Zoning determines what you can legally do with a property: how many units you can build, whether you can add a rental apartment, run a business, or tear down and go bigger. Most buyers find out about zoning constraints after they've already made an offer. Here's how to look it up first.
Philadelphia's zoning code was comprehensively rewritten in 2012. The current system uses a letter-number format (RSA-5, CMX-2, RM-1, I-1) that classifies every parcel by use category and density. Understanding the code for any property you're considering takes about two minutes and can reveal significant upside or hidden constraints that the listing doesn't mention.
The zoning designation for any Philadelphia property has two parts:
For example, RSA-5 means "Residential Single-Family Attached, density class 5," the most common designation for Philadelphia rowhouses. CMX-2 means "Commercial Mixed-Use, level 2," the zoning that covers most of the city's commercial corridors like South Street, Frankford Avenue, and Germantown Avenue.
The practical implication: a property's zoning tells you what's by-right (what you can build or use without asking anyone for permission) versus what requires a variance or special exception (what you'd have to petition the Zoning Board of Adjustment for).
Philadelphia's zoning data is public and searchable through two free tools:
Go to atlas.phila.gov, enter any address, and click the "Zoning" tab. It shows the current zoning designation, any overlay districts, and a link to the relevant code section.
The city also maintains the full Zoning Code online. If you're looking at a specific designation and want to understand exactly what's permitted by-right versus by special exception, this is the authoritative reference.
Flagstone includes zoning designation in every property report, alongside permit history, L&I violations, and 311 complaint history. If you're screening multiple properties, it's faster than looking up each address individually.
Overlay districts: Many Philadelphia parcels carry an additional overlay designation on top of the base zoning, such as Civic Design Review (CDR), Historic District, Neighborhood Commercial (NC), or flood overlay. These can restrict or expand what the base zoning allows. Always check for overlays, not just the base code.
Here are the designations you'll encounter most often when looking at Philadelphia properties:
| Code | Category | By-Right Uses | Common Areas |
|---|---|---|---|
| RSA-5 | Residential Single-Family Attached | Single-family rowhouse; no multi-unit by right | South Philly, Fishtown, Kensington, Passyunk Square |
| RSA-3 | Residential Single-Family Attached | Single-family attached; larger lots than RSA-5 | Northeast Philadelphia, Chestnut Hill, parts of the Northeast |
| RM-1 | Residential Multi-Family | Multi-unit residential; duplexes, triplexes, small apartment buildings by right | West Philly near University City, parts of North Philly |
| RM-2 | Residential Multi-Family | Higher-density multi-family; larger apartment buildings | Center City edges, Spruce Hill, Washington Square West |
| CMX-1 | Commercial Mixed-Use | Neighborhood retail + residential; small-scale commercial only | Corner stores on residential blocks |
| CMX-2 | Commercial Mixed-Use | Ground-floor retail, offices, restaurants + residential above; most commercial corridors | South Street, Frankford Ave, Germantown Ave, East Passyunk |
| CMX-2.5 | Commercial Mixed-Use | Higher-density mixed use; mid-rise buildings possible; requires Civic Design Review above certain thresholds | Spring Garden, Girard Ave, Spruce Hill commercial nodes |
| CMX-3 | Commercial Mixed-Use | High-density commercial and residential; tall buildings; Center City scale | Center City, University City |
| I-1 | Light Industrial | Manufacturing, warehousing, light industrial; residential not permitted by right | Port Richmond, Kensington Ave corridor, parts of Southwest Philly |
| I-2 | Medium Industrial | Heavier industrial uses; larger operations, logistics | Near Navy Yard, parts of the Northeast industrial corridor |
| IRMX | Industrial/Residential Mixed-Use | Transitional zone: residential and light industrial co-exist; common in gentrifying industrial corridors | Parts of Fishtown, Northern Liberties, Kensington |
Zoning is one of the most underappreciated factors in Philadelphia investment analysis. A few scenarios where it makes a material difference:
RSA-5 permits only a single-family dwelling by right. If you're buying what's listed as a "two-unit" property or has a basement apartment, the second unit may be an illegal conversion. This matters because:
Check the L&I violation history for any RSA-5 property being marketed as a two-unit. If there are past zoning violations, they'll appear in the permit and violation record.
CMX-2 zoning requires ground floor commercial use on certain street frontages in some overlay areas. If a property on a commercial corridor has a ground-floor apartment rather than commercial space, verify whether this is compliant with any applicable overlay. Landlords have sometimes faced L&I pressure to convert residential back to commercial use on commercial corridors.
Industrial-zoned land has been a significant driver of Philadelphia development in the last decade. Fishtown, Northern Liberties, and parts of Kensington all sit on parcels that were I-1 or I-2 when rowhouses went in. Converting industrial land to residential requires a variance from the Zoning Board of Adjustment, which is a process with genuine risk and cost. Don't assume that because a property is physically a rowhouse it's residentially zoned.
RM-1 is one of the most investor-friendly designations in Philadelphia because multi-unit use is by right. A single-family home on RM-1 land can legally be converted to a duplex or triplex without a variance (subject to lot size minimums, setback requirements, and building code compliance). This is a significant source of value creation in West Philadelphia and parts of North Philadelphia.
Flagstone reports include zoning designation, L&I violations, permit history, and 311 complaints, everything you need before making an offer.
Get your free reportAccessory Dwelling Units (ADUs), including basement apartments, garage conversions, and carriage houses, have gotten significant attention nationally as a way to add housing density and rental income. In Philadelphia, the rules depend heavily on zoning.
Philadelphia's zoning code does not permit freestanding ADUs by right on single-family zoned parcels. You can have an accessory structure, but renting it as a separate dwelling unit requires a variance. This is different from many other cities that have liberalized ADU rules in recent years. Philadelphia's code is still relatively restrictive on this point.
That said, basement apartments (English basements, garden units) do exist throughout the city. Many were converted without permits decades ago and have continued to operate without enforcement action. This doesn't make them legal, and it's worth knowing whether a property's basement unit has any permit history or violation record before assuming it can be rented.
On RM-1 and RM-2 parcels, additional units are by right up to the density limits for the designation and lot size. If you're buying a single-family home on RM-1 land, you may have the legal ability to add one or more units without going to the Zoning Board, subject to building code compliance, setback requirements, and lot coverage limits.
If you're buying a property specifically for ADU or conversion potential, verify:
When what you want to do isn't permitted by right, you need a variance from the Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA). Here's what that actually involves:
A typical ZBA application in Philadelphia involves:
RCO opposition is a real risk. Philadelphia's zoning process gives significant weight to Registered Community Organizations. In neighborhoods with active civic associations (Queen Village, Passyunk Square, Chestnut Hill, Society Hill), opposition from the RCO can kill a variance application even if the legal standard for variance approval is technically met. Factor this into your development feasibility analysis.
The variance process is most worth it when:
L&I issues zoning violations separately from building code violations. Common zoning violations in Philadelphia:
Open zoning violations follow the property, not the owner. If you buy a property with an open zoning violation, you inherit the obligation to resolve it. Always check L&I violation records before buying, especially on properties being sold by investors or estates where unpermitted work is common.
For Philadelphia real estate, understanding zoning before you make an offer is table stakes. The scenarios where it matters most:
Two minutes on atlas.phila.gov will tell you the zoning. Five more minutes cross-referencing with the violation history and permit record will tell you whether the current use is legal and permitted. That's the minimum due diligence on zoning for any Philadelphia property.
Flagstone includes zoning data in every Philadelphia property report, alongside permit history, L&I violations, 311 complaints, and OPA records. It's the fastest way to see the full picture before making an offer.