What Is a Family? Ask a Zoning Official.
Big cities like New York, Baltimore, and others use strict definitions of family to restrict housing.

The increased cost of housing is a major driver of inflation. It's even forcing modest change in the restrictive zoning codes that distort and restrict supply. California has now moved to legalize small "accessory dwelling units" on housing lots statewide and Minneapolis has rolled back single-family zoning.
Legal constraints on housing supply still abound, however. But less noticed than the exclusionary impact of 4-acre house lot requirements (as in Greenwich, Connecticut) is the fact that city officials are using thousands of local zoning codes to define what a family is. Doing so encourages inefficient use of the housing stock we have and stands in the way of living arrangements that could help young families and older Americans lower their housing costs.
Widespread local regulations limit so-called "unrelated" co-occupants (i.e., roommates or lodgers) even though there are no limits on the number of occupants related by "blood, marriage, or adoption" (the language often used by local zoning codes). Even when there are empty bedrooms that could accommodate more occupants, such rules stand in the way of older homeowners who might like to rent rooms to unrelated helpers, or younger families who would like to share quarters to more easily make their mortgage payments.
For a new American Enterprise Institute research paper, I reviewed zoning regulations in 30 major cities and nearby suburbs and found that, notwithstanding changing social norms, zoning restrictions on the composition of households remain common. Zoning codes in 23 of the 30 largest U.S. cities or nearby suburbs, impose limits on occupants deemed "unrelated."
In Village of Belle Terre v. Boraas (1974), the Supreme Court allowed localities to impose the "related by blood" regulations. The ruling upheld a New York village ordinance that "restricted land use to mean one or more persons related by blood, adoption or marriage, or not more than two unrelated persons."
Even traditionally tolerant cities have kept such restrictions. In New York City, for instance, as explained by the popular rental listing service, StreetEasy, Real Property Law stipulates that when two people sign a lease, "there should be no more than four occupants living in the apartment at one time."
Even stricter laws are not uncommon. In the city of Baltimore, no more than two unrelated persons may live together, unless in an approved rooming house. In Las Vegas, the limit is four; the same zoning limit applies in Grand Rapids, Michigan. No more than three unrelated persons may share a household in St. Louis; the same is true in Nashville, where housing affordability is a crisis.
Just because the Supreme Court found such laws to be constitutional does not, of course, mean that localities must adopt them. Change is not widespread but it is definitely afoot—including laws which distinguish between crowding (which may be a health and safety concern) and the relationships among residents.
Legislation in Oregon passed last year prohibited municipalities from regulating occupancy based on familial relations. Pam Marsh, a Democratic state legislator from Ashland, Oregon, said in support of the bill: "We know that unrelated people live together for lots of important reasons and there is simply no reason for cities to be regulating that." Property owners would not be barred from restricting occupancy based on potential crowding.
This has long been the legal rule in California, in the wake of a 1980 state Supreme Court decision which struck down a Santa Barbara local law that defined family as "two or more persons related by blood, marriage or legal adoption living together as a single housekeeping unit in a dwelling unit."
Change is not limited to blue states. In 2020, the Columbus, Ohio, suburb of Bexley revised its zoning code to recognize "persons living together as a functional family" who "share the entire dwelling unit and live and cook together as a single housekeeping unit." One can view this as cultural change—or simply a means to make better use of our existing housing stock.
This is no call for change dictated by courts or Washington, though. Gradual change at the local level is the best way to proceed. Some communities will prefer to continue to use their zoning law to endorse the traditional nuclear family with two parents and children. In the American federalist tradition, that should be their choice. Still, it's worth reexamining local laws that promote those preferences at the expense of the fuller and varied use of homes.
We've become accustomed to the idea that housing market pressures can only be relieved by grand policy interventions led by Washington. But the quiet zoning code definitions of what may constitute a family can both accommodate changing social norms—and help make sure bedrooms don't go empty while young families are locked out of communities in which they grew up. Let's consider leaving the definition of family to families themselves.
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…. inefficient use of the housing stock …
We must introduce some government efficiency into the process !
Got an empty room or two? Here are your immigrants .
By appointment only.
Does not apply to the following Sanctuary zones:
Martha's Vineyard
San Francisco
Seattle
Colorado
DC
New York
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It takes a unique brand of stupid to interpret "Get government out" to mean "More government."
Sarc doesn’t get sarcasm.
Funny.
Oh sure. Now you claim it was sarcasm. Back peddling.
Poor sarc.
It's pretty ironic, don't you think?
We must introduce some unicorns into the process !
FTFY
Hi.
(●__●)
Good night everybody. Where's Jackie?
What is this "Good night everybody" thing?
Fetterman's opening statement from last night's debate.
Oh, I see. So the usual.
Yes, you missed it. But then again, you do have a lot go right over your head.
Jeff has no sense of humor. Worse than Mike, if that’s possible.
You ruined it!
Biden: Where's Jackie?
Fetterman: Hello and good night everybody.
chemjeff: Who's Jackie and why's everybody going to bed?
Let's go Brandon. I agree.
A biologist might help, too.
We can't define a woman, but now we think we can define family?
We can define a woman; only a certain supreme court judge can't.
"We identify as related."
I identify as highly related with the brown supermen rattling the fence of my southern border. ♥♥♥♥♥♥
Does a 'they' count as one person or two (or more)?
Even traditionally tolerant cities have kept such restrictions. In New York City, for instance, as explained by the popular rental listing service, StreetEasy, Real Property Law stipulates that when two people sign a lease, "there should be no more than four occupants living in the apartment at one time."
It's like Jacob Riis' fingerprints are all over this New York City code.
Since when has NYC been "tolerant?"
When old New York was once New Amsterdam?
Why they changed it, I don't know.
People just liked it better than no.
Can they get around this by stating the obvious?
It is not really living to reside in NYC.
Even stricter laws are not uncommon. In the city of Baltimore, no more than two unrelated persons may live together, unless in an approved rooming house. In Las Vegas, the limit is four; the same zoning limit applies in Grand Rapids, Michigan. No more than three unrelated persons may share a household in St. Louis; the same is true in Nashville, where housing affordability is a crisis.
I have to wonder, how many municipalities enforce these rules, until there's a problem (Geez, Marge, I think there are something like 20 people living in #202 down the hall, I think I'm gonna make a call to someone about this).
That, or
Evil mustachioed developer: I want that land
Evil limp wristed zoning official: I'll start writing the code infractions
There is documentation that zoning officials are rarely limp wristed.
Those bribes are heavy.
That was in the old days, when men were men and bribes came in large sacks with a dollar signs on them. Now it's all done by Venmo.
Is that looking up under "land, snatch", there Heddy?
Denver had a 'no more than two unrelated adults' clause in their single-family zoning regs until last year or so. Combined with a long-standing lack of condos and duplexes and a shortage of older (read non-luxury) apartment buildings - it is why the cost of housing went from always very cheap to very expensive when pot was legalized and a ton of college grads decided to move here.
Widespread local regulations limit so-called "unrelated" co-occupants (i.e., roommates or lodgers) even though there are no limits on the number of occupants related by "blood, marriage, or adoption" (the language often used by local zoning codes).
Last time I looked, families were typically defined as being related via blood, marriage, or adoption. Anything else is cohabitation or renting out rooms (i.e. a boarding house).
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I'm pretty sure Santa Monica doesn't allow non-related mixed living. Unless the man pretends to be gay.
Though I haven't looked up the law. I'm getting that from reruns of three's company, but it was good enough for Mr Roper, so it should be good enough for a Reason article.
Wasn't it just about Mr. Roper? I never got the impression that it was a city statute thing.
What is Mr Furley, chopped liver?
Mr roper didn't think it was proper for a single man to live with 2 single women. So Jack lied and said he was gay
No. No, that should not be their choice. The government does not, at any level, regardless of court findings, have proper authority to interfere with whom a property owner chooses to share his/her dwelling.
Yup. Property rights have to mean something.
Stop paying property taxes and tells me who owns the land and the dwelling.
Government owns it all, and that's why they get to dictate what we can or cannot do with it. After all, we're just renters.
Yes, you essentially have a perpetual lease.
What about runaway airbnb rentals?
How can runaways afford airbnbs?
The same way the meth addict will afford a $1900 two bedroom when if finally drops to $1100.
Almost half price!
You think hunters rent is that low?
They're handy, because you can land your plane right by the door.
And when you say “does not”, you mean “in your opinion, should not”.
Well, face it, your opinion is a small minority opinion. And you’re not doing a good job changing other people’s minds.
Is ten or fifteen illegal alien men crammed into a one-bedroom apartment a "family"?
No idea, let's ask Fiona.
I don't think that'd be a family - but if you put me in that apartment for a couple nights, I will gladly work to create some nice, mixed, politically approved families, my love. ♥♥♥♥♥♥
Are they gay illegal alien men?
In the American federalist tradition, that should be their choice.
Except that housing is one of the biggest distortions in the federal tax code - and most states piggyback on the federal stuff.
What an authoritarian --and anti-liberty-- take.
Who the fuck cares who I rent my spare bedroom to?
Code enforcement might, if your house isn't zoned for, or has a variance to be a boarding house. Most usually just look the other way for one spare bedroom.
If it's illegal to rent, watch out. The tenant can withhold the rent and you can't sue him because it was illegal to rent in the first place. I learned that from The People's Court.
It may be hard to believe for you, but there are socioeconomic strata where we don’t “rent spare bedrooms” to anyone, under any circumstances. We may have extended house guests, but we wouldn’t charge them for their stay. And we like our neighborhoods to be filled with people from our own socioeconomic strata, hence such restrictions. Don’t buy into our neighborhoods if you don’t like it.
'....Let's consider leaving the definition of family to families themselves....' To do that, one would first have to define what families means. Leaving that task to the local jurisdictions is the worst way to do it, until you consider the alternatives.
"We are all part of the family of man"
So how can they NOT be related?
Brothers from different mothers.
Get with the times; "mothers" is so out of style.
And I think they are working on "brother", but they have to figure out the "correct" way to deal with the racial uses.
I was certain housing costs were excluded from the calculation of inflation and it was just more day to day items that counted.
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Hey, suggesting that a family is "children" living with "parents" is oppressive white privilege thinking. Just ask the Smithsonian or any black studies professor.
I like the “inefficient housing” in my neighborhood; it’s why I moved here.
Apparently, Reason wants the jackboot of government to stomp down on me and my neighbors and force us to turn our nice, inefficient, suburban, wealthy suburb into efficient communist housing blocks.
Thanks, but no thanks. You can go to hell.
Hear, hear!
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