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Phoenix · Arcadia

Home Addition in Arcadia

Mid-century citrus-grove pocket between Phoenix and Scottsdale with flood-irrigation lots, horse privileges on some parcels, and renovation demand that sets the top of the Phoenix-metro price band. AskBaily scopes home additions in Arcadia and routes the finished scope to one AZ ROC-licensed Phoenix contractor — not twelve strangers bidding blind off a lead auction.

2026 cost band
$109K–$464K
Arcadia comps, Phoenix-metro baseline × 1.45
Permit + build timeline
16–32 weeks
2-6 week PDD review + construction
Permit authority
City of Phoenix Planning and Development Department
HOA density: low

What a Arcadia home addition actually covers

In Arcadia, a 2026 home addition scope typically covers permitted square-footage addition — bedroom, family room, second-story pop-top, or primary-suite extension — with structural, mechanical, and envelope upgrades that meet 2021 IRC + Phoenix amendments. The Arcadia context adds a second layer: most of arcadia is hoa-free, but salt river project flood-irrigation membership, horse-keeping zoning (r1-35 horse privilege), and camelback-view setback norms all shape what plan-check will accept.

Phoenix PDD runs plan-check through the Phoenix PDD Online portal; the current residential remodel review window is 2-6 weeks for most scopes. Project-specific timelines cluster around 16–32 weeks total elapsed — permit review plus construction. HOA architectural review (where it applies in Arcadia) is independent of the city permit and can add 2-12 weeks on its own track.

Regulatory posture — Arcadia + Phoenix + Arizona

These are the concrete rules that decide whether a Arcadia home addition clears plan-check in 3 weeks or gets bounced for 12.

How a Arcadia home addition actually runs

  1. 1
    Scope + zoning review

    Architect confirms lot coverage, setbacks, and building-height compliance. If any zoning variance is needed, that runs its own 6-12 week path through the Board of Adjustment.

  2. 2
    Structural engineering + permit package

    Structural engineer signs lateral + gravity calcs. Plan-check submits through Phoenix PDD Online — typical residential addition plan-check runs 3-8 weeks.

  3. 3
    HOA + historic review (if applicable)

    HOA architectural review and Phoenix Historic Preservation Office review run in parallel with PDD. Clear both before demolition opens the envelope.

  4. 4
    Foundation + framing

    Footing inspection, slab inspection, framing inspection, sheathing inspection — each on the PDD schedule before the next phase proceeds.

  5. 5
    MEP rough + envelope

    Mechanical, electrical, plumbing rough inspections, then insulation + energy envelope inspection before drywall.

  6. 6
    Final + Certificate of Occupancy supplement

    Phoenix issues a final sign-off for the added square footage. The Maricopa County Assessor eventually re-assesses the parcel for the added improvement value.

Who you’re matched with
License data refresh pending — see board lookup.

AskBaily has no active Phoenix partner GC at launch — the AZ ROC number above is a sample placeholder so the license card renders a real skeleton. Every Arcadia match made after launch is verified against a live Arizona Registrar of Contractors record (active status, bond, complaint history) before scope is routed.

2026 cost bands for Arcadia home additions

Scope tier2026 cost bandTypical timeline
Entry / refresh$109K$174K1621 weeks
Mid-tier$174K$286K2124 weeks
High-end / custom$286K$464K2432 weeks

Bands reflect Phoenix-metro baselines × a 1.45x Arcadia comp multiplier. Custom imports, historic-overlay work, and structural extensions push above the high-end band.

Arcadia home addition — the 5 questions homeowners actually ask

How much does a home addition cost in Arcadia, Phoenix in 2026?

Arcadia home additions typically run $109K–$464K in 2026. The band reflects the Phoenix-metro median shifted by Arcadia comps (1950s ranch, citrus-grove lots (10K–40K sqft), occasional horse property). High-end custom work with imported materials, structural changes, or historic-district review can land above the top of this band.

Do I need a permit for a home addition in Arcadia?

Yes for most scopes. City of Phoenix Planning and Development Department requires a permit whenever the work moves plumbing, electrical, gas, or load-bearing structure. Phoenix residential zoning districts set lot-coverage, setback (front, side, rear), and building-height caps — an addition that pushes any of these typically requires a zoning variance or Board of Adjustment hearing before PDD will issue the permit. Review the Phoenix PDD Online portal for the specific submittal package.

How long does a Arcadia home addition take from permit to final?

Plan on 16-32 weeks total elapsed time in Arcadia — roughly 2-6 weeks for permit review at Phoenix PDD, then the construction phase. HOA architectural review (where applicable in Arcadia) runs in parallel and can add 2-12 weeks independently.

Does Arcadia have HOA or historic review on top of the city permit?

Most of Arcadia is HOA-free, but Salt River Project flood-irrigation membership, horse-keeping zoning (R1-35 horse privilege), and Camelback-view setback norms all shape what plan-check will accept. Salt River Project flood-irrigation infrastructure runs through many Arcadia lots — any kitchen-addition footing that crosses an SRP irrigation ditch or head-gate triggers SRP easement review alongside the city permit.

What contractor license is required for a home addition in Phoenix?

Arizona requires an AZ ROC (Registrar of Contractors) license for any residential work over $1,000. For a home addition, the correct class is typically B-2 (Residential General Contractor) for kitchen, bath, and overall project coordination. Every AskBaily Phoenix match is verified against active ROC status, bond, and complaint history before scope is routed.

Talk to Baily about your Arcadia home addition

Start a scoping conversation. Baily pulls in Arcadia-specific zoning, HOA posture, permit timeline, and the AZ ROC license-class requirement so the scope you hand to a contractor is complete before the first bid ever gets priced.

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