zoning code

What N2 zoning means for your Ottawa property

N2 is Neighbourhood Zone 2 in Ottawa's new zoning by-law. It permits low-rise buildings up to 3 storeys with up to 6 units per building. Subzone letters A through F (for example N2A or N2C) tune lot width and setbacks from most urban to most suburban. Run your address through Zoned to see your exact zone, setbacks, and buildable envelope.

What this page helps answer

What does N2 usually mean in practical terms?

Built for lot-first screening before the project gets expensive.

Which project paths deserve deeper review on lots like this?

Built for lot-first screening before the project gets expensive.

What should I open next after understanding the zone label?

Built for lot-first screening before the project gets expensive.

N2 at a glance under By-law 2026-50

  • Official name: Neighbourhood Zone 2
  • Height: up to 3 storeys (11 m)
  • low-rise housing with up to 6 units per building.
  • Subzone letters A to F set lot width and yard patterns, A most urban, F most suburban
Figures follow Part 8 of By-law 2026-50 as published by the City of Ottawa. During the transition, permits are checked against both the new by-law and By-law 2008-250, and the most restrictive provision governs.

What to check before planning a project on a N2 lot

  • Your exact subzone letter, which sets lot width and yard setbacks
  • Overlays and exceptions that can change the base rules on your street
  • How the transition to By-law 2026-50 interacts with the legacy 2008-250 zone on your parcel

Local context for this search

N2 appears in low-rise neighbourhoods with room for up to 6 units per building. Zoned helps interpret this context for practical project-start planning rather than abstract code reading.

Typical scenario

Typical scenario: a homeowner or investor sees N2 in zoning records and asks what can be built next. Early clarity avoids misaligned design expectations.

Practical checkpoints

Validate N2 zone assumptions before finalizing project scope
Review A-F-pattern lot behavior with setback-aware thinking
Use lot-specific constraints to guide contractor and permit sequencing

Zone label vs planning workflow

The zone label matters, but only when it is connected to the real project question and the real lot.

TopicCommon search result / sourceZoned approach
What the label gives youA technical zoning category.A better explanation of what that category means for the project idea you actually care about.
Best next moveRead more code in isolation.Move into the matching project or service page while the lot context is still in view.

Frequently asked questions

What does N2 mean for Ottawa planning?

It points to a zoning framework, but the real answer still depends on the lot, project type, and buildability assumptions being tested.

Can I use N2 to decide whether an addition, detached unit, or multiplex is feasible?

Yes as a starting point, but the lot and project-specific constraints still need to be interpreted together.

Why not stop at the zone label?

Because the label alone rarely answers the real question users care about: what can I do on this lot next?

Coverage

Zoned across Canada

Zoning intelligence and buildability screening are rolling out city by city. The list below stays live as new markets come online.

See the service-area map
Live
  • Ottawa
Beta
  • Toronto
Coming soon
  • Montreal
  • Vancouver
  • Calgary
  • Edmonton
  • Winnipeg
  • Regina
  • Saskatoon
  • Halifax
  • Quebec City
  • St. John's
  • Fredericton
  • Charlottetown
  • Whitehorse
  • Yellowknife
  • Iqaluit