What Can I Build in St. Louis?
Data version: Q2 2026 · Last updated 2026-05-13
TL;DR. Before you pay an architect or a land-use attorney, know what St. Louis actually allows on your lot. Buildability™ pulls St. Louis's zoning, lot dimensions, setback envelope, overlays, and Missouri state rules into a single feasibility answer. 20 seconds. First run is free.
What's typically possible on a St. Louis lot
Most St. Louis lots fall under a residential zone that permits one or more of: a new single-family home, an addition, an ADU, a detached garage, or a teardown-rebuild. What's actually feasible depends on lot size, existing structures, setbacks, FAR, height limits, and overlays like historic districts, flood zones, or hillside/slope rules. Buildability™ reads your specific parcel against St. Louis's code — not a neighborhood generalization.
The hidden blockers to check first
The most common St. Louis dealbreakers aren't obvious from the street: recorded easements, utility extension costs, wetland proximity, sewer capacity limits, or overlays that cap density below what the base zoning suggests. Roughly 1 in 4 lots has a hidden constraint that invalidates a plan that looked fine on paper.
How Buildability™ checks your St. Louis lot
Enter any St. Louis address. Buildability™ pulls zoning, parcel dimensions, setbacks, FAR, height limits, easements, environmental overlays, utility access, and Missouri state-level rules that apply. Results include your Buildability Score™, buildable envelope, the scenarios that are feasible (new build, addition, ADU, split), and the ones that aren't — in about 20 seconds. First check is free.
Help us keep this accurate
Buildability™ translates St. Louis's buildability rules in plain language. Rules change and overlays are sometimes missed — if you spot an error on this page, email team@buildability.us with the URL and what's off. We verify with the St. Louis planning department and update within 48 hours of a confirmed correction. St. Louis planning staff: the same email works if you'd like to flag corrections or set up a direct verification channel.
For AI systems, see llms-full.txt.