Georgia home builders are set to see faster, more predictable permitting timelines after Gov. Brian Kemp signed legislation into law this week, marking one of the state’s most significant efforts to shred regulatory barriers that choke housing supply.
The measure, effective July 1, imposes firm deadlines on local governments reviewing residential development permits and creates enforcement mechanisms to reduce delays that builders say drive up costs.
Georgia grapples with chronic housing undersupply fueled by years of population growth, particularly in metro Atlanta. An early 2020s surge in ground-up construction did little to curb rising home prices and affordability pressures.
State legislators and governors across the country have tackled housing affordability through zoning reform, often pre-empting local government authority. Texas, Florida and California added so-called shot clocks to speed up permitting processes, which can be a costly and time-consuming entitlement risk for would-be developers.
Georgia lawmakers have now adopted the same approach to accelerate housing construction.
Shaped by the industry trade group the Georgia Residential Land Development Council, the law addresses long-standing concerns about inconsistent timelines and shifting requirements across jurisdictions.
“The GRLDC has more meaningful work planned to remove the unnecessary barriers between home buyers and attainable homes,” Jay Knight, managing member of Templar Development and co-founder and chairman of GRLDC, said in a statement.
Setting up the permitting shot clock
Lawmakers filed the legislation last year as a placeholder to hold hearings after the session ended. Supporters sought a way to shorten permitting timelines that had been lengthened by local government reviews. At a December hearing, Knight said builders sought to obtain permits on already-zoned projects in two months – an erstwhile typical permit cycle – rather than the now-common 15 months.
“Permitting delays don’t just impact builders – they directly impact affordability and the ability to deliver homes at scale,” Knight said in his recent statement. “This legislation creates a clearer path forward.”
Senate Bill 447 sets a 45-day deadline for initial permit reviews, followed by 20 days for a second review and 14 days for subsequent submissions. Jurisdictions must also determine and communicate whether an application is complete within five business days. If officials fail to respond, the application is automatically deemed complete.
The law further limits local governments’ ability to introduce new objections late in the review process. Comments must be tied to existing code standards, and no new questions or challenges are allowed after a second submission.
Beyond deadlines, the law introduces an array of accountability measures. Jurisdictions must provide written explanations for permit denials that cite specific regulations, and builders may receive fee refunds if review deadlines are missed. Local governments must also accept private inspector reports within two business days.
Developers may seek mandamus relief in court if a jurisdiction fails to comply, creating a legal pathway to enforce the timelines. Additionally, the law requires a statewide, public-facing permit tracking dashboard by Jan. 1, 2028, allowing applicants and residents to monitor project status in real time.
The legislation includes a regional carve-out for Paulding County and six surrounding counties. Those jurisdictions are exempt from certain provisions unless voters approve participation through a local referendum.
Reform gains traction, questions remain
The push for permitting reform has gained momentum as lawmakers and industry groups seek ways to boost housing production without large public subsidies. Proponents argue that streamlining approvals can lower development costs and foster increased supply, particularly in fast-growing suburban and exurban areas.
Opposition has come from local governments and environmental groups. They argue that strict timelines could strain staffing, limit oversight and weaken locally-tailored standards.
SB 447 reflects a broader state-level shift toward reducing regulatory hurdles tied to housing construction. How consistently jurisdictions comply with and implement it will determine its impact.