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California Building Permits Hit 5-Year High on Housing Reforms

National Desk
May 1, 2026
SACRAMENTO — Building permits for new homes across California surged to a five-year high in early 2026, marking a direct response to landmark 2025 laws that slashed regulatory hurdles and incentivized affordable housing. Developers, long hamstrung by lengthy approvals, are now expediting projects thanks to measures like Assembly Bill 253 (Ward, Rivas), which empowers third-party professionals for plan checks when local agencies miss 30-day deadlines, and AB 301 (Schiavo, Rivas), holding state departments to strict timelines.[1] The Sacramento Bee first reported the boom, attributing it to these reforms that update the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and freeze new residential building standards through 2031, stabilizing costs for builders and families.[1] In high-cost coastal zones and urban centers, AB 462 (Lowenthal, Rivas) accelerates accessory dwelling units (ADUs), boosting backyard housing options in places like Los Angeles, where a 59-unit project took over a decade for approvals amid zoning battles.[4][1] Central Valley farmworker housing gets a lift from AB 457 (Soria), streamlining larger developments, while AB 507 (Haney) converts underused office spaces into residences amid post-pandemic vacancies. Near transit hubs and colleges, new laws like one green-lighting apartments over local objections and AB 893 (Fong) creating 'campus development zones' within half-mile radii of public universities are spurring multifamily builds, signed enthusiastically by Gov. Gavin Newsom.[2][1] Yet the permit rush collides with persistent affordability woes. The Legislative Analyst's Office reports that while home prices stabilized close to pre-pandemic trends by Q1 2026, income needed for a median-tier mortgage has outpaced household earnings since 2020, with rates hovering near 7% since 2022.[3] Inventory rose in 2024-2025, but sales lag pre-pandemic levels as buyers balk at costs. Pro-housing advocates hail the 2025 'Yes In My Backyard' wins, but critics note slim aid for current renters and no new state bond for affordable funds.[2] These reforms signal a pivot after years of stagnation, with Speaker Robert Rivas touting them as a 'turning point' to house middle-class families near jobs and transit. From San Francisco offices to Fresno farms, the permit surge promises thousands more units, but experts watch if high interest rates and local enforcement — bolstered by AB 712 (Wicks) fines — deliver actual shovels in the ground.[1][3]

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