ℹ️ Skipped - page is already crawled
| Filter | Status | Condition | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| HTTP status | PASS | download_http_code = 200 | HTTP 200 |
| Age cutoff | PASS | download_stamp > now() - 6 MONTH | 0 months ago |
| History drop | PASS | isNull(history_drop_reason) | No drop reason |
| Spam/ban | PASS | fh_dont_index != 1 AND ml_spam_score = 0 | ml_spam_score=0 |
| Canonical | PASS | meta_canonical IS NULL OR = '' OR = src_unparsed | Not set |
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| URL | https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/policy-brief-minimum-lot-size |
| Last Crawled | 2026-04-09 22:59:36 (2 hours ago) |
| First Indexed | 2024-12-18 18:49:53 (1 year ago) |
| HTTP Status Code | 200 |
| Meta Title | Policy Brief #3: Minimum Lot Size — Housing Hawai‘i's Future |
| Meta Description | Minimum lot size is a zoning regulation that sets the minimum amount of land required for new development. These requirements vary by county and type of land use in Hawaiʻi. They were invented in the late 1910s to maintain racial segregation in North America. Today, they harm housing affordability, social equality, and environmental sustainability in Hawai‘i. |
| Meta Canonical | null |
| Boilerpipe Text | Minimum lot size is a zoning regulation that sets the minimum amount of land required for new development. These requirements vary by county and type of land use in Hawaii. They were invented in the late 1910s to maintain racial segregation in North America. Today, they harm housing affordability, social equality, and environmental sustainability in Hawai‘i.
KEY ISSUES
Racial and Economic Segregation: Minimum lot sizes maintain racial and economic inequality. Areas with larger lot sizes tend to be whiter and wealthier.
Affordability Crisis: Minimum lot sizes add to housing prices because land costs money. Smaller, affordable homes are difficult to build when minimum lot sizes are large. This makes housing unaffordable for first-time buyers, low-income residents, and seniors.
Environmental Impact: Large lot sizes promote greenfield development. They add to urban sprawl and increase dependence on cars.
Multigenerational Living and Seniors: Large lot sizes prevent traditional, multigenerational living arrangements. This causes hardship for community elders (kūpuna) and contradicts Hawaiian culture.
Our takeaway: Reducing minimum lot sizes will create more affordable housing, improve social equity, and increase sustainability. |
| Markdown | [0](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/cart)
[Skip to Content](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/policy-brief-minimum-lot-size#page)
[](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/)
[Home](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/)
[About](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/about)
[Programs](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/programs)
Resources
[All](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources)
[Hawaiʻi's 2026 Housing Survey](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/2026-hawaiis-housing-survey)
[Policy](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/policy)
[News](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/news)
[Blog](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/blog)
[Contact](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/contact)
[MAKE A DIFFERENCE](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/newsletter)
Open Menu Close Menu
[](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/)
[Home](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/)
[About](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/about)
[Programs](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/programs)
Resources
[All](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources)
[Hawaiʻi's 2026 Housing Survey](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/2026-hawaiis-housing-survey)
[Policy](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/policy)
[News](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/news)
[Blog](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/blog)
[Contact](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/contact)
[MAKE A DIFFERENCE](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/newsletter)
Open Menu Close Menu
[Home](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/)
[About](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/about)
[Programs](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/programs)
[Folder: Resources](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources-1)
[Back](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/)
[All](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources)
[Hawaiʻi's 2026 Housing Survey](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/2026-hawaiis-housing-survey)
[Policy](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/policy)
[News](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/news)
[Blog](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/blog)
[Contact](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/contact)
[MAKE A DIFFERENCE](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/newsletter)
# Policy Brief \#3: Minimum Lot Size
[Policy](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/category/Policy)
Nov 19
Written By [Guest User](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources?author=678e7ad9c60bc20a0b024f24)

Minimum lot size is a zoning regulation that sets the minimum amount of land required for new development. These requirements vary by county and type of land use in Hawaii. They were invented in the late 1910s to maintain racial segregation in North America. Today, they harm housing affordability, social equality, and environmental sustainability in Hawai‘i.
KEY ISSUES
- Racial and Economic Segregation: Minimum lot sizes maintain racial and economic inequality. Areas with larger lot sizes tend to be whiter and wealthier.
- Affordability Crisis: Minimum lot sizes add to housing prices because land costs money. Smaller, affordable homes are difficult to build when minimum lot sizes are large. This makes housing unaffordable for first-time buyers, low-income residents, and seniors.
- Environmental Impact: Large lot sizes promote greenfield development. They add to urban sprawl and increase dependence on cars.
- Multigenerational Living and Seniors: Large lot sizes prevent traditional, multigenerational living arrangements. This causes hardship for community elders (kūpuna) and contradicts Hawaiian culture.
**Our takeaway: Reducing minimum lot sizes will create more affordable housing, improve social equity, and increase sustainability.**
[READ MORE](https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NyfzPni8FoB-qLPbkF81HIx2v83ceM4-/view)
[Policy recommendations](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/tag/Policy+recommendations)[Affordability](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/tag/Affordability)[Alternative solutions](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/tag/Alternative+solutions)[Environmental impact](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/tag/Environmental+impact)[Social equality](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/tag/Social+equality)[Starter homes](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/tag/Starter+homes)[ADU](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/tag/ADU)[Multigenerational housing](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/tag/Multigenerational+housing)[Senior housing](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/tag/Senior+housing)[Family housing](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/tag/Family+housing)
[![]() Guest User](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources?author=678e7ad9c60bc20a0b024f24)
[Previous Previous Policy Brief \#2: Security Deposit Insurance](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/policy-brief-1-security-deposit-insurance)
[Next Next Policy Brief \#4: EXPLORING 3D PRINTED AND MODULAR HOMES AS SOLUTIONS TO HAWAIʻI’S HOUSING CRISIS](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources/policy-brief-3d-printed-and-modular-homes)
***

[Home](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/home) \| [About](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/about) \| [Programs](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/programs) \| [Stay Movement](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/stay)
[Resources](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/resources) \| [Contact](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/contact) \| [Donate](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/donate) \| [Newsletter](https://www.hawaiisfuture.org/newsletter) |
| Readable Markdown | Minimum lot size is a zoning regulation that sets the minimum amount of land required for new development. These requirements vary by county and type of land use in Hawaii. They were invented in the late 1910s to maintain racial segregation in North America. Today, they harm housing affordability, social equality, and environmental sustainability in Hawai‘i.
KEY ISSUES
- Racial and Economic Segregation: Minimum lot sizes maintain racial and economic inequality. Areas with larger lot sizes tend to be whiter and wealthier.
- Affordability Crisis: Minimum lot sizes add to housing prices because land costs money. Smaller, affordable homes are difficult to build when minimum lot sizes are large. This makes housing unaffordable for first-time buyers, low-income residents, and seniors.
- Environmental Impact: Large lot sizes promote greenfield development. They add to urban sprawl and increase dependence on cars.
- Multigenerational Living and Seniors: Large lot sizes prevent traditional, multigenerational living arrangements. This causes hardship for community elders (kūpuna) and contradicts Hawaiian culture.
**Our takeaway: Reducing minimum lot sizes will create more affordable housing, improve social equity, and increase sustainability.** |
| Shard | 133 (laksa) |
| Root Hash | 14693799535662446933 |
| Unparsed URL | org,hawaiisfuture!www,/resources/policy-brief-minimum-lot-size s443 |