Saint Paul Minnesota Zoning Map

The Zoning Map for the City of Saint Paul in Minnesota divides the city’s real estate into zones based on land use and building regulations.

The Zoning Ordinance divides the city based on zoning, land use and building regulations information.

Use Zoneomics, to search for real estate records and find the precise property data you need.

The Property data comprises Zoning information by aggregating:

  • Municipal zoning mapping
  • Code & Ordinance Records
  • Related Data e.g. permitted uses, maximum building height, maximum floor area ratio etc.

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Quick Stats: Saint Paul’s Most Common Zones

One Family Residential - R4

#1

20.68% Land Coverage

14,846 Area

One Family Residential - R3

#2

13.49% Land Coverage

9,686 Area

One Family Residential - R1

#3

12.45% Land Coverage

8,942 Area

Two Family Residential - RT1

#4

9.76% Land Coverage

7,010 Area

Light Industrial - I1

#5

9.16% Land Coverage

6,575 Area

Popular Zoning Searches Around Saint Paul

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Saint Paul, Minnesota Zoning Districts Explained

Zoneomics operates the most comprehensive zoning database for Saint Paul Minnesota and other zoning maps across the U.S. Zoneomics includes over 50 million real estate properties, each property features zoning code/district, permitted land uses, development standards, rezoning and variance data. Zoneomics attracts a large community of Minnesota real estate professionals. Members from Minnesota include brokers, investors and service providers, many of whom specialize in Minnesota Real Estate.

Zone Code Zone Name
B1 Local Business
B2 Community Business
B3 General Business
B4 Central Business
B5 Central Business Service
BC Community Business Converted
CA Capitol Area Jurisdiction
F1 Ford River Residential
F2 Ford Residential Mixed Low District
F3 Ford Residential Mixed Mid District
F4 Ford Residential Mixed High District
F5 Ford Business Mixed District
F6 Ford Gateway District
I1 Light Industrial
I2 General Industrial
I3 Heavy Industrial
ITM Industrial Transitional Master Plan
IT Transitional Industrial
OS Office Service
PD Planned Development
R1 One Family Residential
R2 One Family Residential
R3 One Family Residential
R4 One Family Residential
RL One Family Large Lot Residential
RM1 Low Density Multiple Family Residential
RM2 Medium Density Multiple Family Residential
RM3 High Density Multiple Family Residential
RT1 Two Family Residential
RT2 Townhouse Residential
T1 Traditional Neighborhood
T2 Traditional Neighborhood
T3M Traditional Neighborhood Master Plan
T3 Traditional Neighborhood
T4M Traditional Neighborhood Master Plan
T4 Traditional Neighborhood
VP Vehicular Parking

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What is Zoning?

Zoning codes are a century old, and the lifeblood of all major U.S. cities, determining what can be built where and what activities can take place in a neighborhood. Zoning is how cities control the development and use of land. Zoning defines the legally permitted and prohibited uses of a piece of land, determining if plot of land can be used for commercial, industrial, residential or agricultural purposes. Essentially, it determines what can and cannot be built on a property.

Zoning and Real Estate Values

Zoning is the first stage of the home life cycle and a key influence on all other stages. Zillow has identified that zoning regulations are so important that they impact home values. Zillow Research found that home values grew most in markets with the strictest land use regulations. Home values in the most restrictive metropolitan areas grew an average of 23.4%, more than double the home value appreciation in the least restrictive metros. Zoning regulations are determined locally and some cities can have more restrictive regulation systems than others. However, within a city’s zoning system individual zones can be more restrictive and less restrictive, including different single family zones.

Zoneomics has the largest breadth of zoning data coverage with over— 20 zoning related insights for you to integrate and expand your database. Including permitted land uses, rezonings, variances, density controls, built form controls, envelopes, housing supply data, employment generation, underutilized parcels, short term rental permissibility, proponents and developers

* For address where we don't require manual effort would have zone report for $29.95 and deliver instantly and where manual effort is required, the price for report would be $59.95 and it would be delivered in 24 hours.