Transfer of Development Rights (TDR) is a zoning tool used to distribute development in an area to the places best suited for development, while letting all property owners recoup the value of development. Within a TDR framework, the owner of land ill-suited for new housing (e.g., where there is a farm or where there are no utilities) could sell development rights to an owner of land more suitable to new housing (e.g., in a developed area with infrastructure access).
Many TDR frameworks establish a “sending zone,” where property owners can sell development rights, and a “receiving zone,” where property owners can buy development rights. In most frameworks, a local government body (like the Planning Board) must approve the sale, and sale is often conditional on the approval of the development itself. In some cases, municipalities will remove the right to actual development in the sending zone, but use TDR to maintain the sending zone landowners’ financial benefits.
In theory conventional zoning and TDR permit the same number of total housing units, just in different places. In practice, TDR can unlock more housing development by moving development capacity from infeasible parcels and parcels with limited infrastructure access to parcels that are more conducive to housing development.
TDR can…