Travis County encourages defensible space around rural Hill Country homes, but enforcement is limited because Texas grants counties narrow authority. ESDs and Texas A&M Forest Service publish voluntary 30-foot brush clearance guidelines for unincorporated wildfire-prone areas.
Travis County sits at the eastern edge of the Hill Country, where cedar brakes and oak savanna create real wildfire risk during summer drought cycles. Unlike California, Texas counties cannot mandate vegetation management on private property without specific statutory authority. Travis County partners with Emergency Services Districts, Texas A&M Forest Service, and the Wildland Urban Interface program to promote voluntary defensible space: a 30-foot Zone 1 cleared of dead fuels, a 30-to-100-foot Zone 2 thinned, and roof clearance maintained. The Firewise USA program recognizes participating Travis County subdivisions like Lakeway and Spicewood Springs neighborhoods.
No civil penalty for failing to maintain defensible space in unincorporated Travis County, though insurance carriers may non-renew or surcharge homeowners in mapped wildfire intermix areas without documented brush clearance.
Travis County, TX
Travis County recommends 30-foot defensible space around structures in WUI zones per Texas A&M Forest Service Firewise guidelines. No county-wide mandatory b...
Travis County, TX
Western Travis County (Lakeway, Steiner Ranch, Spicewood, Bee Cave, Lago Vista) sits in the Hill Country Wildland-Urban Interface documented by TAMU Forest S...
Travis County, TX
Erosion and sedimentation control is required under Travis County Code Chapter 82 for any earth disturbance over 1 acre or within Edwards Aquifer zones. Silt...
See how Travis County's defensible space rules stack up against other locations.
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