Halifax's Four-Unit Zoning Rules, Explained: What By-Right Density Means for a Lot
In June 2024, Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM) changed the math on what an ordinary residential lot can hold. Under planning amendments tied to the federal Housing Accelerator Fund (HAF), a minimum of four dwelling units is now permitted as-of-right on every centrally serviced residential lot in the municipality — no rezoning, no public hearing, no development agreement required to reach that threshold [1][2].
That is a structural shift, not a cosmetic one. For decades, much of HRM's low-density residential land was effectively capped at one or two units without a discretionary planning process. The HAF amendments collapsed that barrier for the four-unit case. This article explains what the rule actually says, where it applies, what "as-of-right" means in practice, and how a development firm reads what a given parcel can realistically support.
All regulatory facts below are current as of 2026-06-22 and cite primary government sources. Always confirm site-specific requirements against the applicable Land Use By-law and with HRM planning staff before relying on any figure.
What the four-unit rule actually says
The core of the change is precise. HRM's HAF "urgent" planning amendments — approved by Regional Council at second reading on May 23, 2024 following a May 21–23 public hearing — took legal effect on June 13, 2024, the date the municipality received provincial approval [1]. As of that date, up to four dwelling units per lot are permitted as-of-right in all residential zones within HRM's existing serviced (central water and wastewater) areas [2].
Two qualifiers matter:
- "Centrally serviced" is the gating condition. The four-unit allowance applies to lots connected to (or eligible for) central municipal water and wastewater. The amendments achieved this outside the Regional Centre by reworking the low-density R-1 and R-2 zones, which had previously constrained those areas to one or two units [2]. A lot on a private well and septic system is not automatically swept into this rule.
- There is a deliberate exclusion. The four-unit and new multi-unit (R-4) allowance in HRM's Urban Service Area was carved out for the African Nova Scotian Beechville Community, which the municipality intentionally excluded from the upzoning [3]. This is a named, primary-sourced exception — not a rounding error — and it underlines why parcel-level verification matters before assuming the rule applies.
So the headline is accurate and important: four units, by-right, on most serviced residential lots. But the boundary conditions — servicing status and the Beechville exclusion — are exactly the kind of detail that separates a feasible plan from a stalled one.
"Up to eight" is a Regional Centre story, not a citywide one
A common shorthand says Halifax now allows "four units on a lot, or up to eight in the urban core." The eight-unit figure is real, but it belongs to a specific zone in the Regional Centre, and it is governed by lot size — not granted automatically.
The June 2024 HAF amendments reshaped the Regional Centre's Established Residential (ER) zones [4]:
- ER-1 is the lowest-density established residential zone. The former ER-1 — which had limited much of the Regional Centre to single-unit dwellings — was largely replaced by ER-2 and ER-3. Where ER-1 remains, it does not permit townhouse or small-apartment forms [4].
- ER-2 permits single-, two-, and three-unit dwellings (up to a triplex) as-of-right, and removed the previous unit cap where the existing built form is retained [4].
- ER-3 is the zone that produces the "up to eight" number. It permits up to eight dwelling units per lot as-of-right, lot-size dependent — including four-unit dwellings, low-rise multi-unit dwellings of five to eight units, and townhouses to a maximum of eight units [4].
Crucially, the eight-unit ceiling in ER-3 is not a flat entitlement. In ER-3, the minimum lot area for a 1–4 unit dwelling is 325 square metres; townhouse units require less area per unit (roughly 185 m² for interior units with 6.1 m frontage, ~245 m² for end units with 9.1 m frontage); and unit yield scales upward with available lot area toward the eight-unit maximum [5]. Built form is also bounded: ER-3 carries a maximum building height of 11 metres as-of-right, with an additional 3-metre exemption for a pitched roof or attic unit (so up to roughly 14 metres for a sloped roof) [6].
The practical reading: the difference between a four-unit and an eight-unit outcome on an ER-3 lot is usually decided by square metres of land, frontage, and the built-form envelope — not by ambition. Reading a parcel correctly means checking its zone, its area, its frontage, and the height envelope before assuming a unit count.
What "as-of-right" means — and where it stops
"As-of-right" (also called "by-right") is a specific legal status, and it is the source of most of the value in these amendments. A development that is as-of-right complies with all applicable Land Use By-law requirements and can proceed via a development permit without discretionary approval [7]. There is no rezoning, no development agreement, and no Council vote in the path.
It is worth being precise about the gradations, because they determine timeline and risk:
- As-of-right / by-permit: The proposal meets every by-law standard. It moves to a development permit and then a building permit. This is the fast lane the four-unit rule opens up [7].
- Variance: A minor relaxation of a specific by-law standard — for example, a setback or lot-coverage adjustment — granted by the development officer under the Halifax Regional Municipality Charter [7]. Still administrative, but discretionary at the margin.
- Development agreement or rezoning: Required for larger departures from the by-law, and these go to Council [7].
The four-unit allowance lives in the first bucket. That is what makes it consequential: a compliant four-unit project does not have to win a discretionary approval to exist. But "as-of-right" is a compliance test, not a blank cheque. Every dimensional standard in the applicable by-law — minimum lot area, frontage, height, setbacks, lot coverage — still has to be satisfied, and those standards are zone-specific. There is no single HRM-wide minimum lot size; the figures are set in each Land Use By-law [8].
The lot is the unit of analysis
Because servicing status, zone, lot area, and frontage all bear on the result, the honest answer to "how many units can I build here?" is parcel-specific. From a development-firm perspective, that is exactly the question worth computing before any design work begins. The inputs are knowable:
- Servicing: Is the lot on central water and wastewater (the precondition for the four-unit rule outside the Regional Centre)? [2]
- Zone: Is it a serviced residential zone (four units by-right), or a Regional Centre ER-2 (up to three) or ER-3 (up to eight, lot-size dependent)? [4]
- Lot area and frontage: Do they clear the zone's minimums for the unit count you have in mind — e.g., ER-3's 325 m² floor for 1–4 units, scaling upward for more? [5]
- Built-form envelope: Does the height limit (11 m + a 3 m pitched-roof exemption in ER-3) and the setback/coverage envelope accommodate the form you want? [6]
- Exclusions and overlays: Is the lot inside an excluded area such as Beechville, or subject to heritage, floodplain, or other overlays that add requirements? [3]
None of these inputs are subjective. What a parcel can support under the current by-law is computable from public planning data. The value is in computing it correctly — and in being candid about the boundary cases (servicing gaps, undersized lots, named exclusions) rather than assuming the four-unit headline applies everywhere.
Building code and permits don't disappear
Skipping rezoning is not the same as skipping construction approvals. A by-right four-unit project still moves through the building-permit and inspection process, and the standards there have also moved recently.
Since April 1, 2025, Nova Scotia's building regulation adopts the National Building Code of Canada 2020 (along with the 2020 national energy and plumbing codes), in force under N.S. Reg. 198/2024 [9]. The province is phasing in tiered requirements: building-code Tier 2 takes effect April 1, 2026, with further energy tiers following [9]. For small residential projects, the dividing line between the simpler Part 9 path and the more demanding Part 3 path matters: a building qualifies for Part 9 ("Housing and Small Buildings") only if it is 3 storeys or fewer AND has a building area of not more than 600 m² AND is not an excluded occupancy — exceed either size threshold and it becomes a Part 3 building [10]. Most four-unit-on-a-lot forms sit comfortably inside Part 9, but a larger ER-3 eight-unit building can approach those limits.
On the municipal side, 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 at or above average finished grade, with lower rates below grade — subject to a $31.25 minimum (effective April 1, 2024) [11]. The building code itself is provincial law, but permits, inspections, and occupancy permits are administered and enforced at the municipal level, which is why fees and processing differ between, say, HRM and a smaller town [12]. There is no province-wide statutory deadline for permit review; HRM residential reviews are commonly described by practitioners as roughly four to eight weeks, and multi-unit work as several months, but those are estimates dependent on application completeness, not legislated maximums [11].
Why the four-unit rule still pays off
Even with code and permitting intact, the economic logic of by-right density is straightforward: more rentable units on the same land, reached without the time and uncertainty of a discretionary approval. The federal tax environment reinforces it. Qualifying new purpose-built rental housing is eligible for a GST/HST Purpose-Built Rental Housing rebate that refunds 100% of the federal (5%) part of HST, up to $35,000 per unit, with Nova Scotia mirroring that with a 100% rebate of the provincial (9%) part [13][14] — and Nova Scotia's HST rate itself dropped to 14% effective April 1, 2025 [15]. (These rebates have eligibility conditions; the PBRH rebate applies to qualifying purpose-built rental, not to every project shape.)
The point is not a pro-forma — pricing depends on land, design, code tier, and market, and is not something to assert in the abstract. The point is that the regulatory change widened the set of feasible outcomes on a given lot, and the tax framework is currently favourable to purpose-built rental. Both are conditions a parcel-level feasibility analysis can weigh precisely.
The takeaway
Halifax's four-unit rule is one of the most significant by-right density changes the municipality has made. The accurate version of the story is: up to four units, as-of-right, on most centrally serviced residential lots since June 13, 2024 — with a higher ceiling of up to eight in the Regional Centre's ER-3 zone, gated by lot size and built form, and with named exclusions like Beechville. As-of-right removes the discretionary approval, not the by-law standards or the building code.
What a specific lot can actually support is a computable question, not a guess. That is the work worth doing first: read the parcel — its servicing, zone, area, frontage, and envelope — against the current by-law, and let the data say what's possible before anyone draws a plan.
Sources
- 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 (HAF) program page + Suburban & Rural Fact Sheet (June 2024). https://www.halifax.ca/about-halifax/regional-community-planning/housing-accelerator-fund
- 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 (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) / Regional Centre Land Use By-law. https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/about-the-city/regional-community-planning/er-zones-fact-sheet-june-2024.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality — HAF Amendments / ER Zones Fact Sheet (June 2024) + Regional Centre Land Use By-law. https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/about-the-city/regional-community-planning/er-zones-fact-sheet-june-2024.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality Charter (Nova Scotia) + HRM Regional Centre Land Use By-law administration. https://nslegislature.ca/sites/default/files/legc/statutes/halifax%20regional%20municipality%20charter.pdf
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Community Plan Areas / Land Use By-laws. https://www.halifax.ca/about-halifax/regional-community-planning/community-plan-areas
- Government of Nova Scotia News Release, "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). 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
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Permit Fees (License, Permit and Processing Fees Administrative Order #15). https://www.halifax.ca/home-property/building-development-permits/permit-fees
- Halifax Regional Municipality — Building code & regulatory information. https://www.halifax.ca/home-property/building-development-permits/building-code-regulatory-information
- Canada Revenue Agency — GST/HST Purpose-Built Rental Housing (PBRH) Rebate. https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/businesses/topics/gst-hst-businesses/gst-hst-rebates/purpose-built-rental-housing.html
- Government of Nova Scotia, Department of Finance — Purpose-Built Rental Housing Rebate. https://novascotia.ca/finance/en/home/taxation/tax101/harmonizedsalestax/purpose-built-rental-housing-rebate.html
- Canada Revenue Agency — GST/HST Notice 342 (Nova Scotia HST Rate Decrease). https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/publications/notice342/nova-scotia-hst-rate-decrease-questions-answers-general-transitional-rules-personal-property-services.html