Before a company can build, expand, or occupy a property, it must navigate a maze of local regulations that determine how the land can be used. Two of the most important—and often misunderstood—concepts are zoning and entitlements. While they’re closely related, they serve different purposes in the commercial real estate process, and understanding both can dramatically reduce risk and delay.
At Keyser, our advisors guide space occupiers and tenants through these stages across all property types—office, warehouse, manufacturing, medical, and retail—using data, technology, and local expertise to anticipate issues before they become costly obstacles.
Zoning varies by geography and municipality widely. It defines what can and cannot be built on a parcel of land. Each municipality divides land into districts (e.g., commercial, industrial, medical, or retail), and each district has its own rules for permitted uses, building height, density, parking, and setbacks.
In short, zoning determines how the land can be used. For example:
Understanding these designations early is crucial. Selecting a site with the wrong zoning can lead to major project delays or even make a property unusable for your intended purpose.
Entitlements are the permissions or approvals required to develop a property under its zoning classification. Even if zoning allows your intended use, you may still need entitlements such as:
Entitlements are typically granted by city or county planning departments and often require public hearings or local approvals. The process can take weeks—or months—depending on the complexity of the project and community input.
Zoning tells you what’s possible. Entitlements determine what’s permitted and when.
A site may appear ideal based on zoning, but if entitlements are difficult or uncertain, the project’s timeline and cost can quickly spiral. For companies seeking to move fast, expand operations, or open new facilities, missing these nuances can jeopardize schedules and investment outcomes.
Keyser’s AI-enabled platform helps identify risk factors early—analyzing zoning maps, entitlement timelines, and local precedent—to forecast which sites offer the best balance of flexibility and speed.
Keyser’s project management, site selection, and advisory teams coordinate this process globally, ensuring our clients’ facilities—whether office headquarters, warehouses, manufacturing plants, medical campuses, or retail locations—meet both business and regulatory objectives.
With over 600 professionals worldwide, including international partners, Keyser delivers the full scope of services of any global commercial real estate firm—without conflicts of interest. Our AI-enabled insights and occupier-only model empower clients to make smarter, faster, and safer real estate decisions—wherever they operate.
Understanding the difference between zoning and entitlements isn’t just a planning issue—it’s a strategic advantage. With the right guidance, your next project can move from concept to occupancy with confidence and control.
Q: How can businesses reduce zoning and entitlement risk during site selection or expansion?
A: To minimize entitlement delays and zoning exposure, organizations should:
Conduct zoning and land-use due diligence before committing
Obtain zoning verification and review municipal plans
Model entitlement timelines and political/approval risk
Engage experienced tenant advisors and land-use professionals early
Coordinate with local planning authorities before design and investment decisions
A proactive approach—and the right advisory team—helps secure compliant sites faster, mitigate approval risk, and preserve schedule and budget certainty.