In real life, an accessory dwelling unit (ADU) allows an adult child, niece, nephew, or caregiver to live on the same property—close enough to help with daily needs, emergencies, transportation, and companionship, yet separate enough that everyone keeps their own space. Independence and dignity are preserved, and no one feels like a burden. This is especially meaningful in Southwest Florida, where many homeowners are aging in place, family often lives out of state, and healthcare and caregiving costs continue to rise. An ADU allows families to reunite physically without merging households.
With an ADU, parents can remain in their primary home while family is present but not intrusive. Each household maintains its own entrance, its own kitchen, and its own rhythm of life. It’s support without surrender—connection without compromise.
What makes this arrangement especially powerful is its flexibility over time. Today, the ADU may house a family member. Later, it can serve as caregiver housing. Eventually, if no longer needed for family, it can become a source of rental income. The structure adapts as life changes, allowing homeowners to plan calmly and proactively rather than reacting under pressure or in crisis.
Not all returns are financial. For many homeowners, the true value lies in peace of mind, family closeness, reduced reliance on institutions, and the ability to age with grace, familiarity, and choice. SB 48 doesn’t force density—it allows families to take care of their own, in their own way, on their own property.
At its core, this isn’t about development or policy. It’s about responsibility, family, stewardship, and preparing wisely for the later chapters of life. The ability to welcome family onto the same property—without giving up independence—may be the most enduring benefit of all.
Below is a summary of the main points and advantages:
The Main Positives for a Southwest Florida Homeowner-Turned-Landlord
1. You Gain a New “Right” — Not a Favor From City Hall
The single biggest shift is certainty.
For decades, a homeowner had to:
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Ask permission
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Sit through hearings
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Risk denial due to neighbor pressure or politics
Under SB 48 (if passed as written):
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ADUs become a by-right use
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Approval becomes administrative, not political
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If your plans meet code, they must be approved
What this means practically:
You can plan, budget, and move forward with confidence instead of crossing your fingers.
2. You Control Your Property’s Income Potential
Your home stops being a single-purpose asset.
With an ADU:
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Your lot can legally support two income streams
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You decide:
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Long-term tenant
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Mid-term furnished rental
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Family housing now, rental later
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This is especially powerful in SWFL where:
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Demand for 3–6 month housing is constant
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Seasonal workers and relocations are normal
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Insurance displacement creates steady mid-term demand
You’re no longer locked into “one house, one household, one check.”
3. You Can Offset Your Biggest Monthly Expenses
For owner-occupants, the math is often transformative.
ADU income can help cover:
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Mortgage
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Property taxes
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Insurance (a major Florida pain point)
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Maintenance reserves
Even conservative rents:
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Reduce personal housing costs
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Improve long-term affordability
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Create breathing room during market shifts
This is financial resilience, not speculation.
4. You Keep Your Homestead Protection
This is a huge homeowner win that gets overlooked.
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Your main residence remains homesteaded
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Save Our Homes cap stays in place
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Only the ADU portion is assessed separately
Translation:
You can add income without giving up one of Florida’s strongest homeowner tax protections.
5. You Are No Longer Forced to Live On-Site Forever
SB 48 removes mandatory owner-occupancy rules.
Why this matters for homeowners:
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You can live in the main house now, rent later
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You can move and keep the property as an income asset
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Life changes don’t kill the business model
This flexibility lets your home evolve with your life, not trap you.
6. Financing Becomes Easier for Regular People
The 2026 lending changes matter more to homeowners than investors.
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A portion of ADU rent can count toward loan qualification
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This helps:
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First-time buyers
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Move-up buyers
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House hackers
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It reduces dependence on high incomes alone
In plain terms:
Your property helps qualify you for itself.
7. You Can Build Wealth Without Buying Another Property
In Southwest Florida:
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Prices are high
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Inventory is tight
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Insurance and rates are volatile
ADUs let homeowners:
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Add value without competing in the open market
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Avoid commercial loans
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Avoid buying multi-family property
This is wealth creation inside an asset you already own and understand.
8. You Maintain Control Over Who Lives There
Unlike selling or condo conversions:
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You choose tenants
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You control lease terms
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You decide whether it’s furnished or unfurnished
This preserves:
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Neighborhood stability
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Personal comfort
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Long-term optionality
It’s entrepreneurial — but still personal.
9. You Create a Built-In Exit Strategy
An ADU gives your home more futures, not fewer:
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Rental income property
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Multigenerational living
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Caregiver or family housing
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Higher resale appeal to flexible buyers
In uncertain markets, flexibility = value.
Bottom Line (Homeowner Lens)
From a homeowner’s perspective, SB 48:
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Reduces bureaucracy
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Increases certainty
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Expands financial options
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Preserves core homeowner protections
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Turns passive ownership into optional entrepreneurship
It doesn’t force anyone to become a landlord —
It simply stops the government from blocking those who choose to.
Please contact me for insight into the current SWFL real estate market, and reliable assistance in formulating and realizing your real estate goals.
In touch,
Timothy Steeves, PA
Coldwell Banker
239.898.5572
tim.steeves@cbrealty.com