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Fairfax County
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Fairfax County

Virginia county; added 200-foot setbacks, design controls, and noise studies for new data centres in April 2026.

Last refreshed: 6 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Will Fairfax County's new setback rules slow the world's largest data-centre cluster?

Timeline for Fairfax County

#318 May
#312 May

Voted 8-2 for new data-centre regulations to prevent Loudoun and Prince William-style disputes

Data Centres: Boom and Backlash: Fairfax pre-empts; Sabey pulls Seattle plan
#310 May
#227 Apr

Added 200-foot setbacks, building-design controls, and noise studies for data-centre approvals

Data Centres: Boom and Backlash: Virginia courts and counties tighten the cluster
View full timeline →
Common Questions
What new data-centre rules did Fairfax County adopt in 2026?
Fairfax County added 200-foot setbacks from residential properties, building-design controls, and mandatory noise studies for new data-centre applications in April/May 2026.Source: Virginia Mercury
How many data centres are in Fairfax County Virginia?
Fairfax County is part of the Northern Virginia cluster, which collectively hosts over 5 GW of operational data-centre power — the world's largest concentration — shared primarily with Loudoun and Prince William counties.Source: Data Center Dynamics
Where is Fairfax County Virginia and why does it matter for tech?
Fairfax County is a large suburban county in Northern Virginia, bordering Washington DC. It is part of the Northern Virginia data-centre cluster, one of the world's largest, and also hosts a high concentration of federal contractors, defence technology firms, and Fortune 500 headquarters.Source: Fairfax County Economic Development Authority

Background

Fairfax County tightened its data-centre approval requirements in late April/early May 2026, adding 200-foot setbacks from residential properties, building-design controls, and mandatory noise studies for new data-centre applications. The changes were adopted in the same week that Loudoun County stripped data centres of by-right zoning and the Virginia Court of Appeals upheld a ruling blocking Prince William County's fast-tracked rezoning — a concurrent three-county tightening that reshaped the Northern Virginia consent environment.

Fairfax County is the most populous jurisdiction in Virginia and the second-largest county in the United States by population, with roughly 1.2 million residents. It contains major data-centre corridors along the Dulles Technology Corridor and in areas served by Dominion Energy's Northern Virginia transmission infrastructure. Alongside Loudoun County, it forms the core of the Northern Virginia data-centre cluster, which collectively hosts over 5 GW of operational capacity — the world's largest concentration of data-centre power.

The new Fairfax requirements stop short of Loudoun's decision to eliminate by-right zoning, but the combination of setback, design, and noise requirements adds meaningful pre-application cost and lengthens planning timelines. Combined with Loudoun's Phase 2 Standards, the two counties effectively end the era of streamlined administrative approvals that drove the cluster's growth, without formally closing the pipeline.

More questions
What are the new setback rules for data centres in Fairfax County?
Fairfax County adopted 200-foot setbacks from residential properties for new data-centre applications in April/May 2026, alongside building-design controls and mandatory noise studies — part of a simultaneous tightening across three Northern Virginia counties.Source: Virginia Mercury
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