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What the Friction Index Measures

The Regulatory Friction Index is a composite score that quantifies the overall difficulty a residential homebuilder faces when navigating the permitting and approval process in a specific jurisdiction.

It aggregates data across multiple regulatory touchpoints — from initial permit application to final inspection sign-off — to produce a single, actionable score that reflects real-world builder experience.

What it captures:

The Scoring Scale

Friction scores range from 1.0 to 10.0, where:

Friction Index Scale

1 5 10
1.0 – 4.5
Builder-Friendly
4.6 – 6.5
Moderate Friction
6.6 – 10.0
High Friction

Low friction (1.0–4.5): Streamlined processes, predictable timelines, lower fees. Builders can plan confidently.

Moderate friction (4.6–6.5): Standard review processes with some complexity. Budget extra time and admin resources.

High friction (6.6–10.0): Significant regulatory hurdles, extended timelines, high fees, and frequent delays. Requires specialized local expertise and extended project timelines.

Input Factors & Weighting

The Friction Index is calculated using weighted inputs from seven regulatory factors. Each factor is normalized and combined to produce the final score.

1. Permit Approval Timeline (30% weight)

What it measures: Average number of days from permit application submission to approval for a single-family residential build.

Why it matters: Time is money. Longer timelines mean carrying costs, delayed sales, and opportunity cost. A 60-day timeline vs. 24 days is the difference between breaking ground this quarter or next.

Scoring: 20 days or less = low friction. 40+ days = medium. 60+ days = high friction.

2. Total Fee Burden (25% weight)

What it measures: Total cost per home, including building permit fees, impact fees, plan review fees, and utility connection charges.

Why it matters: Fees directly impact per-unit profitability. A jurisdiction with $15,000 in fees vs. $4,000 can make or break a project's margins, especially at scale.

Scoring: Under $5,000 = low friction. $8,000–$15,000 = medium. $20,000+ = high friction.

3. Number of Required Permits (15% weight)

What it measures: Total count of distinct permits, approvals, and sign-offs required to complete a single-family home from start to finish.

Why it matters: More permits = more touchpoints with local officials, more opportunities for delays, more administrative overhead.

Scoring: 3–5 permits = low friction. 6–8 = medium. 9+ = high friction.

4. Zoning Complexity (10% weight)

What it measures: Presence of overlay districts, special use permits, minimum lot size rules, setback requirements, and variance processes.

Why it matters: Complex zoning means more legal review, potential need for rezoning, and more risk of project rejection or costly design changes.

Scoring: Simple zoning with clear SFR allowances = low friction. Overlay districts + setbacks = medium. Historic districts + design review boards = high friction.

5. Rezoning Difficulty (10% weight)

What it measures: Length of rezoning process, public hearing requirements, approval rates, and political unpredictability.

Why it matters: If your land isn't already zoned for residential, rezoning can add 6–12 months and significant uncertainty.

Scoring: High approval rate + predictable process = low friction. Public hearings + 4–6 month process = medium. Low approval rate + political opposition = high friction.

6. Inspection Requirements (5% weight)

What it measures: Number of mandatory inspections (foundation, framing, electrical, plumbing, final), scheduling delays, and inspector availability.

Why it matters: Inspection delays halt construction. If you can't get an inspector for 2 weeks, your crew sits idle and costs mount.

Scoring: 4–6 inspections + same-week scheduling = low friction. 7–9 inspections + 1-week wait = medium. 10+ inspections + 2-week waits = high friction.

7. Additional Regulatory Hurdles (5% weight)

What it measures: Environmental reviews (wetlands, flood zones), design review boards, historic preservation requirements, tree save ordinances, etc.

Why it matters: These are the wildcards — often jurisdiction-specific rules that can blindside builders unfamiliar with the local code.

Scoring: None = low friction. One or two minor requirements = medium. Multiple overlapping requirements = high friction.

Real-World Examples

Here's how the Friction Index differentiates between jurisdictions in practice:

Jurisdiction Score Timeline Total Fees Key Factors
Palm Bay, FL 3.8 18 days $4,200 Streamlined process, low fees, minimal delays
Miami, FL 8.2 55 days $22,800 High impact fees, design review, slow approvals
Celina, TX 4.5 24 days $5,100 Fast-growing corridor, builder-friendly policies
Austin, TX 7.5 48 days $18,500 Environmental regs, tree ordinances, higher fees

Why the difference?

Score Updates & Data Freshness

Regulatory environments change. Fee schedules are updated. Staffing shortages slow down permitting offices. Code amendments add new requirements.

ZoneIQ continuously monitors and updates Friction Index scores as regulations change. This includes:

Note: Friction scores reflect the regulatory environment as of the most recent data update. Scores are reviewed and adjusted quarterly or when significant regulatory changes occur. Always verify current fees and requirements directly with the jurisdiction's permit office before finalizing project budgets.

Regulatory Cost Estimate (RCE) Methodology

While the Friction Index measures relative regulatory difficulty on a 1-10 scale, the Regulatory Cost Estimate (RCE) translates that friction into dollars per lot.

This gives builders a concrete cost basis for comparing jurisdictions and building accurate pro formas.

The 7-Component Cost Model

RCE breaks down the total regulatory cost burden into seven measurable components:

RCE vs. NAHB National Average

The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) 2021 study found that regulatory costs average $93,870 per single-family home nationally, split between:

How ZoneIQ RCE relates to the NAHB average: The NAHB $93,870 figure includes both jurisdiction-variable costs (fees, timelines, local requirements) and baseline costs common to all jurisdictions (standard inspections, basic code compliance). ZoneIQ RCE isolates the jurisdiction-variable portion — the costs that differ from one city to the next. This is the delta that matters when choosing where to build.

RCE vs. Academic Indexes (Wharton WRLURI)

Academic researchers use indexes like the Wharton Residential Land Use Regulatory Index (WRLURI), which scores jurisdictions on regulatory stringency using survey data and policy metrics.

ZoneIQ RCE is superior for builders because:

Data Sources & Transparency

Each RCE line item is tagged with its data source:

Assumptions used:

Jurisdiction Friction Score RCE (per lot) Top Cost Drivers
Fort Mill, SC 4.5 $9,200 Impact fees $5,100 + Utilities $2,800
Miami, FL 8.2 $39,500 Impact fees $18,500 + HVHZ code $8,000 + Delay $2,100
Johns Creek, GA 4.2 $6,800 Impact fees $3,500 + Permits $2,200
Raleigh, NC 5.8 $14,300 Impact fees $7,200 + Utilities $4,100 + Environmental $1,800

Risk Flag System

While Friction Scores and RCE quantify regulatory difficulty and cost, Risk Flags highlight binary deal-breaker conditions or competitive advantages that can't be captured in a numeric score.

Flags answer the question: "Is there a specific rule or condition that would kill this project outright — or give us a major advantage?"

Flag Definitions

🔴
RED FLAGS
High-risk conditions that can block or severely delay projects. Examples: permit moratoriums, mandatory inclusionary zoning, concurrency requirements, extreme friction scores (8.0+).
🟡
YELLOW FLAGS
Moderate risks requiring extra diligence. Examples: wetlands presence, historic overlay districts, recent fee increases, discretionary review requirements.
🟢
GREEN FLAGS
Competitive advantages and builder-friendly conditions. Examples: by-right residential zoning, state preemption laws, online permit submissions, fast-track approval programs.

Flag Criteria

🔴 Red Flags (Deal Breakers):

🟡 Yellow Flags (Proceed with Caution):

🟢 Green Flags (Competitive Advantages):

Data Sources for Flags

Jurisdiction Flags Flag Details
Miami, FL 🔴 🟡 🟡 🟡 Red: Extreme friction (8.2). Yellow: HVHZ requirements, flood zones, high fees, slow approvals.
Johns Creek, GA 🟢 🟢 Green: By-right residential zoning, online permit system, fast approvals (22 days).
Charleston, SC 🟡 🟡 Yellow: Coastal OCRM compliance, historic overlay districts downtown.
Austin, TX 🟡 🟡 🟡 Yellow: Tree ordinances, environmental review, Edwards Aquifer recharge zone restrictions.

How the Three Layers Work Together

ZoneIQ provides three complementary lenses for evaluating jurisdictions. Each layer answers a different question:

Friction Score
"How hard is this jurisdiction to work in?"
1-10 scale. Relative severity. Combines timelines, complexity, unpredictability. Use to rank jurisdictions and filter out high-friction markets.
RCE (Regulatory Cost Estimate)
"What will this jurisdiction cost me per lot?"
Dollar estimate. Absolute cost. 7-component breakdown of fees, delays, code premiums. Use to build pro formas and compare profitability.
Risk Flags
"Are there deal-breakers or advantages?"
Binary indicators. Red = blockers. Yellow = risks. Green = advantages. Use to surface non-obvious conditions that scores can't capture.

Example: Comparing Two Markets

Fort Mill, SC
Friction Score
4.5
RCE
$9,200
Flags
🟢 🟢
Verdict: Low friction, low cost, green flags. Strong market for production builders. I-77 corridor growth market.
Miami, FL
Friction Score
8.2
RCE
$39,500
Flags
🔴 🟡 🟡 🟡
Verdict: High friction, high cost, red flag (extreme friction). Requires local expertise, extended timelines, HVHZ compliance. Only for experienced operators with strong margins.

Use all three layers: Friction Score tells you where to avoid. RCE tells you what to budget. Risk Flags tell you what to watch for. Together, they give you the complete regulatory picture before you sign a land contract.

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