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HB 248

Revise the Auditor of State law

136th Legislature (2025-2026) Introduced by David Thomas

Owner-occupied single-family homes with a qualifying home business stay classified as single-family residences and are not reclassified or extra-regulated as live/work or commercia

Referred to committee
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Bill Summary · HB 248

HB 248 — Live/Work Exemption for One‑Family Dwellings (North Carolina)

Status (as provided): Passed first reading; referred to Housing & Development (then Judiciary 1 and Rules). Introduced / First read: February 27, 2025. Sponsor: Representative Roberson (primary).

Purpose / Intent

To ensure that owner‑occupied, single‑family homes that host small, owner‑operated “home businesses” are not reclassified or regulated as live/work, mixed‑use, or commercial occupancies under the North Carolina Building Code solely because of that business activity. The bill aims to reduce building‑code compliance burdens and avoid additional inspections or construction requirements for qualifying home businesses.

Key provisions

  • Definitions

    • “Home business use”: an accessory commercial or professional activity conducted by the owner‑occupant within the dwelling that is incidental to the residence and not leased to a third party.
    • “Owner‑occupied”: at least one record owner lives in the dwelling as primary residence; temporary absences (e.g., military deployment) do not negate status.
    • “Single‑family dwelling”: a residential building containing one dwelling unit, subject to the NC Residential Code.
    • “Live/work unit” (for context): under existing code, a unit with >10% and <50% of space used for nonresidential activity operated by the tenant.
  • Exemption (Section 1.b)

    • Qualifying owner‑occupied, single‑family dwellings with permitted home business uses remain classified and regulated solely as single‑family residences under the North Carolina Residential Code — i.e., they are not treated as live/work, mixed‑use, or commercial occupancies because of the home business.
    • The presence of a qualifying home business shall not: (1) change the dwelling’s classification; (2) create a separate occupancy; or (3) impose any additional building‑code requirements that would not otherwise apply to a single‑family dwelling.
  • Conditions to qualify (Section 1.c)

    • Owner‑occupancy (owner lives in the home).
    • Activity meets the “home business use” definition (owner‑operated, accessory, incidental).
    • The home business is permitted under applicable local zoning and otherwise lawful.
  • Loss of exemption

    • The exemption automatically terminates if any qualifying condition ceases; the dwelling then becomes subject to applicable occupancy classifications and requirements.
  • Preemption and implementation (Section 2)

    • Prohibits counties/municipalities from reclassifying or imposing commercial/live‑work code requirements on qualifying dwellings solely because of the home business.
    • Requires the North Carolina Building Code Council and Residential Code Council to adopt permanent rules aligning the codes with the Act; Section 1 expires when those rules take effect.
    • Rules must be substantively identical to the statutory provisions and are implemented under an expedited rulemaking path specified in the bill.
  • Exceptions / limitations

    • The bill does not restrict local zoning or police power authority (local governments retain land‑use and public‑safety regulation powers).
    • Private covenants, deed restrictions, and HOA rules remain enforceable.
    • Home businesses must still comply with other applicable state/federal laws (licensing, environmental, health/safety).

Who is affected

  • Beneficiaries: owner‑occupants operating small, accessory home businesses (e.g., professional services, artisans) who would otherwise face reclassification under building codes.
  • Government: building inspectors, code enforcement, and Building/Residential Code Councils (required to adopt matching rules).
  • Not affected / protected: local zoning authority retains control over permissible uses; HOAs and private covenants continue to apply; businesses involving hazardous operations remain regulable.

Potential impacts

  • Reduces regulatory and compliance costs for qualifying home business owners by avoiding commercial/live‑work building requirements, additional construction standards, and mandatory reinspection or certificate‑of‑occupancy changes tied solely to owner‑operated home businesses.
  • Clarifies state preemption over local building‑code reclassification in these circumstances, but preserves local zoning and safety regulation.
  • Implementation requires rulemaking by state code councils; the statutory exemption sunsets when the councils’ matching rules become effective.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • Effective date: the bill takes effect upon becoming law and applies to existing and future owner‑occupied single‑family dwellings used for qualifying home businesses.
  • Rulemaking: the Building Code Council and Residential Code Council must adopt permanent, substantively identical rules; the legislative provision governing the exemption expires when those rules become effective.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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