Most homeowners start an ADU project by thinking about the finished space. They picture a rental unit, a guest house, a place for family, or a backyard office that finally gives them more flexibility. What they usually do not picture is the trenching, pipe routing, panel capacity, and site constraints that make the space actually work.
That is where utility planning comes in.
Utility planning affects where your ADU can go, what it can include, how much site work is required, and how much the project will cost. It also plays a major role in how smoothly construction moves once things begin.
This guide covers what homeowners need to know about setting up utilities in an ADU in Atlanta.
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Utility planning matters because it determines what is realistic before construction begins. It is not just a technical step that happens after the design is done. It can affect the size of the ADU, the best place to put it, whether a full kitchen makes sense, and how much of your budget goes into infrastructure instead of finishes.
For example, an ADU may look perfect in one corner of the yard on paper. But if that location puts it too far from the sewer line, requires cutting through a driveway, or demands a major electrical upgrade, the “best” placement may no longer be the smartest one.
This is the part homeowners often miss: utilities are not separate from design. They shape it.
If you understand your site early, you can make better choices about:
The short answer: most ADUs connect to the main house’s sewer line, but whether that is simple or expensive depends on slope, distance, and access.
If your ADU has a toilet, sink, shower, or kitchen, it needs wastewater drainage. In most Atlanta projects, that means tying into the existing sewer service for the main home. A separate public sewer tap is not usually the starting point. The real question is how difficult it will be to get from the ADU to that existing line.
Three things usually decide that.
Distance. The farther the ADU sits from the house and the sewer connection point, the more trenching, pipe, and labor the project will need.
Slope. Sewer lines work best when gravity does the job. If the ADU sits in a position that allows waste to flow downhill toward the connection, great. If it does not, the project may need a sewage ejector pump, which adds cost and complexity.
Site conditions. Tree roots, retaining walls, narrow side yards, existing patios, and rock can all make sewer work more difficult.
What homeowners miss most about sewer is that it is often the utility that drives placement. You may think you are choosing an ADU location based on privacy, yard layout, or aesthetics. But sewer access may end up being the factor that makes one location much more practical than another.
The main questions homeowners need to address regarding water service are:
A short run from the main house to the ADU is usually the easiest scenario. A long run across the property can create more trenching, more cost, and more delay in hot water delivery. That may not sound like a big deal during planning, but it becomes noticeable once someone is actually living there.
Homeowners should also think about how the ADU will function day to day. If the main house and ADU are both using showers, laundry, and kitchen fixtures at the same time, the existing plumbing setup may not perform as well as expected.
Here are a few practical decisions that can make the water setup work better:
Water service is usually not the hardest part of an ADU build. But it can affect comfort more than people expect, especially when the unit is occupied full-time.
Electrical service for an ADU usually comes from the main house, but the real issue is whether the home has enough capacity to support the added load. And that is the answer most homeowners need upfront.
A basic ADU with lights, outlets, and a compact HVAC system may be able to run off the existing service with a subpanel added to the new structure. But once you include a full kitchen, laundry, electric water heater, mini-split system, work-from-home setup, or future EV charging, the demands add up quickly.
Depending on the property, the right solution might be:
What homeowners often overlook is future use. An ADU built for guests today may become a rental unit later. A backyard office may turn into a full-time living space. Planning only for the first use can leave you paying for upgrades twice, so think about how you might want to use your ADU down the road.
Some of the biggest cost drivers are:
A homeowner may budget for “utility hookups” as if they are one line item. In reality, those hookups can include excavation, demolition, rerouting, equipment upgrades, and restoration work afterward. That is why two ADUs of similar size can have very different utility costs. The difference is often not the building, but the site they're built on.
These are the most common mistakes Atlanta homeowners make when planning utilities for their ADUs:
| What homeowners assume | What actually happens |
|---|---|
| The ADU can go anywhere in the yard | Utility access often narrows the best placement options |
| Sewer, water, and power will be simple to connect | Distance, slope, and site conditions can make connections more involved |
| The main house can automatically support the ADU | The home may need plumbing or electrical upgrades first |
| The ADU only needs to work for its first use | Future rental, guest, or family use may require more utility capacity |
| Utility questions can wait until after design is done | Late utility planning can force layout changes, added costs, or both |
At SmartSpaces ADUs, we assess utilities before finalizing the design. That is because utility planning affects placement, layout, budget, and long-term performance. If those questions get answered too late, homeowners end up redesigning around constraints they could have identified earlier. So, we start our process with the site itself.
We look at:
From there, we use that information to guide the project in practical ways. That may mean adjusting the ADU location to simplify sewer routing, identifying when a panel upgrade makes sense, or planning for future flexibility if the unit may become a rental or long-term living space.
Connections matter, both in life and in ADUs. That is why utility planning is one of the first things we look at because it affects everything that follows. Sewer, water, and power connections shape placement, budget, design, and long-term performance. When those decisions are handled early, the project is clearer, more efficient, and far less likely to run into preventable issues.
Our team has decades of combined experience helping Atlanta homeowners build high-quality ADUs. We take time to learn what their property can support, what utility work the project may require, and how to make smart decisions before construction begins.
If you are thinking about adding an ADU to your property, start with a team that understands the infrastructure behind it.
Check out our Portfolio to get an idea of what we can build for you.
Contact our team and start building your ADU today. We can answer any questions you have and go over financing options and available ADU plans.