2026 Update
Unlike California — which has the CalHFA ADU Grant ($40,000 directly to homeowners) — Washington State does not yet have a dedicated ADU construction grant. However, a combination of federal tax credits, utility rebates, and local programs can reduce your net project cost by $25,000–$45,000+ on a typical Seattle DADU. This guide maps every available incentive as of June 2026.
Federal Tax Credits
Up to $17,200+
IRA §25C + §25D combined
Utility Rebates
Up to $3,700
PSE or Seattle City Light
Design Savings
$5K–$20K
Pre-approved DADU plans
Building an ADU in Seattle is expensive — detached ADUs start at $450,000, and that number climbs fast with site conditions and utility connections. But intentional use of available incentive programs can meaningfully offset that cost. The key is knowing where each dollar of savings comes from and which programs can be layered together.
Below we cover four tiers of incentives: federal tax credits (the largest bucket), utility rebates from PSE and Seattle City Light, Seattle and King County programs, and Washington State WSHFC loan programs. We end with a stacking strategy that shows how a single project can capture all four.
Tier 1
Federal Tax Credits (Inflation Reduction Act)
The 2022 Inflation Reduction Act extended and expanded residential energy tax credits through 2032. These are non-refundable credits that reduce your federal tax liability dollar-for-dollar — and they apply to improvements on your primary residence, which includes both your main home and an ADU being built on the same parcel.
Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (§25C)
Up to $3,200/yr
30% of cost for qualifying improvements: heat pumps, heat pump water heaters, insulation, air sealing, electrical panel upgrades. Applies to both main home and ADU construction costs when installed as part of the new unit. No income limit.
Residential Clean Energy Credit (§25D)
30% of cost
30% of the cost of solar panels, battery storage (≥3 kWh), and solar water heaters installed on your property — including on an ADU structure. No cap on credit amount. Credit carries forward if it exceeds your tax liability.
High-Efficiency Electric Home Rebate Act (HEEHRA)
Up to $14,000
Point-of-sale rebates for low-to-moderate income households: up to $8,000 for a heat pump HVAC, $1,750 for heat pump water heater, $4,000 for electrical panel upgrades. Administered through utility companies — check PSE and Seattle City Light availability.
Tier 2
Utility Rebates: PSE & Seattle City Light
Your electric utility offers rebates for energy-efficient equipment installed in new construction — including ADUs. These are paid directly to you (or your contractor) after installation and don't require tax liability to capture. They stack on top of the federal §25C credits.
Puget Sound Energy (PSE)
Heat Pump Rebate
$400–$1,200Per qualifying air-source heat pump installed as primary HVAC in ADU.
Heat Pump Water Heater
$400Per qualifying ENERGY STAR heat pump water heater.
Insulation Rebate
$0.10–$0.40/sq ftFor attic, wall, and floor insulation meeting R-value requirements.
Smart Thermostat
$50Per qualifying smart thermostat for heat pump systems.
PSE serves most unincorporated King County and some eastside cities.
Seattle City Light
Heat Pump HVAC
Up to $1,500For qualifying heat pump systems replacing electric resistance or gas heating.
Heat Pump Water Heater
Up to $500ENERGY STAR certified heat pump water heaters.
EV Charger (Level 2)
Up to $500For Level 2 EV charging station installation — useful for ADU with dedicated parking.
Seattle City Light serves the City of Seattle. Check current program availability at seattle.gov/city-light.
Tier 3
Seattle & King County Programs
Seattle has invested in ADU-friendly policies and programs. The most significant savings opportunity is the pre-approved plan library — it's often overlooked but offers some of the fastest ROI available to Seattle ADU builders.
Seattle DCI
Pre-Approved ADU Plans
Seattle's Department of Construction & Inspections maintains a library of pre-approved DADU floor plans. Using a pre-approved plan eliminates the architectural review step, cutting permit timeline and design fees significantly. Plans range from 300 to 1,000 sq ft.
Seattle Office of Housing
HomeWise Weatherization
Free energy efficiency improvements (insulation, weather stripping, HVAC tune-ups) for owner-occupied single-family homes. Income limits apply (typically ≤80% AMI). While not ADU-specific, qualifying improvements to the main house can free up capital for ADU construction.
Seattle Office of Housing
Seattle Affordable Housing Levy Loans
Seattle's voter-approved housing levy funds programs that include below-market financing for homeowners willing to rent their ADU at affordable rates. Typically targets ≤80% AMI tenants. Terms vary by program cycle — check Seattle Office of Housing for current availability.
Tier 4
Washington State Housing Finance Commission
The WSHFC doesn't offer ADU-specific grants, but its homeownership programs reduce the cost of acquiring and financing a property — freeing equity that can be leveraged for ADU construction. These programs are most valuable when you're early in the process.
House Key Opportunity
First-time homebuyer program offering below-market interest rates plus a 3–5% down payment assistance second mortgage. While not ADU-specific, it makes homeownership accessible for buyers who then plan to add an ADU — starting the equity-building cycle sooner.
Eligibility: First-time buyers; income and purchase price limits apply
HomeChoice Program
Down payment assistance for borrowers with disabilities or who have a family member with a disability. A multigenerational ADU for a disabled family member would qualify under this program's intended use case.
Eligibility: Borrower or household member with a documented disability
EnergySpark Loan Program
Below-market rate mortgage for homes that are 10% more energy efficient than code — or refinances for energy-efficient upgrades. A newly built DADU meeting advanced energy standards could trigger EnergySpark eligibility on the whole property.
Eligibility: Must demonstrate 10%+ energy efficiency above code baseline
Alternative Financing
CDFIs & Mission-Driven Lenders
Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) and mission-driven lenders sometimes offer below-market construction financing for ADU projects, particularly in underserved Seattle neighborhoods. These are not grants — they're loans — but at rates that can beat conventional lenders by 1–3%.
Impact Capital (formerly Community Reinvestment Fund)
Mission-driven lending for homeowners in underserved communities
Flexible construction lending for small residential projects including ADUs, particularly in South Seattle, Rainier Valley, and Beacon Hill.
Rainier Valley Community Development Fund
Affordable housing and small-business loans in Southeast Seattle
Below-market loans for homeowners in the Rainier Valley, Columbia City, and Hillman City corridors — areas where ADU rental income can meaningfully offset housing costs.
BECU (Boeing Employees Credit Union)
Competitive HELOC and home equity loans
BECU frequently offers the lowest HELOC rates among Seattle-area lenders. Members can access home equity for ADU construction at rates typically 1–1.5% below major bank competitors.
Strategy
How to Stack Incentives on a Single Project
Here's a realistic stacking scenario for a $520,000 DADU project in Seattle using a pre-approved plan, all-electric design, and available rebates:
Use a pre-approved DADU plan
−$12,000Eliminates custom architectural drawings. Seattle DCI pre-approved plans are code-compliant and save 4–6 weeks of design review.
Install heat pump HVAC + heat pump water heater
−$4,800§25C credit at 30%: $3,200 (annual cap). PSE rebate: $1,200. Combo saves ~$4,800 net vs. standard gas/electric resistance systems.
Add rooftop solar (5 kW system)
−$6,000§25D credit at 30% of ~$20,000 = $6,000 federal credit. No annual cap. Carries forward if it exceeds year-1 tax liability.
Add R-60 attic insulation + air sealing
−$900§25C credit: $1,200 cap for insulation; PSE rebate: additional $500. Combined net saving varies by scope.
Finance via BECU HELOC at prime − 0.25%
~$3,000+/yrCredit union HELOC rates frequently beat major bank rates by 1–1.5%, reducing annual interest on a $200K draw by $2,000–$3,000.
Total Estimated Savings
$23,700+
Against a $520,000 base project cost — a ~4.6% effective cost reduction through incentive stacking, before financing cost savings. Higher if you add HEEHRA rebates (income-qualified) or additional solar capacity.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a Washington State ADU grant like California's CalHFA program?
No — as of 2026, Washington State does not have a direct ADU construction grant equivalent to California's CalHFA ADU Grant Program. However, Washington homeowners can stack federal tax credits (§25C, §25D), utility rebates from PSE or Seattle City Light, and below-market WSHFC loan programs to meaningfully reduce net project cost.
Can I use the Inflation Reduction Act tax credits for a detached ADU?
Yes. The §25C energy efficiency credit and §25D clean energy credit apply to improvements at your primary residence. If you own and occupy the property where the DADU is built, you can claim these credits for qualifying heat pumps, solar panels, insulation, and electrical upgrades installed in or for the ADU structure. Consult a tax advisor to confirm your specific situation.
Do any programs reduce ADU permit fees in Seattle?
Seattle DCI's pre-approved ADU plan program doesn't eliminate permit fees, but it significantly reduces design costs by providing code-compliant architectural drawings at no charge. Seattle also periodically waives or reduces system development charges (SDCs) for affordable ADUs — check with DCI at the time of permit application.
Are there income limits on energy efficiency rebates for ADUs?
It depends on the program. PSE and Seattle City Light's standard rebates have no income limits — they're available to any customer. HEEHRA rebates (the federal point-of-sale program) are limited to households at ≤150% of Area Median Income. Seattle's HomeWise weatherization program targets ≤80% AMI.
How do I stack multiple programs to maximize savings?
The most common stack: (1) Use a pre-approved DADU plan to cut design costs by $5K–$20K. (2) Install a heat pump HVAC and water heater to qualify for §25C credit (30% of cost, up to $3,200/yr) plus PSE or City Light rebates ($400–$1,500). (3) Add solar to claim the §25D credit (30%, no cap). (4) Finance the project via a HELOC from BECU or a WSHFC-affiliated lender for the best rate. A well-stacked project can cut net out-of-pocket by $25,000–$40,000 on a $500,000 DADU.
Related Resources
Information current as of June 2026. Tax credit rules, rebate amounts, and program availability are subject to change. Verify current terms with the relevant agency or a qualified tax professional before making financial decisions.
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