Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup

Moving to Austin, TX?

Here are the local rules you need to know before you unpack.

Every city has its own set of local ordinances that go beyond state and federal law. From when you can mow your lawn to whether you can park your RV in the driveway, these rules affect daily life in ways most people do not expect. This guide covers the key ordinances in Austin across 53 categories and 219 specific rules we track.

56 Permissive107 Moderate56 Strict

πŸ”Š Noise Ordinances

Noise rules affect everything from weekend parties to lawn care schedules. Quiet hours, construction restrictions, and barking dog limits vary widely between cities.

Leaf Blower Rules

Some Restrictions

Austin does not ban gas leaf blowers, but their use is governed by the general noise ordinance in City Code Chapter 9-2. Leaf blower operation is restricted during nighttime hours and must not exceed residential decibel limits, with enforcement by Austin Code and APD.

: :

Amplified Music & Events

Heavy Restrictions

As the self-proclaimed Live Music Capital of the World, Austin has detailed amplified sound rules in City Code Chapter 9-2. Outdoor amplified music requires a permit, with decibel caps and cutoff times that are stricter in residential areas and around the Red River Cultural District and downtown entertainment zones.

: :

Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 9-2 establishes decibel limits by zoning district and time of day: 75 dB(A) daytime and 70 dB(A) nighttime in residential, up to 85 dB(A) in commercial, and higher in permitted entertainment districts. Measurements are taken at the property line with Type 1 or Type 2 sound meters.

: :

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Austin-Bergstrom International Airport (AUS) aircraft noise is regulated exclusively by the FAA under federal law, preempting local decibel ordinances. The City of Austin Department of Aviation runs a voluntary noise abatement program and publishes a noise complaint portal for residents under flight paths.

: :

Outdoor Music

Heavy Restrictions

Austin requires an Outdoor Music Venue (OMV) permit for any commercial property hosting outdoor amplified music. Permits specify decibel caps, cutoff times, and stage orientation, and residential outdoor music is generally prohibited after 10:00 PM under Chapter 9-2.

: :

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 9-2 sets industrial noise limits at 75 dB(A) during daytime and 70 dB(A) at night, measured at the property line of the receiving property. Industrial facilities in IP (Industrial Park) and MI (Major Industry) zones must also comply with site development permit noise conditions.

: :

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 9-2 establishes citywide quiet hours from 10:30 PM to 7:00 AM, during which sound plainly audible across a property line in residential districts is prohibited. The Austin Police Department and Austin Code Department enforce, with Class C misdemeanor citations up to $500 per offense.

: :

🏠 Short-Term Rentals

If you plan to rent out your home on Airbnb or VRBO - even occasionally - you need to know the local STR rules before listing.

Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

Austin STR operators must provide one off-street parking space per bedroom under City Code Chapter 25-6. On-street parking by guests is allowed only where the street permits, and RPP (Residential Permit Parking) zones prohibit non-resident overnight parking.

: :

Noise Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Austin short-term rentals are subject to Chapter 9-2 noise limits plus stricter STR-specific conditions under City Code Chapter 25-2. STR operators must post 24-hour contact info, respond to noise complaints within one hour, and face license revocation after repeat violations.

: :

Registration Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Austin requires every short-term rental to hold a current operating license under City Code Chapter 25-2 Subchapter E. Applications go through Development Services, require proof of insurance, HOT tax account, and neighbor notification, with annual renewal and posted license number on every listing.

: :

Insurance Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Austin STR licensees must carry at least $1 million in liability coverage specifically endorsed for short-term rental use, per City Code Chapter 25-2 Subchapter E. Proof of insurance is submitted with the annual license application and must remain in force throughout the license term.

: :

Night Caps

Some Restrictions

Austin does not impose an annual night cap on STR rentals like San Francisco's 90-day rule or Palm Springs' 32-day limit. However, Type 2 non-owner-occupied STRs are restricted in residential zones, and all STRs face occupancy and noise limits that effectively constrain heavy event-style bookings.

: :

Host Presence Rule

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 25-2 establishes three STR license types, and Type 1 requires the operator to occupy the property as a primary residence. Type 2 (non-owner-occupied) and Type 3 (multifamily) carry stricter limits, density caps, and ongoing litigation over permitted neighborhoods.

Code chapter: Austin LDC Chapter 25-2Type 1: Owner-occupied primary home

Occupancy Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 25-2 Subchapter E caps STR occupancy at six unrelated adults or 10 total including related persons, whichever is lower, with no more than two adults per bedroom plus two. Outdoor occupancy after 10:00 PM is limited to six persons.

: :

Taxes & Fees

Some Restrictions

Austin imposes an 11% Hotel Occupancy Tax (HOT) on STR stays plus a 6% Texas state HOT. Operators must hold a city operating license: $836.30 new or $385.30 renewal.

City HOT: 11% (9% + 2% venue)State HOT: 6% Texas

Permit Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Austin requires all STRs to obtain a city license through Austin Development Services. Type 1 (owner-occupied), Type 2 (non-owner-occupied), and Type 3 (multifamily) licenses are available. As of Oct. 1, 2025, licenses are valid for two years. License fee is approximately $836.

License Fee: ~$836 (new application)License Term: 2 years (as of Oct. 2025)

πŸ”₯ Fire Regulations

Fire pit rules, fireworks restrictions, and brush clearance requirements are especially important if you are coming from a state with different fire risk profiles.

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Open burning within Austin city limits is prohibited except for small recreational fires (3 feet diameter or less, 2 feet tall or less) for cooking or warmth. Burning in all city parks, greenbelts, and preserves is prohibited under Ordinance No. 20111102-025.

Open Burning: Prohibited (trash/debris)Recreational Fire: ≀3 ft diameter, ≀2 ft tall

Wildfire Zones

Heavy Restrictions

The Austin Fire Department designates WUI (Wildland-Urban Interface) zones concentrated in West Austin hills west of MoPac and south of the Colorado River. Homes in these zones face stricter building codes, vegetation management, and inspection requirements under Chapter 6-1.

: :

Backyard Fires

Heavy Restrictions

Austin Fire Code Chapter 25-12 allows recreational backyard fires only in approved appliances (chimineas, fire pits under 3 feet diameter, patio heaters) with dry seasoned wood or manufactured logs. Open burning of yard waste is banned, and Travis County burn bans automatically apply in Austin city limits.

: :

Brush Clearance

Heavy Restrictions

Austin Fire Department enforces the Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) Code adopted in 2020 requiring defensible space around homes in designated WUI zones, primarily in West Austin hills. Property owners must maintain 30 to 100 feet of cleared space and follow state Property Code guidelines.

: :

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Austin Fire Code Title 6, an amended version of the 2021 International Fire Code Chapter 61, restricts residential propane storage to 25 gallons aggregate water capacity, with stricter rules for multifamily balconies and commercial cylinder exchange under IFC Section 6101.

Adopted code: Austin amended 2021 IFCResidential limit: 25 gal aggregate water capacity

Smoke Detectors

Heavy Restrictions

Austin follows the International Fire Code and Texas Property Code Β§92.251-.262 requiring working smoke alarms in every sleeping room, hallway, and each story of a dwelling. Rental properties must have alarms tested at move-in, and interconnected 10-year sealed-battery alarms are required in new construction.

: :

Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

Consumer fireworks are illegal to possess, use, or sell within Austin city limits. Violations can carry fines up to $2,000. Permits are issued only for professional displays by Austin Fire Special Events.

Consumer Use: Banned year-roundMax Fine: Up to $2,000

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Fire pits and backyard fires are allowed in Austin if used for cooking or warmth and kept to 3 feet or less in diameter and 2 feet or less in height. Permanent outdoor fireplaces and enclosed barbecue pits are permitted. Burning trash is prohibited.

Size Limit: ≀3 ft diameter, ≀2 ft tallPurpose: Cooking, warmth, ceremonial

πŸš— Parking Rules

Parking rules catch more new residents off guard than almost any other ordinance. RV storage, overnight parking bans, and driveway regulations vary significantly.

EV Charging

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 25-2 requires EV-ready parking in new multifamily and commercial construction (minimum 20 percent of spaces), and Austin Energy operates the Plug-In EVerywhere network. Single-family owners can install Level 2 chargers under a simple permit process and receive rebates up to $1,200.

: :

Overnight Parking

Few Restrictions

Austin has no general citywide overnight parking ban on public streets. However, approximately 40 Residential Permit Parking (RPP) zones restrict overnight parking to permit holders, and vehicles may not remain in the same spot for more than 24 hours under Chapter 12-5.

: :

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 25-6 regulates residential driveway width, setback, and surfacing. Single-family driveways are limited to 30 percent of the front yard or 20 feet wide (whichever is less), must be paved with concrete or asphalt, and require a driveway permit for new curb cuts.

: :

Abandoned Vehicles

Some Restrictions

Austin enforces Texas Transportation Code Chapter 683 and Austin City Code Chapter 12-5: a vehicle on public right-of-way is abandoned if inoperable for more than 48 hours or operable but apparently abandoned for more than 7 days. APD posts a warning tag and tows. Junked vehicles on private property are abated under Austin Code Chapter 9-2 as a nuisance with a 10-day notice.

: :

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

RVs and motor homes may not be parked on Austin public streets longer than 72 hours (Β§12-5-11). Residents may store up to two recreational vehicles on residential property if screened behind a 6-foot wood or masonry fence. Living in an RV on residential property requires permits.

Street Limit: 72 hours (Β§12-5-11)On Property: Up to 2 RVs, screened behind 6-ft fence

Dibs & Space Saving

Few Restrictions

Austin does not have an ordinance prohibiting residents from saving shoveled-out parking spots with chairs or cones. Snow events are extremely rare in Austin, and there is no formal 'dibs' system or regulation addressing the practice. The city's parking regulations focus on standard restrictions such as time limits, fire lanes, and accessible parking. Residents are not penalized for placing items in public parking spaces during rare winter weather events.

Dibs Policy: No ordinance addressing space savingEnforcement: Not enforced during winter weather events

🧱 Fence Regulations

Planning to put up a fence? Height limits, material restrictions, and permit requirements differ by city - and sometimes by which side of the property the fence sits on.

Retaining Walls

Some Restrictions

Austin requires a building permit for any retaining wall over 4 feet in height or any wall supporting a surcharge (driveway, structure, slope), per City Code Chapter 25-12. Engineered drawings are required for walls over 4 feet, and watershed rules impose additional limits near creeks and Critical Environmental Features.

: :

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Austin enforces International Swimming Pool and Spa Code barrier standards under Chapter 25-12: 4-foot minimum fence, self-closing self-latching gates, door alarms on homes acting as a pool barrier, and 20-inch gap limits. Barriers must be in place before any water is added.

: :

Fence Requirements

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 25-2 allows residential fences up to 6 feet in side and rear yards and 4 feet in front yards without a permit. Corner visibility triangles, Heritage Tree protection zones, and HOA design rules impose additional limits.

: :

Material Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Austin prohibits barbed wire, razor wire, and electrified fences in residential zones under City Code Chapter 25-2. Hill Country Roadway corridors and historic districts impose additional material rules, and HOA covenants commonly specify wood or masonry.

: :

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Austin Land Development Code Chapter 25-2 Subchapter F caps residential fences at 6 feet in side and rear yards and 4 feet in front yards without a permit. Corner-lot visibility triangles drop the limit to 2.5 feet, and fences exceeding code limits require a Board of Adjustment variance.

: :

πŸ” Animal Ordinances

Pet owners and aspiring chicken keepers should check local animal ordinances before signing a lease or closing on a home.

Beekeeping

Few Restrictions

Austin allows residential beekeeping under City Code Chapter 3-2 with no colony cap, provided hives are set back 10 feet from property lines and behind a 6-foot flyway barrier if within 25 feet of a neighbor. Texas Agriculture Code Chapter 131 regulates registration and disease control.

: :

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Austin does not have breed-specific legislation and is legally prevented from enacting one by Texas Health & Safety Code Β§822.047. The city instead uses a dangerous-dog designation process under Β§822.0421 applied based on behavior, not breed.

: :

Chickens & Livestock

Few Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 3-2 allows up to 10 chickens on most residential lots with setbacks of 50 feet from neighboring dwellings for coops. Roosters are allowed but subject to noise enforcement. Livestock (goats, pigs, cattle) require minimum lot sizes.

: :

Wildlife Feeding

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 3-2 prohibits intentional feeding of deer, coyotes, javelinas, and other wildlife where it attracts nuisance populations. Bird feeding is allowed. Texas Parks & Wildlife Code adds state-level rules on baiting and game species.

: :

Animal Hoarding

Heavy Restrictions

Austin Animal Services investigates hoarding under City Code Chapter 3-2 and Texas Penal Code 42.092. Officers may seize neglected animals with warrants under Health & Safety Code Chapter 821, file misdemeanor or felony charges, and seek court-ordered relinquishment.

Primary statute: TX Penal Code 42.092 crueltySeizure authority: TX H&S Code Chapter 821

Cat Rules

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 3-2 requires cats over four months old to be licensed and currently vaccinated against rabies under Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 826. Austin Animal Services supports community cat trap-neuter-return programs alongside its No-Kill mission.

License age: Cats over four monthsRabies law: TX H&S Code Chapter 826

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Section 3-4-29 requires all dogs and cats over six months old to be spayed or neutered. Owners wishing to keep intact animals must obtain an annual breeder or intact-animal permit. The ordinance is among the strongest in Texas.

Code section: Austin Code 3-4-29Sterilization age: Six months for dogs/cats

Microchipping

Some Restrictions

Austin Animal Center microchips every dog and cat before adoption transfer, and Austin City Code Title 3 requires licensed pets to maintain ISO-compliant microchip identification with current registry contact information for return to owner.

Chip standard: ISO-compliant 15-digit chipAAC adoption: Chipped before transfer

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Section 3-2-7 limits households to three dogs and three cats over four months old without an animal-establishment permit. Larger numbers require a kennel, foster, or rescue authorization with inspection, zoning compliance, and welfare standards.

Code section: Austin Code 3-2-7Dog limit: Three over four months

Coyote Management

Some Restrictions

Austin Animal Services follows a hazing-first coyote management plan emphasizing public education, deterrence, and habitat modification. Texas Parks & Wildlife treats coyotes as nongame furbearers; lethal removal is reserved for documented aggressive or sick animals threatening human safety.

Lead agency: Austin Animal ServicesState authority: TX Parks & Wildlife Code 71

Pet Store Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 3-3 prohibits pet stores from selling commercially bred dogs and cats; retail sales are limited to animals sourced from shelters or rescues. The rule complements Austin's No-Kill mission and aligns with statewide and national anti-puppy-mill efforts.

Code chapter: Austin Code Chapter 3-3Covered species: Dogs and cats only

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 3-4 requires dogs in public to be restrained on a leash no longer than 6 feet, with limited exceptions for designated off-leash areas including Red Bud Isle, portions of Auditorium Shores, and parts of Zilker Park. Violations are Class C misdemeanors enforced by Austin Animal Services and APD.

: :

Livestock

Some Restrictions

Austin allows livestock with minimum lot size: 1 acre for goats/sheep, 2 acres for cattle/horses/hogs, all with a 100-ft setback from any dwelling (Austin City Code Ch. 3-2). Slaughter is banned in city limits except permitted poultry. Chickens have separate, looser rules.

: :

🌿 Landscaping Rules

From grass height limits to tree removal permits, landscaping rules can surprise new homeowners, especially in drought-prone areas with water restrictions.

πŸ’Ό Home Business

Working from home is common, but running a business from home often requires permits and must comply with zoning restrictions on customer traffic and signage.

🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas

Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.

πŸ—οΈ Accessory Structures

Thinking about an ADU, shed, or garage conversion? Local rules on accessory structures have changed rapidly in recent years, especially in California.

Tiny Homes

Few Restrictions

Austin is among the most tiny-home-friendly cities in Texas, allowing ADUs on most SF lots down to 5,750 sf and permitting DADUs (Detached ADUs) with reduced setbacks under HOME Initiative amendments. Texas Property Code and local SMART Housing incentives promote affordable tiny-home development.

: :

ADU Rules

Few Restrictions

Austin's HOME Initiative (Ord. 20231207-001, effective Feb 5, 2024) allows up to 3 housing units, including ADUs and tiny homes, on lots zoned SF-1, SF-2, and SF-3.

Max Units: 3 per SF-1/SF-2/SF-3 lotOrdinance: 20231207-001 (HOME)

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Austin requires a Garage Conversion / Carport-Porch Enclosure permit plus a Residential Interior Remodel application. Citywide off-street parking minimums were eliminated in 2023, though some addresses still trigger replacement parking.

Permit: Garage Conversion + Interior RemodelTrade Permits: Plumbing/electrical/HVAC required

Shed Rules

Few Restrictions

One-story detached residential sheds 200 sq ft or smaller and 15 ft or shorter in height are exempt from a building permit, provided they have no plumbing, are not a dwelling, and are not in a flood hazard area.

Permit-Exempt Size: 200 sq ft or lessMax Height: 15 feet

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Austin regulates carports through the Land Development Code (LDC) Title 25. To qualify as a carport (rather than a garage counted toward floor area), the structure must have at least two open sides that are clear and unobstructed for at least 80% of the area below the top wall plate. A building permit is required, and the structure must comply with setbacks under LDC Β§ 25-2-492 and the openness-of-yard rules in LDC Β§ 25-2-513.

Code Section: LDC Β§Β§ 25-2-492, 25-2-513; Subchapter F Β§ 3.3Permit: Required (DSD Carport/Porch Enclosure application)

ADU Permits

Few Restrictions

Austin processes ADU applications under the HOME Initiative amendments (Ordinance 20231207-001 and 20240516-002) to Land Development Code Chapter 25-2. ADUs are permitted by right on SF-1, SF-2, and SF-3 lots of at least 2,500 sq ft. The pathway is administrative: no zoning case or board hearing for code-compliant designs. Applications go through the Development Services Department Residential Permit team with a target review time of about 30 business days.

Authority: HOME Ord. 20231207-001, 20240516-002Min Lot Size: 2,500 sq ft (SF zones)

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Austin does not charge a general municipal impact fee; the city relies on water/wastewater capital recovery fees, transportation user fees, and Austin Energy connection charges instead. Water/Wastewater capital recovery fees for ADUs are charged based on meter size: an ADU sharing the main meter pays nothing extra, while a separately metered ADU pays the standard 5/8-inch residential rate. Drainage fees are tied to impervious cover. There is no per-unit citywide ADU surcharge.

General Impact Fee: None (Austin)Water Capital Recovery: $3,000-$4,500 for new meter

ADU Owner Occupancy

Few Restrictions

Austin removed its ADU owner-occupancy requirement when the HOME Initiative Phase 1 (Ordinance 20231207-001) took effect in December 2023. A property owner is no longer required to live on the lot to build an ADU or to rent the ADU long-term. Both the main house and the ADU may be rented to separate tenants by an absentee owner. No deed restriction is recorded.

Owner Occupancy: Not requiredAuthority: HOME Ord. 20231207-001 (Dec 2023)

ADU Rental Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Austin allows long-term rental of ADUs without owner occupancy after the HOME Initiative. Short-term rental of an ADU is restricted under LDC 25-2-788 and 25-2-789: ADUs built after October 1, 2015 may operate as a short-term rental for no more than 30 days per calendar year. Type 2 short-term rental licenses (non-owner-occupied) remain phased out under Ordinance 20160223-A.1. Type 1 (owner-occupied) licenses are available but only for the principal dwelling, not the ADU.

Long-Term Rental: UnrestrictedSTR Cap for ADUs: 30 days/yr (post-2015 ADUs)

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

Outdoor Kitchen Permits

Some Restrictions

An outdoor kitchen in Austin typically requires a residential building permit when the structure exceeds 200 sq ft or is attached to the main house. Gas line extensions need a plumbing permit, electrical work needs an electrical permit, and any potable water and drain lines require plumbing permits. Detached accessory structures count toward the lot's impervious-cover and FAR limits under LDC 25-2 Subchapter F. Setbacks of 5 feet from side and rear lot lines apply.

Building Permit Trigger: >200 sq ft or attachedGas Line: Plumbing permit + pressure test

BBQ & Propane Rules

Some Restrictions

Austin adopts the International Fire Code through City Code Chapter 6-2. IFC Section 308.1.4 prohibits charcoal burners and open-flame cooking devices on combustible balconies and within 10 feet of combustible construction in apartments, condos, and hotels. Single-family homes are exempt from the multifamily balcony rule. Small LP-gas cylinders of 1 lb (2.5 lb water capacity) are allowed even in multifamily settings. Citywide burn bans during drought can also restrict open flame.

Governing Section: IFC 308.1.4 via City Code 6-2Multifamily Balcony: No open flame within 10 ft of combustible

Smoker Rules

Few Restrictions

Austin has no dedicated code provision for residential smokers, pellet grills, or wood-fired ovens beyond the general open-flame rules in IFC 308 and the nuisance provisions of City Code 10-1 (Nuisances). Single-family backyard smoker use is unrestricted. Multifamily balcony use falls under IFC 308.1.4. Texas does not regulate residential wood-smoke emissions at the state level, and Austin has no Spare-the-Air analog.

Dedicated Smoker Code: NoneSingle-Family Limit: None

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

Inflatable Display Rules

Few Restrictions

Austin has no ordinance specifically regulating residential inflatable holiday displays. Size, motor noise, and lighting hours are not capped by the municipal code. The constraints come from generally applicable rules: City Code 9-2 (noise) for blower motors after 10:30 p.m., LDC 25-10 (sign code) which exempts residential displays, and City Code 12 (right of way) for items placed on the public sidewalk. HOA CC&Rs typically impose stricter limits.

Size Limit: None (city)Permit Required: No, for private property

Lawn Ornament Rules

Few Restrictions

Austin imposes no general restriction on year-round lawn ornaments, statuary, or religious displays on private residential property. The sign code (LDC 25-10) exempts non-commercial residential displays. Political signs are protected speech subject only to LDC 25-10's residential sign caps. HOA CC&Rs in deed-restricted neighborhoods often add architectural-review requirements that the city does not.

City Restriction: None for residential ornamentsReligious Display: Protected, no city limit

Holiday Light Rules

Few Restrictions

Austin has no city ordinance limiting the duration, brightness, or hours of residential holiday lighting. The sign code in City Code Chapter 25-10 expressly exempts non-commercial residential displays. The applicable enforcement levers are City Code Chapter 9-2 (noise) for amplified sound after 10:30 p.m. and City Code 10-1 (nuisance) for documented light trespass. HOA CC&Rs in deed-restricted neighborhoods often set firmer take-down dates.

Take-Down Deadline: None (city)Brightness Limit: None (city)

🌍 Environmental Rules

Vehicle Idling Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Travis County opted into TCEQ Rule 30 TAC 114.512, which prohibits commercial motor vehicles over 14,000 pounds GVWR from idling for more than five consecutive minutes within Austin and surrounding counties, with several work-related exemptions.

State rule: 30 TAC 114.512Idle limit: 5 consecutive minutes

Gas Leaf Blower Ban

Few Restrictions

Austin has not banned gasoline-powered leaf blowers and likely cannot enforce one because Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 382 reserves air-quality regulation to the state, while general nuisance preemption under HB 4 limits city authority over equipment performance.

Local ban: None enactedPreemption: TX H&S Code 382.113

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Some Restrictions

Austin City Council adopted the Climate Equity Plan in 2021, committing the city to net-zero community greenhouse gas emissions by 2040, accompanied by sector goals for electricity, transportation, buildings, and consumption alongside equity outcome metrics.

Adopted: September 2021Net-zero target: Community-wide by 2040

Sustainable Procurement

Some Restrictions

Austin's Sustainable Purchasing Program, adopted by City Council resolution and codified in Financial Services Department procurement policy, requires city departments to evaluate environmental and equity criteria when buying goods, services, and construction.

Origin: Resolution 20070215-023Scope: City of Austin purchases

Heat Island Mitigation

Some Restrictions

Austin's Urban Forest Plan, adopted in 2014 and updated in 2024, sets a 50 percent citywide canopy cover goal, paired with cool-roof requirements, shaded transit stops, and bus stop greening to mitigate the urban heat island effect across the city.

Plan adopted: 2014, updated 2024Canopy goal: 50 percent citywide

Cool Roof Requirements

Some Restrictions

Austin Energy Code, an amended version of the 2021 IECC adopted under City Code Title 25, requires high-reflectance and high-emissivity roofing on low-slope commercial and multifamily roofs, reducing cooling loads and mitigating urban heat island effect.

Adopted code: Austin amended 2021 IECCReflectance minimum: 0.55 three-year-aged

Grading & Drainage

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Title 25 and the Drainage Criteria Manual regulate all grading and drainage activities. A grading permit is required for any land-disturbing activity exceeding specific thresholds. The city requires drainage plans showing pre- and post-development runoff calculations and mandates that development not increase flooding on adjacent properties. Cut and fill operations must comply with geotechnical requirements especially in the Balcones Fault Zone.

Code Section: Title 25 LDC; Drainage Criteria ManualPermit Required: Grading permit for land disturbance above thresholds

Erosion Control

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Title 25 and the Environmental Criteria Manual Section 1.6 require erosion and sedimentation controls for all land-disturbing activities. In March 2025 the City Council approved strengthened erosion protections along the Colorado River downstream of Longhorn Dam. Developers must submit Erosion and Sedimentation Control Plans and install Best Management Practices (BMPs) before grading begins. Inspections are required during active construction.

Code Section: Title 25 LDC; ECM Section 1.6Plan Required: Erosion & Sedimentation Control Plan for all grading

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Title 6, Chapter 6-7 (Drainage) and the Environmental Criteria Manual require stormwater management for all development. The Save Our Springs (SOS) Ordinance imposes the strictest water quality controls in the Barton Springs Zone. Green Stormwater Infrastructure (rain gardens, biofiltration, rainwater harvesting) is now required as the primary water quality treatment method for most site plan and subdivision development citywide.

Code Section: Title 6, Ch. 6-7 (Drainage); Title 25 LDCSOS Ordinance: Barton Springs Zone β€” strictest controls

Coastal Development

Few Restrictions

Austin is an inland city with no coastline, so coastal development regulations do not apply. Waterfront development along Lady Bird Lake and the Colorado River is instead governed by the Waterfront Overlay Ordinance (Title 25, Subchapter C, Article 2) and the Town Lake Corridor special regulations which address building height, setbacks, and public access along the urban waterfront.

Coastal Zones: Not applicable β€” Austin is inlandWaterfront Rules: Waterfront Overlay Ordinance (Title 25)

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Austin participates in the National Flood Insurance Program and maintains strict floodplain regulations under City Code Title 25 and the Drainage Criteria Manual. The city has over 130 miles of creeks including major flood-prone corridors along Onion Creek, Shoal Creek, Williamson Creek, and Barton Creek. Development in the 100-year floodplain is prohibited or heavily restricted. The Watershed Protection Department maintains flood early warning systems and buyout programs for repeatedly flooded properties.

Code Section: Title 25 LDC; Drainage Criteria ManualNFIP: Active participant β€” Community Rating System

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Personal Cultivation Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Texas prohibits personal cannabis cultivation entirely. Austin cannot authorize home grows under home-rule authority while state law treats marijuana possession and manufacture as criminal offenses. Austin Prop A deprioritizes low-level enforcement but does not legalize cultivation.

Home grow: Prohibited statewidePlant limit: Zero β€” any plant illegal

Social Equity Licensing

Few Restrictions

Texas has no recreational cannabis program, so Austin cannot create a social-equity license. The narrow Compassionate Use Program licenses three statewide dispensing organizations on competitive merit, with no equity preference for prior-conviction, minority, or low-income applicants.

State framework: No recreational cannabis programCUP licenses: Three dispensing organizations

Commercial Cannabis Zoning

Few Restrictions

Austin has no recreational cannabis retail because Texas prohibits it. Hemp-derived CBD and consumable-hemp retailers operate under Texas Agriculture Code Chapter 122 plus Austin Land Development Code commercial zoning. Smoke shops and CBD storefronts are treated as ordinary retail uses citywide.

Recreational retail: Prohibited statewideHemp retail framework: TX Ag Code Chapter 122

Dispensary Zoning

Heavy Restrictions

Texas law strictly limits cannabis dispensaries to licensed Compassionate Use Program organizations dispensing low-THC cannabis (under 1% THC). As of 2025 only three licensed dispensaries operate statewide and none are located in Austin. Local zoning for cannabis dispensaries is effectively preempted by state licensing requirements. Austin has no local dispensary zoning ordinance because the state controls all licensing and siting of compassionate use dispensaries.

State Law: Texas Compassionate Use Act (2015, expanded 2021)Licensed Dispensaries: Only 3 statewide as of 2025

Home Cultivation

Heavy Restrictions

Cannabis cultivation is illegal in Texas under the Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 481 (Texas Controlled Substances Act). There is no home cultivation exemption for recreational or medical use. The Texas Compassionate Use Program allows only licensed dispensing organizations to cultivate low-THC cannabis (under 1% THC) for qualifying patients. Austin voters approved Proposition A in May 2020 directing police to deprioritize low-level marijuana possession, but cultivation remains a felony under state law.

State Law: Texas Health & Safety Code Ch. 481 β€” illegalHome Cultivation: Prohibited β€” felony offense

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

Expedited Solar Permitting

Few Restrictions

Austin Energy and Austin Development Services run an expedited Solar PV permit pathway for typical residential rooftop systems. Standardized plans, online submission, and combined electrical and structural review let most homeowner installations clear permit review in days rather than weeks.

Authority: Austin Energy + Development ServicesSubmittal: Austin Build + Connect online

Community Solar

Few Restrictions

Austin Energy operates one of Texas's largest community solar programs, letting customers subscribe to a share of utility-owned arrays without rooftop panels. Income-qualified customers receive deep bill credits through Austin Energy Customer Assistance Program partnerships.

Operator: Austin Energy municipal utilityUpfront cost: None to subscribers

Panel Permits

Some Restrictions

Solar panel installations in Austin require a building permit through Austin Development Services. Residential rooftop systems must comply with the International Residential Code as adopted locally and the National Electrical Code. Austin Energy offers the Value of Solar tariff for grid-connected systems, replacing traditional net metering. Systems must pass electrical and structural inspections before interconnection. Austin has streamlined solar permitting with an expedited review process for standard residential installations.

Permit Required: Yes β€” building permit through Development ServicesIncentive Program: Austin Energy Value of Solar tariff

HOA Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code Section 202.010 prohibits HOAs from banning solar energy devices on residential property. HOAs may adopt reasonable restrictions on panel placement but cannot prevent installation or substantially increase cost. Restrictions cannot reduce system output by more than 10% or increase total cost by more than 10%. The Texas Solar Rights Act ensures homeowners can install solar panels even in deed-restricted communities, and Austin's pro-solar policies align with state protections.

State Law: Texas Property Code Β§202.010HOA Ban: Prohibited β€” cannot ban solar devices

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

Garage Sale Signs

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 25-10 restricts garage sale signs to the property where the sale is taking place. Off-premises directional signs (such as signs at intersections pointing to a garage sale) are prohibited in the public right-of-way. Signs must be temporary and removed promptly after the sale ends. Bandit signs placed on utility poles, traffic signs, or public property are subject to removal by Austin Code Compliance and can result in fines.

Code Section: Austin City Code Ch. 25-10On-Premises: Allowed at the sale location only

Political Signs

Some Restrictions

Austin regulates political signs as temporary signs under Land Development Code Chapter 25-10. Residential properties may display non-illuminated temporary signs up to 8 square feet per sign and 36 square feet aggregate without permits. Texas state law preempts content-based timing rules; Austin applies content-neutral size and placement standards year-round.

: :

Holiday Displays

Few Restrictions

Austin does not specifically regulate temporary holiday displays on private residential property beyond general sign code provisions in Chapter 25-10. Seasonal decorations including lights, inflatables, and yard displays are generally permitted without a permit. Displays should not obstruct public sidewalks, streets, or sight lines at intersections. HOA communities may have their own restrictions on holiday decoration timing and types. Electrical decorations must comply with the city's electrical code.

Permit Required: No β€” holiday displays exempt on private propertyDuration: No specific city time limit for residential

🏚️ Property Maintenance

Snow & Sidewalk Clearing

Few Restrictions

Austin does not have a mandatory snow or ice sidewalk clearing ordinance. Snow and ice events are rare in Central Texas, occurring only a few times per decade. During the February 2021 winter storm, the city focused on emergency road clearing rather than sidewalk enforcement. Property owners are generally expected to use reasonable care to maintain safe conditions but there is no specific city code requirement to shovel or de-ice sidewalks within a set timeframe.

Snow Clearing Ordinance: None β€” no mandatory clearing requirementClimate: Snow events rare in Central Texas

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Austin Code Department enforces property maintenance standards including trash container storage and placement. Austin Resource Recovery provides standardized carts for trash and recycling collection. Carts must be placed curbside by 6:30 AM on collection day and retrieved by 10 PM the same day. Between collection days, carts should be stored behind the front building line or screened from public view. Overflowing or unsecured trash containers are a code violation enforceable by Austin Code.

Collection Day: Carts curbside by 6:30 AM, retrieved by 10 PMStorage: Behind front building line or screened from view

Property Blight

Heavy Restrictions

Austin Code Department aggressively enforces property maintenance standards under City Code Chapters 6-1 (Public Health and Sanitation) and 13-1 (Minimum Property Standards). Property blight violations include accumulated junk, abandoned vehicles, dilapidated structures, graffiti, and overgrown vegetation exceeding 12 inches. The city operates a complaint-driven enforcement system through 311 and Austin Code Connect. Repeat violators face escalating fines and the city can abate violations and place a lien on the property for costs.

Code Section: City Code Ch. 6-1 and Ch. 13-1Vegetation Height: Over 12 inches triggers violation

Garage Sale Rules

Few Restrictions

Austin does not require a permit for residential garage sales. The city does not impose a specific limit on the number of garage sales per year by ordinance, but sales that appear to operate as ongoing retail businesses may trigger zoning enforcement for unauthorized commercial activity in a residential zone under Title 25 of the Land Development Code. Garage sale signs may only be placed on the property where the sale is occurring. Sales of food or beverages may require a Temporary Food Permit from Austin Public Health.

Permit Required: No β€” no garage sale permit neededFrequency Limit: No specific limit β€” but ongoing sales may trigger zoning review

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Some Restrictions

Vacant lots in Austin must be maintained under City Code Chapter 6-1 (Public Health) and Chapter 13-1 (Minimum Property Standards). Owners must keep vegetation below 12 inches, prevent accumulation of debris and standing water, and secure any structures against unauthorized entry. Austin Code Department conducts proactive sweeps in areas with concentrated vacant lot complaints. The city can mow or clear a vacant lot and assess costs as a lien against the property after providing notice.

Code Section: City Code Ch. 6-1 and Ch. 13-1Vegetation: Must be maintained below 12 inches

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

Relocation Assistance

Some Restrictions

Austin's Tenant Relocation Assistance Ordinance, codified at City Code Chapter 25-1 Subchapter F, requires landlords to pay relocation benefits when manufactured-home parks close, multifamily properties demolish, or zoning changes displace tenants. Most private market evictions still require nothing.

Local ordinance: Austin Code Ch. 25-1 Subch. FTriggers: Park closure, demolition, rezoning

Security Deposit Rules

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code Section 92.103 requires Austin landlords to refund tenant security deposits within 30 days of move-out, with itemized deductions for damage beyond normal wear and tear; Austin imposes no stricter local rule.

Refund deadline: 30 days after move-outStatute: TX Property Code Sec. 92.103

No-Fault Evictions

Few Restrictions

Texas Property Code Chapter 24 allows Austin landlords to terminate month-to-month tenancies or refuse to renew fixed-term leases without cause, requiring only proper written notice; Austin imposes no just-cause requirement on private landlords.

Statute: TX Property Code Ch. 24 and 91Month-to-month notice: 30 days written

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code Section 92.331 prohibits landlord retaliation, and Austin City Code Chapter 5-2 forbids housing discrimination on protected-class grounds. Austin has no comprehensive Tenant Anti-Harassment Ordinance like Los Angeles or Seattle.

Retaliation statute: TX Property Code Sec. 92.331Austin fair housing: City Code Ch. 5-2

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Few Restrictions

Austin enacted a source-of-income antidiscrimination ordinance in 2014, but Texas HB 1510 (2015), codified at Local Government Code Section 250.007, expressly preempted it. Private Austin landlords may legally refuse Section 8 vouchers today.

Austin ordinance: 20141211-050 enacted, preemptedPreemption statute: TX Local Gov't Code Sec. 250.007

Section 8 Voucher Acceptance

Some Restrictions

The Housing Authority of the City of Austin (HACA) administers federal Housing Choice Vouchers, but landlord participation is voluntary because Texas Local Government Code Section 250.007 preempts mandatory acceptance.

Administrator: Housing Authority of Austin (HACA)Tenant share: 30 percent of adjusted income

Rent Control

Few Restrictions

Austin has NO local rent control ordinance. Tex. Local Gov't Code Β§ 214.902 preempts any Texas municipality from adopting rent control unless the governor approves it after a declared housing-emergency disaster. The Austin City Code contains no rent stabilization chapter and most rent increases are unrestricted.

Local Ordinance: None β€” no city rent controlPreemption Statute: Tex. Local Gov't Code Β§ 214.902

Just Cause Eviction

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 4-14 (Ord. 20221027-023, Oct. 2022) requires landlords with 5+ units to give a 7-day notice of proposed eviction before any notice to vacate. Texas HB 2127 (eff. Sept. 1, 2023) preempts local eviction rules; the Third Court of Appeals upheld HB 2127 in July 2025.

Local Code Section: Austin Code Ch. 4-14Ordinance Number: 20221027-023 (Oct. 27, 2022)

Rental Registration

Heavy Restrictions

Austin requires registration for short-term rentals (STRs) under City Code Title 25, Chapter 25-2, Article 4 (Short-Term Rental Ordinance). STRs are classified as Type 1 (owner-occupied), Type 2 (non-owner-occupied, non-multifamily), or Type 3 (non-owner-occupied multifamily). All types require an operating license from Austin Code Department. Long-term rentals do not require a separate rental registration. The city suspended issuing new Type 2 licenses in certain areas due to density caps.

Code Section: Title 25, Ch. 25-2, Article 4STR Types: Type 1 (owner-occupied), Type 2 (non-owner), Type 3 (multifamily)

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling

Mandatory Organics Recycling

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 15-6 (Universal Recycling Ordinance) requires food-permitted businesses to divert organic material from landfill via composting, donation, or other approved methods. Austin Resource Recovery enforces with annual diversion plans and audits citywide.

Code chapter: Austin Code Chapter 15-6Covered: Food-permitted businesses

Yard Waste Collection

Some Restrictions

Austin Resource Recovery provides weekly curbside composting of yard trimmings combined with food scraps in the green cart. Branches must be bundled separately for monthly bulk brush pickup. Christmas trees are collected as part of curbside composting in January.

: :

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

Austin Resource Recovery requires specific cart placement for collection. Carts must be placed at the curb with wheels against the curb, lids closed, and handles facing the house. Carts should be at least 3 feet apart from each other and 3 feet from mailboxes, cars, utility poles, and other obstacles. Carts must not block sidewalks, driveways, or bike lanes. Between collection days, carts must be stored behind the front building line or screened from street view.

Spacing: 3 feet apart from each other and obstaclesOrientation: Wheels against curb, handles facing house

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

Austin Resource Recovery provides curbside bulk item collection by appointment. Residents can schedule up to two free bulk pickups per year for large items like furniture, mattresses, and appliances. Additional pickups are available for a fee. Items must be placed at the curb on the scheduled date. Austin also operates the Recycle and Reuse Drop-off Center for construction debris, tires, and other materials. Hazardous waste is accepted at the Household Hazardous Waste facility on Todd Lane.

Free Bulk Pickups: 2 per year by appointmentAccepted Items: Furniture, mattresses, appliances, large items

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

Austin Resource Recovery provides weekly curbside collection for trash, recycling, and composting for single-family residences. Trash is collected weekly in the blue-lidded cart, recycling in the green-lidded cart, and compost in the orange-lidded cart. Collection schedules vary by neighborhood and can be found on the Austin Resource Recovery website or app. Carts must be placed at the curb by 6:30 AM on collection day with lids closed and handles facing the house. Multifamily properties arrange private collection services.

Trash Collection: Weekly β€” blue-lidded cartRecycling: Weekly β€” green-lidded cart (single-stream)

Recycling Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Austin has a Universal Recycling Ordinance (URO) adopted in 2012 requiring recycling and organics diversion for commercial properties, multifamily properties, and food-permitted establishments. The URO supports Austin's Zero Waste goal of diverting 90% of waste from landfills by 2040. All properties with trash service of 96 gallons or more per week must provide recycling. Food-permitted businesses must divert organics. Single-family homes receive single-stream recycling through Austin Resource Recovery.

Ordinance: Universal Recycling Ordinance (URO) β€” 2012Goal: Zero Waste β€” 90% diversion by 2040

🚁 Drone Rules

Airport Proximity Rules

Heavy Restrictions

FAA Part 107 controls drone flights near Austin-Bergstrom International Airport. Pilots must request near-real-time LAANC authorization for flights in controlled Class C airspace surrounding AUS. Texas Government Code Chapter 423 adds state-level no-fly zones around critical infrastructure.

Airspace: Class C around AUSAuthorization tool: FAA LAANC near-real-time

Event Drone Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

FAA Temporary Flight Restrictions and stadium TFRs ban drone flights over large Austin events such as SXSW, Austin City Limits, and University of Texas football. Austin Code 14-8 and Texas Penal Code 423.0045 add local trespass and reckless-endangerment exposure.

Stadium TFR radius: Three nautical milesStadium capacity: 30,000+ outdoor seats

Park Drone Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Austin Parks and Recreation Department (PARD) prohibits drone operation in city parks without a film/event permit under Austin City Code Β§8-1. Zilker Park, Town Lake, and Lady Bird Lake all post no-drone rules. ABIA Class C airspace covers most of South Austin requiring LAANC, and Texas Govt Code Β§423 adds statewide overlays.

: :

Commercial Drones

Some Restrictions

Commercial drone operations in Austin require an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. Operations near Austin-Bergstrom International Airport require LAANC (Low Altitude Authorization and Notification Capability) approval through the FAA. Commercial operators must also comply with Texas Government Code Chapter 423 which restricts drone image capture over private property with limited exceptions for real estate photography, oil and gas operations, and utility inspections. Austin does not require a separate local commercial drone permit.

Federal License: FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate requiredAirport Operations: LAANC approval for Austin-Bergstrom airspace

Recreational Drones

Some Restrictions

Austin allows recreational drone flight under FAA rules with park-specific bans. Pilots must register drones over 0.55 lbs ($5/3 years), complete the TRUST test, fly below 400 feet AGL, and maintain visual line of sight. Austin Parks & Recreation prohibits drone takeoff and landing in city parks, including Zilker, Lady Bird Lake, and the Greenbelt, without a permit.

: :

πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors

πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door

πŸŒ™ Curfew Laws

πŸ“ Building Setbacks & Zoning

Setback Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Austin Land Development Code Title 25, Chapter 25-2 establishes setback requirements that vary by zoning district. In SF-2 (single-family small lot) zones, the front setback is 25 feet, side setbacks are 5 feet (15 feet on street side of corner lots), and rear setback is 10 feet. SF-3 (single-family standard lot) requires 25-foot front, 5-foot side, and 10-foot rear setbacks. Commercial and multifamily zones have different requirements. The city processes variance requests through the Board of Adjustment.

Code Section: Title 25, Ch. 25-2SF-2 Front: 25 feet

Lot Coverage Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Austin Land Development Code Title 25, Chapter 25-2 sets maximum building coverage (impervious cover) by zoning district. SF-2 zones allow 40% building coverage and 45% impervious cover. SF-3 zones allow 40% building coverage and 45% impervious cover. The McMansion ordinance applies additional floor-to-area ratio (FAR) limits of 0.40:1 in affected neighborhoods. In the Barton Springs Zone, impervious cover limits are significantly lower (15-25%) under the Save Our Springs ordinance. Exceeding limits requires a variance.

Code Section: Title 25, Ch. 25-2SF-2/SF-3 Building Coverage: 40% maximum

Structure Height Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Austin Land Development Code Title 25, Chapter 25-2 sets maximum building heights by zoning district. Single-family residential zones (SF-1 through SF-6) have a 35-foot height limit with a maximum of two stories. The McMansion ordinance (Subchapter F) further limits height and mass in certain central Austin neighborhoods to prevent oversized homes. Downtown and commercial zones have higher limits ranging from 40 to 60 feet, with some Capitol View Corridors limiting height to protect views of the State Capitol building.

Code Section: Title 25, Ch. 25-2SF Zones: 35 feet / 2 stories maximum

🌳 Tree Protection

Protected Tree Species

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 25-8 protects every tree 19 inches DBH or larger, with heritage status for 24-inch protected species like live oak, pecan, bald cypress, and Texas ash; removal requires a permit, mitigation, and often arborist review, with fines up to $1,000 per inch.

Local ordinance: Austin Code Ch. 25-8Protected size: 19-inch DBH minimum

Parkway Planting

Some Restrictions

Austin City Arborist and Urban Forestry program control planting in the parkway strip between sidewalk and street under City Code Chapter 25-7 and Transportation Department right-of-way rules. Approved species lists, clearance standards, and free street tree programs guide residents.

Authority: Austin City Arborist officeCode chapter: Austin Code Chapter 25-7

Tree Removal Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Title 25, Chapter 25-8, Subchapter B (Tree and Natural Area Protection) requires a permit to remove any protected tree. Trees with a trunk diameter of 19 inches or more (measured at 4.5 feet above ground) are classified as protected. A tree removal permit from the City Arborist must be obtained before removal. Permit applications require a tree survey, justification for removal, and a mitigation plan. Emergency removals for immediate safety hazards may proceed without prior permit but must be reported within 5 business days.

Code Section: Title 25, Ch. 25-8, Subchapter BProtected Size: 19 inches diameter at 4.5 ft above ground

Heritage & Protected Trees

Heavy Restrictions

Austin's 2010 Heritage Tree Ordinance (City Code Ch. 6-3) is one of the strictest in the United States. Trees of designated species 19+ inches in diameter are Heritage Trees and cannot be removed except for imminent hazard or where a tree prevents reasonable use of the property. Protected trees (8–18 inch DBH) require a removal permit.

Heritage DBH: 19 inches DBH and largerHeritage species: Oak, elm, pecan, walnut, bald cypress, cedar elm, ash

Tree Replacement Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Austin's tree mitigation requirements under Title 25, Chapter 25-8 require replacement planting or payment into the Tree Fund when protected or heritage trees are removed. Standard protected tree mitigation is calculated based on the diameter of the removed tree using a caliper-inch replacement formula. Heritage trees require a higher mitigation ratio. Developers may plant replacement trees on-site, off-site at an approved location, or pay into the City's Tree Mitigation Fund. The fund is used for tree planting in underserved areas.

Code Section: Title 25, Ch. 25-8Method: Caliper-inch replacement formula

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

Garage Sale Permits

Few Restrictions

Austin does not require a permit for residential garage sales or yard sales. Residents may hold garage sales on their property without prior city authorization. Sales that collect Texas sales tax must comply with Texas Comptroller requirements, though occasional garage sales of personal items are generally exempt from sales tax under the Texas Tax Code. If sales become frequent enough to constitute a business, zoning enforcement for unauthorized commercial activity in a residential zone may apply.

Permit Required: No β€” no city permit neededSales Tax: Generally exempt for personal items

Frequency Limits

Few Restrictions

Austin does not impose a specific numerical limit on the number of garage sales a resident can hold per year. However, the Land Development Code prohibits ongoing commercial activity in residential zones. If garage sales become frequent enough to constitute a business operation (regular hours, commercial inventory, repeated advertising), Austin Code may investigate for unauthorized commercial use. The determination is made on a case-by-case basis considering frequency, duration, and the nature of items sold.

Frequency Limit: No specific numerical limitZoning Concern: Frequent sales may be deemed unauthorized commercial activity

Time Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Austin does not impose specific time-of-day restrictions on garage sales by ordinance. General noise ordinance provisions in City Code Chapter 9-2 apply, meaning garage sales should not create excessive noise during quiet hours (10 PM to 7 AM on weekdays, 10 PM to 9 AM on weekends). As a practical matter, most garage sales operate during daylight hours. HOA communities may have their own rules governing the timing of garage sales within deed-restricted neighborhoods.

Time Restrictions: No specific ordinance β€” general noise rules applyNoise Quiet Hours: 10 PM-7 AM weekdays; 10 PM-9 AM weekends

🏘️ HOA Rules

Architectural Review

Some Restrictions

HOAs in Austin enforce architectural standards through their CC&Rs, governed by the Texas Property Code. Under Section 209.00505, if a property owner's architectural application is not denied within 60 days, it is automatically approved. Associations must follow documented guidelines and apply them consistently. Protected displays include U.S. and Texas flags and religious door items.

Auto-Approval: If no response within 60 days (Section 209.00505)Written Guidelines: Must be documented and applied consistently

Board Procedures

Some Restrictions

HOAs in Austin are governed by the Texas Residential Property Owners Protection Act (Property Code Chapter 209). Board meetings must be open to all association members under Section 209.0051. The board cannot vote on enforcement actions, fines, or suspension of owner rights in closed session. Notice of meetings must include date, time, location, and agenda items.

Governing Law: Texas Property Code Chapter 209Open Meetings: Required under Section 209.0051

Assessment & Dues

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code Chapter 209 governs HOA assessment collection in Austin. Before filing a lien for unpaid assessments, the HOA must provide a written 30-day notice of delinquency including the amount owed, late fees, and the owner's right to a payment plan. HOAs must offer repayment over at least 3 months. Foreclosure requires a court order and is prohibited if the debt is solely fines or attorney's fees.

Notice Required: Written 30-day delinquency notice before lienPayment Plans: Must be offered, minimum 3-month repayment

Dispute Resolution

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code Section 209.0071 provides a mandatory alternative dispute resolution (ADR) framework for HOA disputes in Austin. Before an HOA or homeowner can file a lawsuit related to the governing documents, the complaining party must first offer ADR through mediation. This applies to disputes over enforcement actions, fines, architectural decisions, and assessment collection.

ADR Requirement: Must offer before filing lawsuit (Section 209.0071)Written Offer: Must describe dispute and desired outcome

CC&R Enforcement

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code Chapter 209 governs how HOAs in Austin enforce covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs). Before levying fines, the HOA must provide written notice specifying the violation and the owner's right to a hearing before the board. Fines and suspension of rights may only be imposed after an open board meeting vote. The HOA may not file a lien for fines alone.

Written Notice: Required before any fine or enforcement actionHearing Right: Owner entitled to hearing at open board meeting

πŸ›’ Street Vending

Vendor Permits

Some Restrictions

Street vending in Austin requires a Right-of-Way Vendor Permit from the Transportation and Public Works Department. Vendors may place a cart or stand in the right-of-way not exceeding 4 feet by 5 feet. No person or company may hold more than three vendor permits. Food vendors also need permits from Austin Public Health and must comply with Chapter 10-3 of the Code of Ordinances (Food and Food Handlers).

Permit Type: Right-of-Way Vendor Permit (Transportation & Public Works)Cart Size Limit: 4 feet by 5 feet maximum including attachments

Vending Zones

Some Restrictions

Austin imposes specific location restrictions for street vendors in the right-of-way. The affected sidewalk area must be at least 16 feet wide with a minimum 10-by-10-foot unobstructed pedestrian space. Vendors cannot locate within 20 feet of another vending location or within 20 feet of a business entrance selling comparable merchandise. Additional restrictions apply near intersections, crosswalks, and transit stops.

Minimum Sidewalk Width: 16 feetPedestrian Clearance: 10 ft x 10 ft unobstructed space required

Cart & Stand Rules

Some Restrictions

Street vendors in Austin may place either a cart or a stand in the right-of-way, not exceeding 4 feet by 5 feet including non-detachable parts. Units must be self-contained with no connection to external utilities. Mobile food units must comply with Austin Public Health equipment standards and the Austin Fire Department inspection requirements for units with cooking appliances.

Maximum Cart Size: 4 feet by 5 feet including non-detachable partsSelf-Contained: No external utility connections allowed

🎬 Filming & Production

Location Permits

Some Restrictions

All commercial, student, and mobile filming in Austin's public right-of-way (streets, sidewalks, alleys) requires a film permit from the Office of Special Events (OSE) in the Transportation and Public Works Department. There is no cost for a right-of-way film permit. Applications must be submitted via the AB+C Portal at least 3 business days before filming. Commercial general liability insurance of at least $500,000 per occurrence is required.

Permit Authority: Office of Special Events, Transportation & Public WorksPermit Fee: No cost for right-of-way or park film permits

Production Noise

Some Restrictions

Film productions in Austin must comply with the city's noise ordinance (Chapter 9-2 of the Code of Ordinances). Unreasonable noises are strictly prohibited between 10:30 PM and 7:00 AM. Productions using generators, amplified sound, pyrotechnics, or other noise-generating equipment during permitted hours must still keep noise at reasonable levels. Noise waivers may be available through the special events permitting process for productions requiring overnight filming.

Quiet Hours: 10:30 PM to 7:00 AM (unreasonable noise prohibited)Governing Code: Chapter 9-2, Austin Code of Ordinances

Street Closures

Some Restrictions

Film productions requiring street closures in Austin must obtain a permit from the Office of Special Events and submit a Traffic Control Plan. Police assistance is mandatory for any road closure. Applications must include the specific streets, dates, and hours of requested closures. There is no fee for the film permit itself, but police assistance and traffic control costs are the production's responsibility.

Traffic Control Plan: Required for all street closuresPolice Assistance: Mandatory; costs borne by production

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Austin became one of the first major Texas cities to mandate residential fire sprinklers in new single-family homes, adopting IRC Section R313 without the typical state amendments and codifying the requirement in Austin City Code Title 25 Building Criteria Manual.

Mandated since: 2010 Austin amendmentStandard: NFPA 13D for single-family

Childcare Center Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Austin childcare centers are licensed and inspected by Texas Health and Human Services Commission Child Care Regulation under 26 TAC Chapter 746, layered with Austin City Code Title 25 zoning, building, and fire requirements before a center can open.

State licensor: Texas HHSC Child Care RegulationState rule: 26 TAC Chapter 746

Green Building Code

Some Restrictions

Austin Energy Green Building, launched in 1990 as the first municipal green building rating program in the United States, evaluates new and remodel projects on a one-to-five-star scale and is referenced by Austin Code Title 25 for incentives and density bonuses.

Launched: 1990, first US municipalRating scale: One to five stars

Lead Paint

Some Restrictions

Lead paint regulations in Austin follow federal law (Title X, Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act of 1992) and EPA regulations (40 CFR Part 745). Sellers and landlords of pre-1978 housing must disclose known lead-based paint hazards, provide the EPA pamphlet, and allow a 10-day inspection period for buyers. Texas does not have a state lead paint law beyond federal requirements, and Austin does not impose additional municipal lead paint ordinances.

Applies To: All housing built before 1978Disclosure Required: Known lead paint and hazards must be disclosed

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Austin requires property owners to maintain premises free from rodent and insect infestations under the city's property maintenance standards. The Austin Code Department enforces violations related to conditions that attract pests, including tall weeds, accumulated trash, and standing water. Landlords are responsible for providing habitable rental units free of pest infestations under Texas Property Code Section 92.052.

Enforcement Agency: Austin Code Department (report via 311)Landlord Duty: Maintain pest-free conditions (TX Property Code 92.052)

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Some Restrictions

Scaffolding in Austin is regulated under the city's adopted building codes (2024 Technical Building Codes effective July 10, 2025) and right-of-way permit requirements. Any scaffolding erected over public sidewalks or rights-of-way requires a right-of-way permit from the Austin Transportation and Public Works Department. Construction sites must maintain pedestrian access and provide protective sidewalk sheds when overhead work could endanger the public.

Building Code: 2024 Technical Building Codes (effective July 2025)ROW Permit: Required for scaffolding over public sidewalks/streets

Elevator Maintenance

Some Restrictions

Elevator safety in Austin is regulated by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) under the Texas Elevator Safety Act (Health and Safety Code Chapter 754). All elevators, escalators, and related conveyances must be registered with TDLR, inspected annually, and maintained by licensed contractors. Austin's adopted building codes incorporate ASME A17.1 safety standards for new installations.

Regulatory Agency: Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR)Governing Law: Health and Safety Code Chapter 754

πŸŽͺ Special Events & Permits

Parade Permits

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 14-8 requires a parade or street-event permit issued through the Austin Center for Events, with Austin Police Department coordination. Applicants submit routes, traffic plans, insurance, and fees, and may need APD off-duty officer staffing for street closures.

Code chapter: Austin Code Chapter 14-8Permit office: Austin Center for Events

Sidewalk Cafe Rules

Some Restrictions

Austin regulates sidewalk cafes under Chapter 14-4 of the Code of Ordinances. Restaurants may operate outdoor dining on public sidewalks adjacent to their facade with a Temporary Sidewalk Cafe Permit from the Transportation and Public Works Right-of-Way Division. Permits are valid for up to 5 years. The sidewalk must maintain a minimum clear pedestrian zone, and operators must provide liability insurance and a surety bond.

Governing Code: Chapter 14-4, Austin Code of OrdinancesPermit Duration: Up to 5 years, renewable

Block Party Permits

Some Restrictions

Block parties in Austin that involve closing any portion of a public street require a permit from the Austin Center for Events (ACE) in the Transportation and Public Works Department. Stationary events impacting only one block of sidewalk or non-street right-of-way may qualify for a simplified permit under Chapter 14-8 of the Austin Code of Ordinances. Applications must be submitted with advance notice depending on the event tier.

Permit Authority: Austin Center for Events (ACE) / Transportation & Public WorksGoverning Code: Chapter 14-8, Austin Code of Ordinances

Park Event Permits

Some Restrictions

A permit from the Austin Parks and Recreation Department (PARD) is required for organized events in Austin's public parks, except for casual gatherings of friends or family without commercial activity or public advertisement. Events with amplified sound, structures, vendors, or commercial activity require additional coordination. The permit process is managed through the Austin Center for Events (ACE).

Permit Authority: Austin Parks and Recreation Dept. via ACECasual Exemption: Friends/family gatherings without ads or commerce

πŸ“’ Noise from Specific Sources

πŸ” Rental Inspections

πŸ“‹ Code Violation Reporting

πŸŽ‹ Invasive Plant Rules

πŸ“· Privacy & Surveillance

πŸ“ Permit Requirements

πŸ”« Firearms

🚬 Tobacco & Vaping

πŸ›οΈ Single-Use Items

πŸ’Ό Employment Preemption

πŸ›‚ Immigration Policy

πŸ›οΈ Homelessness & Encampment Rules

πŸ›΄ Mobility & Curb Rules

πŸ’§ Water Use Rules

πŸ—ΊοΈ Zoning Overlays & Bonuses

🩺 Public Health Rules

Rodent Control

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 10-2 and Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 343 require property owners to control rats, mice, and other vermin. The Austin Code Department investigates complaints, issues abatement notices, and may perform city-led abatement charged as a property lien.

Local authority: Austin Code Chapter 10-2State authority: TX H&S Code Ch. 343

Restaurant Grade Cards

Some Restrictions

Austin Public Health inspects food establishments under City Code Chapter 10-3 and assigns a numerical score on a 100-point scale. Austin does not require posted letter grades at the entrance, but reports are public on the Austin/Travis County dashboard.

Authority: Austin Code Chapter 10-3Inspector: Austin Public Health EHS

Syringe Disposal

Some Restrictions

Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 728 governs disposal of used needles and sharps. Austin Resource Recovery and Austin Public Health direct residents to rigid containers and authorized drop-off points; loose syringes in trash or recycling are prohibited and create worker-injury liability.

State law: TX H&S Code Chapter 728Container: Rigid puncture-resistant

Food Handler Certification

Some Restrictions

The Texas Food Handler Education Act requires food employees to complete a state-approved food handler course within sixty days of hire. Austin City Code Chapter 10-3 requires every food establishment to employ at least one Certified Food Manager with credential posted on premises.

State law: TX H&S Code Chapter 438Handler card validity: Two years

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸ›οΈ Historic Preservation

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

Adult Entertainment

Heavy Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 4-13 licenses sexually oriented businesses, requiring annual permits, distance buffers from schools, churches, parks, and residential zones, no-touch performer rules, and operator background checks; violations are class C misdemeanors enforced by APD vice.

Local ordinance: Austin Code Ch. 4-13Distance buffer: 1,000 feet from sensitive uses

Massage Establishments

Some Restrictions

Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation licenses massage therapists and establishments statewide under Occupations Code Chapter 455; Austin City Code Chapter 4-9 layers local registration, zoning, and human-trafficking inspections on top of the state license.

State licensing: TX Occupations Code Ch. 455Local registration: Austin Code Ch. 4-9

Tobacco Retail License

Some Restrictions

Texas Comptroller issues retail cigarette, e-cigarette, and tobacco permits under Tax Code Chapters 154 and 155; Austin Code Chapter 7-2 layers vendor responsibilities and Smoke-Free Workplace duties, while HB 1771 preempts most local restrictions on flavor or product mix.

State permit: TX Comptroller cigarette permitStatute: TX Tax Code Ch. 154 and 155

Secondhand Dealers

Some Restrictions

Texas Occupations Code Chapter 1956 regulates secondhand dealers and crafted-precious-metal dealers, requiring registration with local police, transaction reporting, holding periods, and seller identification; Austin Police Department administers compliance for Austin merchants.

Statute: TX Occupations Code Ch. 1956Registration: APD Pawn and Secondhand Detail

Pawnbrokers

Some Restrictions

Texas Finance Code Chapter 371 licenses pawnbrokers through the Office of Consumer Credit Commissioner, capping fees, requiring 30-day minimum redemption, and mandating police transaction reports; Austin pawnshops also follow the secondhand-dealer reporting and zoning rules.

Statute: TX Finance Code Ch. 371Regulator: Office of Consumer Credit Commissioner

Towing Companies

Heavy Restrictions

Texas Occupations Code Chapter 2308 licenses tow operators, vehicle storage facilities, and incident-management towers through TDLR; Austin City Code Chapter 12 layers wrecker permits, rotation rosters, and consent-tow disclosures, with maximum nonconsent fees set by TDLR rules.

State licensing: TX Occupations Code Ch. 2308Local wrecker rules: Austin Code Ch. 12

🚷 Public Conduct

Aggressive Panhandling

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Chapter 9-2 prohibits aggressive solicitation, including approaching ATMs, intersections, and outdoor diners, while Texas Penal Code Section 22.06 governs threatening contact; passive panhandling itself remains protected speech under the First Amendment after Reed v. Town of Gilbert.

Local ordinance: Austin Code Sec. 9-2-1Buffer rule: 8 feet from ATMs and diners

Public Urination

Some Restrictions

Austin City Code Title 10 disorderly conduct provisions and Texas Penal Code Section 42.01 reach public urination through indecent exposure and disorderly conduct charges; Sixth Street and downtown districts see heaviest enforcement during late-night hours.

Disorderly conduct: TX Penal Code Sec. 42.01Indecent exposure risk: TX Penal Code Sec. 21.08

Loud Party Ordinance

Some Restrictions

Austin Noise Ordinance Chapter 9-2 prohibits unreasonable noise after 10 p.m. on weeknights and 10:30 p.m. weekends; second-response loud-party calls within 12 hours trigger cost-recovery billing of the host plus class C misdemeanor citations.

Quiet hours: 10pm weeknights, 10:30pm weekendsDecibel cap: 75 dBA at source typical

Outdoor Smoking Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Austin Code Chapter 10-6 has banned smoking in indoor workplaces, restaurants, bars, and public buildings since the 2005 voter-approved Smoke-Free Workplace Ordinance, plus designated outdoor zones near entrances, parks, playgrounds, and city-funded venues; vaping is included.

Adopted: 2005 voter approvedLocal ordinance: Austin Code Ch. 10-6

Jaywalking

Few Restrictions

Texas Transportation Code Section 552.005 requires pedestrians crossing outside marked crosswalks or intersections to yield right-of-way to vehicles; Austin enforces this state statute selectively, with no separate municipal jaywalking ordinance and growing pressure to decriminalize.

State statute: TX Transp. Code Sec. 552.005Pedestrian duty: Yield outside crosswalks

πŸ’° Local Taxes & Fees

Overall: What to Expect in Austin

Austin has 219 ordinances on file across 53 categories. Of these, 56 are rated permissive, 107 moderate, and 56 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Austin compared to other cities.

Rules can change, and enforcement varies. Always verify specific requirements with the city directly before making major decisions like building a fence, listing on Airbnb, or starting a home business.

Also Moving Nearby?