversions tend to run faster — often 2–3 months of active construction — because the structure already exists.
Phase 4: Final inspections & certificate of occupancy
Once construction is substantially complete, the city conducts final inspections covering structural, electrical, plumbing, mechanical, energy compliance, and accessibility. If all inspections pass, the city issues a Certificate of Occupancy — the legal document that makes the ADU habitable and rentable.
Most projects close out final inspections in 2–4 weeks. Common reasons it takes longer: a punch list item identified at inspection requires correction before re-inspection is scheduled, or utility connections aren't finalized before the city will issue the CO.
Estimate your ADU timeline
Select your project type to get a rough timeline range based on our experience with San Diego projects.
ADU Timeline Estimator
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Estimates based on typical San Diego projects. Your actual timeline depends on site conditions, city workload, HOA requirements, and how quickly decisions are made. Book a free feasibility check for a project-specific estimate.
What causes delays — and how long they add
Every ADU project has some slack in the schedule. Most delays are manageable. But one delay consistently catches San Diego homeowners off guard and there's essentially nothing you can do to speed it up.
If your ADU requires a new electrical service connection — its own meter, not shared with the main home — SDG&E's processing and installation backlog adds 6 to 12 weeks with no ability to expedite. This is the delay that surprises homeowners most. It's not the city, it's not your contractor — it's the utility, and their queue is their queue. The fix: get the SDG&E application submitted as early in the project as possible, ideally concurrent with permit submission, not after.
City plan checkers issue correction letters when plans have errors, omissions, or code compliance issues. Each round adds 2–4 weeks. Most well-prepared submissions get through in 1–2 rounds. Poorly prepared plans — common with inexperienced designers — can require 3+ rounds, adding months.
Slow sign-offs on design revisions, late finish selections (tile, flooring, fixtures), and mid-construction change orders all push the schedule. Contractors can only move as fast as approvals come in. Pre-selecting finishes before construction begins eliminates most of this.
Unexpected soil conditions, unmarked underground utilities, or structural issues in existing buildings discovered during demo can add time. A thorough pre-construction site assessment reduces but can't eliminate this risk entirely.
Communities with active HOAs (common in Carmel Valley, Scripps Ranch, Rancho Santa Fe) require architectural committee approval before or alongside city permits. HOA review timelines vary widely — some review monthly, some quarterly. Factor this in early if your neighborhood has an HOA.
Trade labor in San Diego is tight. Electricians, plumbers, and framers often have queues. A well-organized general contractor pre-schedules trades ahead of need — gaps happen when subs are booked last-minute or coordination breaks down.
What your contractor handles vs. what you do
One of the biggest sources of timeline friction is unclear responsibility. Here's how it typically breaks down on an IL Total Design & Build project.
| Task | Who handles it | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Architectural drawings | Contractor | IL Total prepares all permit-ready drawings |
| Permit submission & corrections | Contractor | We handle all city correspondence and resubmittals |
| SDG&E service application | Contractor | Submitted as early as possible — we initiate this |
| Finish selections (tile, flooring, fixtures) | Homeowner | Pre-select before construction starts to avoid delays |
| Design review sign-offs | Homeowner | Fast feedback = faster drawings |
| HOA application (if applicable) | Both | We prepare the package; you submit as the property owner |
| School fees, water/sewer impact fees | Homeowner | Paid at permit issuance — your name, your check |
| Construction management & inspections | Contractor | We schedule and coordinate all city inspections |
| Tenant screening (post-CO) | Homeowner | You find the tenant; we can refer property managers |
Know your timeline before you commit
We give every client a free feasibility assessment upfront — what your lot can build, what permits it needs, and a realistic project timeline based on your specific property and goals.
Book your free feasibility check →Frequently asked questions
How long does it take to build an ADU in San Diego?
How long does ADU permitting take in San Diego?
What is the fastest way to build an ADU in San Diego?
Why is SDG&E causing delays on ADU projects?
How long does ADU construction take in San Diego?
Does an HOA affect how long my ADU takes?
Can I live in the ADU while my main home is being renovated, or vice versa?
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Disclosure: Timeline estimates in this article reflect typical IL Total Design & Build project experience in San Diego as of 2026 and are provided for planning purposes only. Actual timelines vary based on project complexity, city workload, HOA requirements, utility availability, and site conditions. Nothing in this article constitutes a contractual commitment to any specific timeline. Always verify current permit processing times with the relevant city or county planning department. IL Total Design & Build is a licensed general contractor (CSLB #1058676). Last updated May 2026.
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