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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Livestock

Livestock: Flower Mound vs Little Elm

How do livestock rules compare between Flower Mound, TX and Little Elm, TX?

Flower Mound has fewer restrictions than Little Elm.

Flower Mound, TX

Denton County

Some Restrictions

Livestock allowed in agricultural zoning districts on qualifying acreage. Residential zones prohibit livestock except chickens protected by TX HB 1750. Most HOAs ban all livestock.

View full Flower Mound rules β†’

Little Elm, TX

Denton County

Heavy Restrictions

Livestock prohibited on residential lots under Ch. 18 Animals and zoning ordinance. Only agricultural-zoned properties may keep farm animals. Backyard chickens generally not permitted.

View full Little Elm rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactFlower MoundLittle Elm
ZoningAgricultural districts allow livestock on qualifying acreage-
ChickensProtected by TX HB 1750 (2023)-
State LawTX Agriculture Code Ch. 142-
Residential ZonesLivestock generally prohibited except chickens-
HOA RulesMost subdivisions prohibit all livestock-
Livestock in Residential-Prohibited
Agricultural Zones-Livestock permitted with conditions
Code-Ch. 18 Animals / Zoning Ordinance
State Protection-TX Ag Code Ch. 251 (Right to Farm)
Fine-Up to $500/day, up to $2,000 repeat

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Flower Mound FAQ

Can I keep chickens in a Flower Mound subdivision?

TX HB 1750 (2023) protects backyard chickens from blanket municipal bans. However, the town may still regulate for imminent health dangers, and your HOA may independently prohibit poultry.

How many acres do I need to keep horses?

Livestock is permitted on agricultural-zoned parcels meeting minimum acreage thresholds set in the zoning ordinance. Contact Planning and Development Services at (972) 874-6350 for current lot size requirements.

Little Elm FAQ

Can I keep backyard chickens in Little Elm?

Little Elm has not adopted a backyard poultry ordinance. Chickens are generally classified as poultry/livestock and prohibited in residential zones. Check with Code Enforcement for current interpretation.

What if my property used to be farmland?

If the property has been rezoned residential through subdivision platting, livestock restrictions apply regardless of prior agricultural use. Texas Right to Farm Act protection generally does not override municipal zoning within city limits.

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