Virginia Beach Planning and Zoning Authority

Virginia Beach's planning and zoning authority governs how land is used, developed, and subdivided across the city's approximately 249 square miles of land area. The framework shapes decisions from large mixed-use developments along the Resort Area corridor to single-family additions in established neighborhoods. Understanding how this authority operates — and where its limits fall — is essential for property owners, developers, and residents navigating land use decisions in Virginia Beach.

Definition and scope

Planning and zoning authority in Virginia Beach derives from state-enabling legislation, specifically Title 15.2 of the Code of Virginia, which grants localities the power to adopt comprehensive plans, enact zoning ordinances, and establish procedures for land use decisions. Virginia Beach exercises this authority through its Department of Planning and Community Development, which administers the Virginia Beach Zoning Ordinance — a locally enacted code that divides the city into districts and prescribes permitted uses, dimensional standards, and development conditions for each.

The scope of this authority encompasses:

Virginia Beach's unique geography — including the Chesapeake Bay, the Atlantic shoreline, and Transition Area agricultural lands — adds regulatory layers beyond standard zoning, including Chesapeake Bay Preservation Area designations under Title 62.1 of the Code of Virginia.

Scope boundary: This page addresses the planning and zoning functions exercised by the City of Virginia Beach. It does not cover planning authority exercised by adjacent independent cities such as Chesapeake or Norfolk, state-level land use decisions made by the Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD), federal jurisdiction over military installations including Naval Air Station Oceana, or wetlands permitting under U.S. Army Corps of Engineers authority. Readers seeking broader regional context can explore resources at /index or review the Hampton Roads Regional Government framework, which addresses multi-jurisdictional planning coordination.

How it works

The Virginia Beach planning and zoning process operates through three primary tracks, each with distinct procedures and decision-makers.

Track 1 — Administrative approval: Applications that meet all applicable standards — such as site plans conforming to existing zoning — are reviewed and approved by city staff without a public hearing. This track handles a large share of routine development activity.

Track 2 — Legislative approval: Requests that require a change in policy — rezonings, conditional use permits, and comprehensive plan amendments — must go before the Planning Commission and City Council. The process follows this sequence:

  1. Pre-application conference with Planning Department staff
  2. Formal application submission with required plans, studies, and fees
  3. Staff review period (typically 45 to 60 days for standard applications)
  4. Planning Commission public hearing and recommendation
  5. City Council public hearing and final vote

City Council holds final legislative authority over rezonings and conditional use permits. The Planning Commission's role is advisory for legislative matters but final for certain subdivision and site plan actions delegated by ordinance.

Track 3 — Quasi-judicial relief: Property owners seeking relief from specific dimensional standards — setbacks, height limits, lot coverage — file variance applications with the Board of Zoning Appeals. The BZA applies a legal standard requiring demonstration of unique hardship, not mere inconvenience. Appeals of administrative zoning interpretations also route through the BZA before reaching Circuit Court.

Common scenarios

Planning and zoning authority in Virginia Beach most frequently comes into play in the following situations:

Decision boundaries

Not all land use decisions rest with Virginia Beach's local planning authority. Distinguishing local jurisdiction from state and federal authority is essential for applicants.

Local authority (Virginia Beach):
- Zoning district classifications and text amendments
- Conditional use permit issuance and conditions
- Subdivision plat approval
- Site plan conformance determinations
- BZA variance and appeal decisions

State authority (outside local control):
- Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code (USBC) compliance, administered by the Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) — local zoning approval does not substitute for building permit compliance
- Wetlands permits in state-regulated tidal wetlands, administered by the Virginia Marine Resources Commission (VMRC)
- State highway access permits for connections to state-maintained roads, issued by the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT)

Federal authority:
- ACUP (Air Installation Compatible Use Zone) restrictions near Naval Air Station Oceana constrain development types and densities in defined noise zones under federal aviation compatibility guidelines. Virginia Beach's zoning ordinance incorporates AICUZ overlay districts to reflect these restrictions, but the underlying federal designation originates with the Department of the Navy.

A rezoning approval from Virginia Beach City Council does not confer VDOT access approval, VMRC wetlands permits, or Army Corps Section 404 permits. Each regulatory layer must be satisfied independently before construction may proceed.

References