If adopted, a proposed appendix to the Maine Uniform Building and Energy Code is going to make it easier for anyone looking to make a tiny home their permanent address.

“Tiny homes really represent a new wave of building and of a lifestyle which brings some unique considerations,” said Rep. Seth Berry, D-Bowdoinham, who requested the state building code board consider the rules’ appendix. “The current building code is unfortunately inflexible when it comes to tiny houses.”





Gov. Paul LePage has already signed off on the proposed tiny house additions and the Maine Uniform Building and Energy Code Board will hold a public hearing on the proposed appendix next month.

There is no unified building code or legal definition of a “tiny house,” but a residential structure under 500 square feet is generally accepted to be a tiny home, according to various online groups advocating the simplified lifestyle.

And while there are no official numbers for how many tiny houses there are in the state, Berry said the simplified lifestyle is here to stay.

Changes to Maine’s building code, he said, is only going to help the trend continue.

“Maine’s unified code has been around for about a decade,” Berry said. “They are a very important set of rules to ensure the safety and energy efficiency of our homes and buildings.”

Municipalities in Maine are free to use the state code as it is written, or use it as a base to which they add their own rules.

The proposed appendix to the existing state code covers tiny house sleeping lofts, stairs, ladders and emergency escapes.

“It’s a good step that will help make tiny house living more accessible to Maine people,” said Alan Plummer, Maine representative to the American Tiny House Association. “It allows some guidelines for building and will be something municipalities can use as a code resource.”

Assuming the state board gives the proposed appendix the nod, Plummer said local building code enforcers will have something concrete upon which to base any decision when it comes to tiny houses.

Without those state rules, Plummer said, some local building code officials were hesitant to issue permits for tiny houses.

“This is what we needed, something for the local code guys to stand on,” said Ted Lucier of Tiny Houses of Maine. “Anything that can help move the tiny house movement along is a good thing.”

The language of the appendix, Berry said, is simply reflecting the reality of tiny home living.

“Tiny homes allows someone to ‘live lite’ with a reduced carbon footprint and reduced fuel bills,” Berry said. “I’m excited we will be able to eliminate some of the red tape that has prevented people from having access to that lifestyle.”

The Maine Uniform Building and Energy Code Board public hearing on the proposed appendix is 9 a.m., Sept. 18, at the Maine Department of Safety building on 45 Commercial Drive in Augusta.