How Zoning Works in San Francisco
Why It’s So Hard to Build Housing — Even When It’s Legal
San Francisco’s housing shortage is often described as a market failure or a political stalemate. It is neither. It is the predictable result of zoning rules paired with an approval process that turns legality into a starting point, not a finish line. This explainer shows why housing that is allowed on paper is still hard to build in practice—and how delay became a form of power.
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Zoning is the legal framework that determines what can be built on each parcel of land: height, density, unit count, use, and design. In San Francisco, most of the city is zoned conservatively despite extreme demand and limited land.
But zoning alone does not explain the outcome. What makes San Francisco distinct is that zoning is enforced through a discretionary approval system. This means that meeting the written rules does not guarantee approval. Projects typically move forward only after additional review, conditions, and negotiation.
Zoning sets the ceiling. Discretion controls the clock.
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Most housing proposals begin compliant with the zoning code. In theory, these projects should be approved “by right.” In practice, few are.
What follows isn’t a single decision point, but a sequence where each step can slow or stop a project. The typical path looks like this:
The Planning Department interprets zoning rules and issues recommendations.
The Planning Commission reviews projects and can impose conditions or demand revisions.
Appeals trigger additional hearings and delay.
Environmental review under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) is folded into the process, creating legal avenues that can extend timelines even when projects remain environmentally compliant.
Financing windows stretch. Construction costs rise. Some projects shrink. Others die.
None of these steps requires an outright denial. Delay alone is often enough.
Time becomes the gatekeeper. Only projects that can absorb uncertainty survive.
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Decision-making power over housing in San Francisco is fragmented by design.
The Planning Department drafts and interprets the zoning code.
The Planning Commission controls approvals and conditions.
The Board of Supervisors legislates zoning changes and can intervene politically.
Neighbors and organized groups can trigger discretionary review and appeals.
Courts become involved through CEQA litigation.
State agencies now act as backstops when local discretion crosses legal limits.
No single actor controls housing outcomes. Many actors can slow them down.
This dispersion of authority makes accountability diffuse and delay durable.
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Restrictive zoning combined with discretionary approvals does not freeze neighborhoods in place. It redirects pressure.
When housing supply is constrained:
Rents rise faster than incomes.
Displacement accelerates.
Commutes get longer.
New housing skews toward high-end projects that can survive delay.
Homelessness becomes harder to address.
These outcomes are not side effects. They are the system functioning as designed.
Zoning decisions quietly determine who can afford to live in the city and who cannot.
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After decades of underbuilding, California intervened.
State housing laws now limit local discretion and require approval of compliant housing projects. San Francisco is legally required to plan for and permit tens of thousands of new homes under its Housing Element, with consequences for cities that fail to comply.
Local control still exists. What no longer exists is unlimited delay without legal risk.
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These sources explain how San Francisco zoning operates, how state housing law constrains local discretion, and how land-use regulation affects housing supply.
San Francisco Planning Department — San Francisco Zoning Code Overview (2024)
https://sfplanning.org/zoningCalifornia Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) — Housing Accountability Act Technical Assistance (2023)
https://www.hcd.ca.gov/planning-and-community-development/housing-accountability-actCalifornia Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) — Housing Element Law and Enforcement (2024)
https://www.hcd.ca.gov/planning-and-community-development/housing-elementCalifornia Legislative Analyst’s Office — California’s Housing Shortage (2024)
https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/4695UC Berkeley School of Law, Center for Law, Energy & the Environment — CEQA and Housing Production (2023)
https://www.law.berkeley.edu/research/clee/research/climate/ceqa-and-housing/Terner Center for Housing Innovation (UC Berkeley) — Land Use Regulation and Housing Supply (2022)
https://ternercenter.berkeley.edu/research-and-policy/land-use-regulation-housing-supply/
