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