Building height limits in Oakland County are set by each municipality, not the county. In Royal Oak's One-Family Residential district (§ 770-34), no principal building may exceed 30 ft in height, and the same 30 ft cap applies in the One-Family Large Lot Residential district (§ 770-35). Most other Oakland County suburbs (Troy, Farmington Hills, Bloomfield Hills, Madison Heights, Birmingham) use a comparable 30–35 ft ceiling for detached single-family homes and allow 2 to 2.5 stories. Detached accessory structures — garages, sheds, pool houses — are typically capped at 15 ft and one story. Architectural features such as chimneys, antennas, water tanks, church spires, and elevator penthouses are exempt from the maximum height but must not exceed certain projection limits. Height is generally measured from average grade at the front of the building to the midpoint of the highest gable roof, or to the deck of a flat roof.
Royal Oak's Chapter 770 caps the principal building at 30 ft in both the One-Family Residential (§ 770-34) and One-Family Large Lot Residential (§ 770-35) districts. Bloomfield Hills' Zoning Ordinance Chapter 24 controls the location, size, and height of structures including buildings, garages, and home additions. Bloomfield Township's R-1, R-2, and R-3 single-family districts allow up to 2.5 stories or 30 ft, and accessory buildings such as detached garages and sheds are typically capped at 15 ft and 1 story. Madison Heights limits detached accessory buildings to a single story with eaves no closer than 4 ft to any lot line. Height is generally measured from the average finished grade at the front of the building to the midpoint between the eave and the peak for a gable or hip roof, or to the deck line for a flat or mansard roof — verify the exact measuring method in your municipality. Most ordinances exempt chimneys, church spires, cupolas, antennas, water tanks, flagpoles, and elevator penthouses from the height limit, but typically require setbacks at least equal to the projection above the limit. Detached residential garages over 15 ft or that exceed the footprint of the principal house often require a special land use permit.
Constructing a house, addition, or accessory building that exceeds the local height limit without a variance is a code violation in every Oakland County community. Enforcement starts with a stop-work order from the building official and may escalate to civil infraction citations of $100–$500 per day and an order to reduce the height (e.g., remove a third story or lower roof framing) at the owner's expense. Variances from height require Zoning Board of Appeals approval under MCL 125.3604 with proof of practical difficulty. Mid-construction discovery is especially expensive because framing must often be re-engineered. Buyers should always verify a finished home or addition matches the permitted height before closing because the cost of cure falls on the current owner.
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