Tiny Homes and Small Infill in Nova Scotia: The 2026 Rules, Zoning, and What a Lot Can Support
"Tiny home" is a marketing word, not a regulatory one. In Nova Scotia there is no separate building code, no separate zoning category, and no separate permit track for a small house. A compact dwelling on a foundation is regulated exactly like any other dwelling of its size: by the National Building Code as adopted in the province, by the Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM) Land Use By-law that governs the parcel, and by the same permit, tax, and tenancy rules that apply to a conventional unit.
That reframing matters because the real question for an owner with a Halifax lot is not "can I put a tiny home here?" It is "what is the most this parcel can support, and under which rules?" From a development perspective, the small-footprint conversation is really three separate questions — how the code treats a small building, what the zoning lets you build as-of-right, and how the unit economics work once permit fees, taxes, and rental rules are accounted for. This guide walks each in turn, current as of 2026-06-22, with every regulatory figure tied to its primary source.
What the building code actually says (2026)
Nova Scotia's building regulation now adopts the National Building Code of Canada 2020 (along with the 2020 national energy and plumbing codes, with revisions issued on or before April 1, 2023), brought into force on April 1, 2025 under N.S. Reg. 198/2024 [1]. There is no "tiny home" chapter. A small dwelling is held to the same structural, fire-safety, egress, and energy provisions as any house of comparable size and occupancy.
The single most consequential code distinction for small buildings is Part 9 versus Part 3. A building qualifies for the simpler Part 9 ("Housing and Small Buildings") path only if it is three storeys or fewer in building height, has a building area of not more than 600 m² (about 6,460 sq ft), and is not an excluded major occupancy (assembly, care/treatment/detention, or high-hazard industrial). Exceed either size threshold, or fall into an excluded occupancy, and the project becomes a more demanding Part 3 building [2]. Virtually every small-footprint dwelling, fourplex, or backyard suite sits comfortably inside Part 9 — which is precisely why these forms are economical to permit and build.
Energy performance is tightening on a schedule, not in a single jump. Nova Scotia is phasing in the 2020 codes by tier: building-code Tier 1 and energy-code Tier 1 took effect April 1, 2025; building-code Tier 2 took effect April 1, 2026; energy-code Tier 2 follows April 1, 2027; and Tier 3 requirements land in 2027 and 2029 [3]. For houses and small buildings, the tiered energy-efficiency requirements of Section 9.36 mean at least Tier 2 (climate Zone 6) applies as of April 1, 2026, having phased in from Tier 1 the year before [4]. In practice a small dwelling permitted in HRM today must be built to a measurably higher envelope-and-systems standard than one permitted two years ago — better insulation, better airtightness, and heating systems sized to match. (Ductless heat pumps are a common way to meet these requirements in Nova Scotia's climate, but they are an engineering choice, not a regulatory one.)
A note on accessibility, since it is frequently misstated for small dwellings: Nova Scotia's Built Environment Accessibility Standard Regulations (N.S. Reg. 48/2025, under the Accessibility Act) apply to construction or installation beginning on or after April 1, 2026 — but explicitly exclude private residences with three or fewer dwelling units [5]. The building code's own barrier-free provisions (at least one barrier-free entrance, and a barrier-free path of travel on the entrance level and in storeys over 600 m² or served by an elevator) still apply per its scope [6], but the new provincial standard does not pull a duplex or triplex into elevator-and-ramp territory.
What the zoning lets you build
Code tells you how you must build. Zoning tells you what and how much — and this is where the last two years changed the calculus most for Halifax owners.
Under HRM's Housing Accelerator Fund (HAF) planning amendments, a minimum of four dwelling units is now permitted as-of-right on every centrally serviced residential lot in HRM's existing serviced (central water and wastewater) areas. The amendment package was approved by Regional Council at second reading on May 23, 2024, and took effect on June 13, 2024, the date the municipality received provincial approval [7][8]. "As-of-right" is the phrase that matters: a project that complies with all applicable Land Use By-law requirements can proceed via a development permit without a discretionary approval. A variance is only a minor relaxation of a specific standard (a setback, say) granted by the development officer; larger departures still require a development agreement or rezoning approved by Council [9]. The four-unit allowance carries one deliberate carve-out — the African Nova Scotian Beechville Community was excluded from the upzoning [10].
Inside the Regional Centre (peninsular Halifax and central Dartmouth), the established-residential zones were restructured in the same June 2024 amendments:
- ER-1 is the lowest-density established residential zone and does not permit townhouse or small-apartment forms; much of the former ER-1 was replaced by ER-2 and ER-3 [11].
- ER-2 permits single- and two-unit dwellings plus one backyard suite as-of-right. It does not permit new triplex or fourplex construction — that is ER-3 [12]. Maximum building height in ER-2 is 11 metres, with a 3-metre exemption for a pitched roof or attic unit [13].
- ER-3 is the workhorse small-infill zone. It permits up to eight dwelling units per lot, scaling with lot size — roughly four units on smaller lots up to eight on larger ones — delivered as single/two/three/four-unit dwellings, small multi-unit buildings (five to eight units), or townhouses (max eight units) [14]. Maximum height is again 11 metres plus the 3-metre pitched-roof exemption (up to ~14 m with a sloped roof) [15]. (You will see "12 m" in older blog content, including Helio's own legacy posts; the official maximum is 11 m [15].)
ER-3's built-form controls are specific: minimum lot area of 325 m² for one-to-four-unit dwellings, lot coverage capped at 40% (single-unit) / 50% (other uses on lots over 325 m²) / 60% (lots of 325 m² or less), and a minimum lot frontage of 10.7 m [16][17]. Maximum permitted bedrooms also scale with unit count — six for a single unit up to twenty for an eight-unit building [18]. For townhouse forms, interior units need roughly 185 m² each and end units roughly 245 m² [16].
There is no single municipality-wide minimum lot size in HRM; it is zone-specific, set in the applicable Land Use By-law, and unit yield in zones like ER-3 increases with available lot area [19]. The honest answer to "how many units can I build?" is therefore never a rule of thumb — it is a parcel-specific reading of the by-law that applies to that lot, its dimensions, and its servicing. For higher-order zones (HR-1, HR-2, and the Centre mixed-use zones), heights and intensities are set per-precinct in the Regional Centre Land Use By-law, not by a single zone-wide number, so the authoritative value for any given parcel is the by-law itself or HRM's ExploreHRM mapping tool [20][21].
The permit and cost picture
Once you know what the parcel can support, the next layer is what it costs to get the permit and carry the project — and these figures, too, are public.
In HRM, building permit fees for new construction of residential buildings of four units or fewer are charged per square metre of floor area: $4.04/m² for floors at or above average finished grade, $3.36/m² for shallow below-grade floors, and $1.35/m² for deep basements and garages, with a $31.25 minimum (effective April 1, 2024) [22]. Renovations, repairs, and "other residential and all commercial construction" are instead charged $6.88 per $1,000 of estimated construction value, same $31.25 minimum [23]. A separate demolition permit ($62.50) is required before removing any existing building [24], and an occupancy permit — requiring a valid building permit and a passed final inspection — is generally needed before a multi-unit building can be occupied [25]. Permit review timelines are not fixed by any province-wide statutory deadline; HRM residential reviews are commonly described as roughly four to eight weeks and multi-unit developments as several months, but those are practitioner estimates dependent on application completeness, not legislated maximums [26].
Servicing has its own charge. Halifax Water's Regional Development Charge (RDC) is $5,405.81 per unit for a multiple-unit dwelling and $8,048.66 per unit for a single-unit dwelling or townhouse, effective April 1, 2024 and frozen at 2023 levels under an HRM Charter amendment [27][28]. A proposed RDC increase has been under UARB and stakeholder engagement, so this is a figure to re-confirm before pro-forma-ing a project, but as of 2026-06-22 the frozen rates above are the published schedule.
On hard construction cost, Helio publishes no price of its own. The most credible public benchmark is CMHC's Housing Design Catalogue (Halifax basis, Q1-2025), which estimates hard construction cost for small multi-unit buildings at roughly $217,000–$387,000 per unit — about $217K–$271K for a sixplex, $236K–$358K for a fourplex, and $260K–$387K for a stacked townhouse — or roughly $223–$345 per square foot for four-to-six-unit forms [29]. These are hard costs only: they include the general contractor's overhead and profit but exclude land, financing, soft costs, and developer profit, and CMHC advises adding a 5–10% contingency [29]. Any single all-in "$/unit" number you see quoted without that scope caveat is, by CMHC's own framing, misleading. For context on direction, Statistics Canada's Building Construction Price Index shows Halifax residential construction prices rose 3.9% year-over-year in Q4 2025 (low-rise apartments +4.0%) [30].
How the unit economics get shaped — taxes, programs, and rents
A small infill building is taxed as residential property in Nova Scotia. Apartment and condominium buildings are classified residential — regardless of unit count — and taxed at the municipal residential rate, not the commercial rate [31]. A common confusion: Nova Scotia's Capped Assessment Program (CAP), which limits annual taxable-assessment increases, applies only to owner-occupied residential property with fewer than four units (the 2026 CAP rate is 2.6%) [32]. A fourplex is therefore residential class at the residential rate, but it is not CAP-eligible — CAP-ineligibility is not the same as commercial classification [32].
On the tax side of construction, Nova Scotia's HST is 14% (5% federal + 9% provincial), reduced from 15% effective April 1, 2025, and it applies to new construction on top of the hard cost [33]. For purpose-built rental, two rebates are significant. The federal Purpose-Built Rental Housing (PBRH) rebate refunds 100% of the GST / 5% federal HST on qualifying new rental, up to $35,000 per unit with no phase-out, and Nova Scotia mirrors it with a 100% rebate of the provincial 9% portion [34][35]. Note the eligibility line: PBRH targets purpose-built rental. Housing that doesn't qualify for the enhanced rebate (condos, and smaller duplex/triplex forms) instead falls under the base New Residential Rental Property rebate of 36%, capped at $6,300/unit and nil above $450,000 FMV [36]. And long-term residential rent itself is a GST/HST-exempt supply — no tax on the rent, but no input tax credits on related inputs either [37].
A word of caution on incentive programs, because the original version of this article — and much of the secondary web — still cites a program that has closed. The Nova Scotia Secondary and Backyard Suite Incentive Program has ended: it stopped accepting new applications, 624 applications were approved before it closed, and the province redirected funding toward rent supplements [38]. The separate federal Canada Secondary Suite Loan Program (announced as an $80,000 loan at ~2%) was announced but never became operational and has been widely reported as not proceeding [39]. What does remain available is the HRM municipal Secondary Suite Incentive — a Water/Wastewater Infrastructure Costs grant (reported around $10K–$12K per unit) funded under the HAF; on January 27, 2026 Council expanded eligibility to non-profits, co-ops, and more than one secondary unit per property, with those applications opening February 10, 2026 [40]. For purpose-built rental of any meaningful scale, the more substantial financing levers are CMHC's, discussed next.
For projects of five or more units, CMHC's two multi-unit instruments come into play — and they are distinct. MLI Select is mortgage loan insurance: it awards points across affordability, accessibility, and energy efficiency to unlock reduced premiums, higher leverage, and longer amortization (50 points can reach up to 95% loan-to-cost with up to 40-year amortization on new construction; 100 points unlocks up to 50-year amortization) [41][42]. The Apartment Construction Loan Program (ACLP) — the renamed Rental Construction Financing initiative — is a direct low-interest construction loan, from a $1 million minimum, up to 100% loan-to-cost on the residential component, with up to 50-year amortization for projects of at least five rental units [43][44]. They can be layered, but they are different financial instruments, and the five-unit floor is why crossing from a fourplex to a five- or six-unit building changes the financing conversation entirely [44].
Finally, the rents these units can charge operate under a cap. Nova Scotia's temporary rent cap limits annual increases for existing tenancies to a maximum of 5%, in effect through December 31, 2027 (extended from a prior 2025 sunset) [45][46]. A landlord may increase rent only once in any 12-month period and must give at least four months' written notice [47]. This does not cap the rent on a new unit's first lease, but it does shape the long-run revenue trajectory of any building you hold — and it is a current, dated fact (as of 2026-06-22) rather than a permanent feature.
What this means for a Halifax owner
The market backdrop is real: CMHC reported 8,732 housing starts in Nova Scotia in 2025, up 31% from 2024, with the Halifax CMA at 7,000 starts (multi-unit up 45%) [48], and more than 13,000 units under construction in the Halifax area as of October 2025 [49]. The demand for compact, well-built rental units is not in question. What separates a profitable small-infill project from a stalled one is rarely the appeal of the form — it is whether the parcel was read correctly before a dollar was spent.
That is the development question underneath the "tiny home" question. The same Halifax lot can yield two units, four units, or eight depending on its zone, its dimensions, its servicing, the heights and setbacks the by-law imposes, and which CMHC and rebate thresholds the program-eligible unit count crosses. A four-unit scheme that just misses the five-unit floor forfeits ACLP and MLI Select; a building one storey too tall or one square metre too large leaves Part 9 for the costlier Part 3 path. The optimal answer for any given parcel is a computation across all of these constraints at once — which is the work Helio does: we model what a parcel can legally and economically support, then develop it end-to-end, with construction delivered by established builders.
The small house is just one possible output of that calculation. The rules above are the inputs — public, current, and parcel-by-parcel.
Sources
- Government of Nova Scotia — "Province to Adopt 2020 National Building Codes" (Sept 20, 2024). https://news.novascotia.ca/en/2024/09/20/province-adopt-2020-national-building-codes
- National Research Council Canada — Illustrated User's Guide, NBC 2020 Part 9 (Division B), Housing and Small Buildings. https://nrc.canada.ca/en/certifications-evaluations-standards/codes-canada/codes-canada-publications/illustrated-users-guide-national-building-code-canada-2020-part-9-division-b-housing-small-buildings
- Government of Nova Scotia — "Province to Adopt 2020 National Building Codes" (tier phase-in schedule). https://news.novascotia.ca/en/2024/09/20/province-adopt-2020-national-building-codes
- Government of Nova Scotia — Building Code Regulations §9.36 (tier dates via the news release above). https://news.novascotia.ca/en/2024/09/20/province-adopt-2020-national-building-codes
- Built Environment Accessibility Standard Regulations, N.S. Reg. 48/2025 (Accessibility Act). https://novascotia.ca/just/regulations/regs/accbuiltenviro.htm
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Accessible / Barrier-Free Entrance Design Guidelines (per National Building Code Section 3.8). https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/home-property/building-renovating/2024.01-barrier-free-entrance-guidelines-v1.03.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Recent changes to planning documents for housing (Housing Accelerator Fund). https://www.halifax.ca/about-halifax/regional-community-planning/housing-accelerator-fund/urgent-changes-planning-0
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Housing Accelerator Fund (program page + Suburban & Rural Fact Sheet, June 2024). https://www.halifax.ca/about-halifax/regional-community-planning/housing-accelerator-fund
- Halifax Regional Municipality Charter (Nova Scotia) + HRM Regional Centre LUB administration. https://nslegislature.ca/sites/default/files/legc/statutes/halifax%20regional%20municipality%20charter.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality — HAF / Timberlea-Lakeside-Beechville SMPS & LUB amendments (June 2024). https://www.halifax.ca/about-halifax/regional-community-planning/housing-accelerator-fund/urgent-changes-planning-0
- Halifax Regional Municipality — HAF Amendments: Permitted Uses, Regional Centre Established Residential Zones (ER Zones Fact Sheet, June 2024). https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/about-the-city/regional-community-planning/er-zones-fact-sheet-june-2024.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality — ER Zones Fact Sheet (June 2024), ER-2 permitted uses. https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/about-the-city/regional-community-planning/er-zones-fact-sheet-june-2024.pdf
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- Halifax Regional Municipality — ER Zones Fact Sheet (June 2024), ER-3 unit yield. https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/about-the-city/regional-community-planning/er-zones-fact-sheet-june-2024.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality — ER Zones Fact Sheet (June 2024), ER-3 height. https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/about-the-city/regional-community-planning/er-zones-fact-sheet-june-2024.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality — ER Zones Fact Sheet (June 2024), ER-3 lot area / townhouse area. https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/about-the-city/regional-community-planning/er-zones-fact-sheet-june-2024.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality — ER Zones Fact Sheet (June 2024), ER-3 lot coverage and frontage. https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/about-the-city/regional-community-planning/er-zones-fact-sheet-june-2024.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality — ER Zones Fact Sheet (June 2024), maximum bedrooms by unit count. https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/about-the-city/regional-community-planning/er-zones-fact-sheet-june-2024.pdf
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- CMHC — ACLP: Standard Rental Housing. https://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/professionals/project-funding-and-mortgage-financing/funding-programs/all-funding-programs/apartment-construction-loan-program/standard-rental-housing
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- Standard Form of Lease Regulations, Clause 14 — Residential Tenancies Act (Nova Scotia). https://novascotia.ca/just/regulations/regs/rtsflease.htm
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- CBC News (Oct 2025), reporting CMHC data — Halifax units under construction. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/halifax-housing-starts-2025-october-9.6994899