Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup

Moving to Cedar Park, 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 Cedar Park across 18 categories and 101 specific rules we track.

22 Permissive51 Moderate28 Strict

πŸ”Š Noise OrdinancesFull noise ordinances guide β†’

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

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park Code of Ordinances Article 8.08 (Noise Regulations) sets objective decibel limits at the property line of the noise source. Residential daytime (7 a.m.-10 p.m.) caps are 70 dBA / 80 dBC; nighttime (10 p.m.-7 a.m.) caps drop to 50 dBA / 60 dBC every day.

Code Article: Cedar Park Code Art. 8.08Residential Day Cap: 70 dBA / 80 dBC, 7a-10p

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park classifies a continuously barking dog as a 'public nuisance animal' under the Animal Control chapter of its Code of Ordinances. Animal Control investigates complaints; sworn citizen testimony in Municipal Court is required to convict.

Classification: Public nuisance animalEnforcing Agency: Cedar Park Animal Control

Amplified Music & Events

Heavy Restrictions

Amplified music in Cedar Park is held to Article 8.08's property-line decibel caps - 70 dBA / 80 dBC daytime residential, 75 dBA / 85 dBC nonresidential, with stricter nighttime caps. Outdoor amplified events require a Special Noise Exception submitted 60+ days ahead and approved by City Council.

Code Section: Cedar Park Code Art. 8.08Residential Day Cap: 70 dBA / 80 dBC

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Article 8.08 allows construction activity within 600 feet of an occupied dwelling only between 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. Outside that window construction noise must comply with the residential decibel caps (50 dBA / 60 dBC at night).

Allowed Hours: 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.Trigger Distance: Within 600 ft of a dwelling

Leaf Blower Rules

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park has no leaf-blower-specific ordinance. Gas and electric blowers are allowed citywide; they must simply stay under Article 8.08's residential decibel caps (70 dBA / 80 dBC daytime, 50 dBA / 60 dBC nighttime) measured at the source property line.

Blower-Specific Rule: NoneGas Blowers: Allowed

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park does not (and legally cannot) regulate aircraft-in-flight noise; airspace and aircraft noise are exclusively governed by the FAA under federal law. No local Cedar Park ordinance addresses overflight noise.

Local aircraft noise rule?: No β€” federally preemptedGoverning authority: FAA (49 U.S.C. Β§40103)

Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park sets a citywide objective standard of 85 dBA between 7am and 10pm and 70 dBA between 10pm and 7am (Fri/Sat nighttime period begins at 11pm), enforced as a Class C misdemeanor.

Day limit: 85 dBA (7am–10pm)Night limit: 70 dBA (10pm–7am Sun–Thu; 11pm–7am Fri/Sat)

Vehicle Noise

Some Restrictions

Texas Transportation Code Β§547.604 requires every motor vehicle to have a muffler in good working order and prohibits muffler cutouts. Cedar Park Article 8.08 exempts a properly-mufflered engine but DOES regulate amplified sound equipment in or attached to vehicles under the 85/70 dBA limits.

Muffler rule: Tex. Transp. Code Β§547.604 (state preempts city)Engine noise exemption: Yes, if mufflered & moving on ROW

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park Article 8.08 caps industrial and commercial noise at 85 dBA during the day (7am–10pm) and 70 dBA at night (10pm–7am, extended to 11pm–7am on Fri/Sat), measured at the property line of the receiving property.

Daytime limit: 85 dBA (7am–10pm)Nighttime limit: 70 dBA (10pm–7am; 11pm–7am Fri/Sat)

Outdoor Music

Some Restrictions

Outdoor amplified music must stay under the 85/70 dBA day/night limits of Article 8.08. Events exceeding those limits require a $50 Special Noise Exception application filed at least 60 days in advance and approved by City Council.

Permit required?: Yes, if exceeding 85/70 dBAPermit fee: $50.00

🏠 Short-Term RentalsFull short-term rentals guide β†’

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

Host Presence Rule

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park does not require a host or property manager to be present on-site or in town during a short-term rental stay. Unhosted (whole-home) rentals are allowed.

Host-presence required: NoUnhosted/whole-home STRs: Allowed

Taxes & Fees

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park imposes a 7% Hotel Occupancy Tax on STR stays under 30 days (Article 10.03) and, starting October 1, 2026, will require all STR owners to register with the city and pay a $100 annual fee.

City HOT rate: 7%State HOT rate (additional): 6%

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park City Council approved an ordinance on April 23, 2026 requiring all short-term rental owners to register with the city. Registration becomes mandatory on October 1, 2026; the fee is $100 per property per year.

Permit required: Yes β€” registration mandatory starting Oct 1, 2026Annual fee: $100 per property

Registration Rules

Some Restrictions

Every short-term rental property in Cedar Park must register with the city beginning October 1, 2026. Registration is per-property (not per-owner) and renews annually at $100.

Registration required: Yes β€” effective Oct 1, 2026Fee: $100 per property per year

Occupancy Limits

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park's adopted STR registration ordinance does not set a guest-occupancy cap; the operative ceiling is Texas Property Code Β§92.010, which allows up to three adults per bedroom in any residential dwelling.

City STR occupancy cap: None setTexas statutory cap: 3 adults per bedroom (Prop. Code Β§92.010)

Night Caps

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park does not impose an annual cap on the number of nights an STR may be rented; the city's October 2026 registration ordinance regulates registration and HOT collection, not nights booked.

Annual nights cap: NoneHosted vs. unhosted distinction: Not made by city

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park does not limit short-term rentals to a host's primary residence. Both owner-occupied and non-owner-occupied (whole-home) STRs are allowed, subject only to registration and Hotel Occupancy Tax compliance.

Primary-residence-only rule: NoWhole-home STRs allowed: Yes

Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park's short-term rental ordinance and Hotel Occupancy Tax apply only to rentals of 30 consecutive days or fewer. Longer 'extended home-share' or month-plus stays are treated as ordinary residential tenancies, not STRs.

STR threshold: Stays of 30 consecutive days or fewerStays β‰₯30 days: Not regulated as STRs

Insurance Requirements

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park's STR registration ordinance does not require operators to carry liability insurance. Coverage is left to the operator and any platform-provided host protection (e.g., Airbnb AirCover, VRBO Liability Insurance).

City insurance requirement: NoneMinimum liability coverage: Not specified by city

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

STR guests in Cedar Park must comply with Article 8.08 of the Code: nighttime quiet hours run 10 PM-7 AM in residential zones, with limits of 50 dB(A)/60 dB(C) at night and 70 dB(A)/80 dB(C) by day.

Code section: Cedar Park Code Art. 8.08Residential quiet hours: 10:00 PM - 7:00 AM daily

Parking Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park Code Β§17.04.005 prohibits parking on public roadways and right-of-way within residential subdivisions, so STR guests must park in the driveway or garage. Vehicles left over 48 hours on a city street are deemed abandoned.

On-street parking in residential subdivisions: Prohibited (Β§17.04.005)Abandoned-vehicle threshold: 48 hours on right-of-way

πŸ”₯ Fire RegulationsFull fire regulations guide β†’

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 outdoor burning is prohibited inside Cedar Park city limits except in Rural Agricultural (RA) zoned areas, and even there requires a $35 permit from the Cedar Park Fire Marshal. Williamson County burn bans automatically apply.

Open burning allowed in city?: No – only in RA-zoned parcels with permitOpen burn permit fee: $35 (Fire Marshal's Office)

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Recreational fires and fire pits are allowed under the 2021 International Fire Code as adopted by Cedar Park (Article 5.01), but open burning of yard debris within city limits requires a Fire Marshal permit and is generally prohibited except in RA-zoned areas.

Fire code adopted: 2021 International Fire Code (Cedar Park Code Art. 5.01)Container fire setback: 15 ft from structures

Brush Clearance

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park requires property owners to maintain landscape areas free of weeds, brush, and dead vegetation. Weeds over 48 inches are treated as an immediate safety hazard by Code Compliance, and the Fire Department recommends a 30-foot defensible space around structures.

Weed height threshold: 48 inches (Code Compliance)Recommended defensible space: 30 ft radius around home

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Propane and LPG storage in Cedar Park is regulated under the 2021 International Fire Code (Chapter 61, adopted via Article 5.01) and the Texas LP-Gas Safety Rules. Tank installation requires a Fire Marshal permit with tank and line pressure testing fees of $90 and $60.

Governing code: 2021 IFC Ch. 61 + NFPA 58 (Cedar Park Code Art. 5.01)Tank pressure test fee: $90

Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park bans the sale, possession, storage, use, or discharge of any fireworks within the city limits and within 5,000 feet of the corporate limits under Article 5.05 of the Code of Ordinances. The maximum fine is $2,000.

Consumer fireworks legal in city?: No – banned by Art. 5.05Ban radius: City limits + 5,000 ft beyond

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park has not adopted the International Wildland-Urban Interface Code (IWUIC), and there are no mapped WUI zones with mandatory hardening requirements. Wildfire mitigation is voluntary under the City's Firewise/Ember Aware program.

IWUIC adopted?: NoMapped WUI zones?: None mandated by city

πŸš— Parking RulesFull parking rules guide β†’

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

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park requires driveway access design and off-street parking under Article 14.05, and prohibits on-street parking within 5–20 feet of any driveway under Article 17.04. Front-yard parking requires a pervious courtyard.

Off-street parking code: Cedar Park Code Art. 14.05On-street setback near SF/duplex driveway: 5 ft

Abandoned Vehicles

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park Code Art. 8.05 declares junked vehicles a public nuisance, adopting time triggers (72 hrs public, 30 days private) and a 10-day abatement order, consistent with Tex. Transp. Code Ch. 683 Subchapter E.

Junked vehicle on public property: 72 hours unmovedJunked vehicle on private property: 30 days unmoved

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park regulates on-street parking under Code Article 17.04, prohibiting parking in signed/marked no-parking zones, near driveways, and adopting Texas Transportation Code definitions. Violations are Class C misdemeanors.

Code section: Cedar Park Code Art. 17.04State definitions: Tex. Transp. Code Β§541.401

Overnight Parking

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park Code Β§17.04 bans on-street overnight parking (10:00 p.m.–6:00 a.m.) for recreational vehicles, trailers, and any vehicle over 1.5 tons or 21 feet, and prohibits inhabiting any vehicle parked in the right-of-way.

Restricted hours: 10:00 p.m.–6:00 a.m.Restricted vehicles: RVs, trailers, >1.5 tons, >21 ft

EV Charging

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park has no city-specific EV-charging ordinance. EV chargers are regulated by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation under Tex. Occ. Code Ch. 2310, and electrical installations follow the adopted National Electrical Code via the city's building-code adoption.

Local EV ordinance: None β€” see state lawState regulator: Texas Dept. of Licensing & Regulation

RV & Boat Parking

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park Code Article 17.04 makes it unlawful to park any recreational vehicle, boat, boat trailer, or trailer on a public roadway or right-of-way in any residential subdivision at any time. A short-term permit allows up to 7 consecutive days, capped at 15 days per calendar year.

Code section: Cedar Park Code Art. 17.04 (Β§17.04.005, Β§17.04.013)RV on public street: Prohibited in residential subdivisions

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park Code Β§17.04.005 prohibits parking any vehicle with a manufacturer's rated carrying capacity over 1-1/2 tons or longer than 21 feet on a public roadway or right-of-way in a residential subdivision at any time. A separate citywide nighttime ban (10:00 p.m.-6:00 a.m.) applies to these vehicles on any public roadway.

Code section: Cedar Park Code Β§17.04.005Weight threshold: Manufacturer rated capacity over 1.5 tons

🧱 Fence RegulationsFull fence regulations guide β†’

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.

πŸ” Animal OrdinancesFull animal ordinances guide β†’

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

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park requires every dog off its owner's property to be physically restrained by a leash, chain, or similar device; voice control alone is not enough. At-large dogs are a separate offense and are subject to impoundment.

Code section: Chapter 2, Article 2.06 (leash) & 2.04 (at-large)Leash required off owner's property: Yes

Chickens & Livestock

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park prohibits keeping fowl (including chickens) and livestock within the city except in Equestrian Suburban (ES), Suburban Residential (SR), and Rural Agricultural (RA) zoning districts on lots one acre or greater. Most single-family residential lots are not eligible.

Backyard chickens allowed citywide?: No β€” only in ES, SR, or RA zoning on lots β‰₯1 acreMaximum fowl where permitted: 15 per lot; 1 rooster maximum

Beekeeping

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park's Chapter 2 (Animal Control) does not contain a beekeeping ordinance. Backyard beekeeping is therefore governed by Texas Agriculture Code Chapter 131 (Bees and Honey) and the Texas Apiary Inspection Service (TAIS); registration with TAIS is voluntary unless performing bee removal commercially.

City beekeeping ordinance?: None β€” Ch. 2 has no apiary provisionState registration required?: No for hobbyists; yes ($35/yr) for bee removal

Wildlife Feeding

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park does not have an ordinance specifically prohibiting feeding of wildlife on private property. The city actively discourages the practice via its Wildlife Awareness program, and chronic wildlife feeding that attracts nuisance animals can be cited as a public-nuisance animal violation under Β§2.03.

Stand-alone wildlife-feeding ban?: No on private property; yes in city parksCity guidance: Never feed wildlife (Wildlife Awareness page)

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park has no breed-specific ban or restriction β€” Texas Health & Safety Code Β§822.047 preempts cities and counties from regulating dogs by breed. The city regulates dangerous dogs by behavior under Article 2.09 instead.

Breed ban in Cedar Park: None β€” preemptedState preemption statute: Tex. HSC Β§822.047

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park Code Article 2.01 prohibits ownership of "dangerous wild animals" within the city, including big cats, bears, primates, venomous reptiles, and large constricting snakes. State law (Tex. Health & Safety Code Β§822.101 et seq.) imposes additional registration and $100,000 liability insurance requirements where state-listed dangerous wild animals are otherwise permitted.

Exotic pets allowed?: No β€” comprehensive prohibition under Β§2.01.001Constricting snake limit: Under 6 feet only (anything β‰₯6 ft prohibited)

Animal Hoarding

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park does not impose a numerical limit on dogs or cats per household β€” a proposed seven-pet cap was withdrawn during the 2017 ordinance rewrite. Hoarding situations are addressed through the cruelty provisions in Article 2.07 and the public-nuisance provisions in Β§2.03, backed by Texas Penal Code Β§42.092 (cruelty to non-livestock animals).

Pet limit per household: None (proposed 7-cap dropped)Local hoarding tools: Code Β§2.03, Β§2.07 (cruelty), Β§2.11 (sanitation)

🌿 Landscaping RulesFull landscaping rules guide β†’

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

Water Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park is in Stage 1 of its Drought Contingency and Water Emergency Plan (as of April 2026), limiting outdoor irrigation to two assigned days per week before 10 a.m. or after 7 p.m. The plan is codified in the Code of Ordinances and escalates to Stage 3 or higher during severe drought.

Current stage: Stage 1 (April 2026)Irrigation days (even addresses): Sunday & Thursday

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Under Texas Health & Safety Code Β§342.004 and the Cedar Park Code, owners must keep property clear of weeds, brush, rubbish, and public nuisances. The City may mow, lien the property, and prosecute repeat violators as Class C misdemeanors.

State authority: Tex. HSC Β§342.004Definition of nuisance: Tex. HSC Β§343.011

Tree Trimming

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park's Tree & Landscape Requirements (Code of Ordinances Article 14.07) protect trees 8 caliper inches and larger and designate heritage trees at 26 inches or more. Removal of protected trees requires city review and mitigation; fees-in-lieu range from $150 to $450 per inch.

Protected tree size: 8 inches diameter (DBH+1 ft)Heritage tree size: 26 inches

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park property owners must keep grass and weeds maintained. Under Texas HSC Β§342.008, the city may abate without notice weeds taller than 48 inches that pose an immediate health/safety danger; the City lists weeds over 48 inches as an immediate safety concern in its Common Violations page.

Immediate-danger threshold: 48 inches (Tex. HSC Β§342.008)State authority: Tex. HSC Β§342.004

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park encourages rainwater harvesting. The City offers a rain barrel credit of $0.50 per gallon of storage (up to $100) for residential water customers, and HOAs may not prohibit rain barrels under Tex. Property Code Β§202.007.

City rebate: $0.50/gallon, up to $100Permit required: No (residential non-potable)

Artificial Turf

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park's Code of Ordinances does not prohibit artificial turf on residential property. Installations must comply with Article 14.07 landscape requirements (minimum live-plant ground cover for regulated sites) and any drainage rules in Chapter 13. HOAs may regulate but not flatly ban artificial turf under Tex. Property Code Β§202.007's drought-resistant landscaping protections, where the turf qualifies.

Permit needed (homeowner): NoCounts toward landscape requirement (commercial): Generally no - live cover required

Native Plants

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park actively promotes native and drought-tolerant landscaping through its 'Water Thrifty' program and LCRA WaterSmart rebates (up to $2,000 for turf-to-native conversion). Texas Property Code Β§202.007 also limits HOAs from banning drought-resistant landscaping.

Turf-to-native rebate: Up to $2,000 (LCRA WaterSmart)Preapproval required: Yes

πŸ’Ό Home BusinessFull home business guide β†’

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.

Zoning Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Home occupations are allowed as an accessory to a residential dwelling under City Code Chapter 11 (Zoning), subject to accessory-use standards that protect the residential character of the neighborhood.

Permit required: No separate home-occupation permit; must comply with Ch. 11 accessory-use standardsWhere allowed: Accessory to a legal residential dwelling unit

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

A Cedar Park home occupation cannot generate customer-related vehicular traffic in excess of three vehicle trips per 24-hour day, and no direct selling of merchandise may occur on the premises (direct marketing is permitted).

Customer vehicle trips: Maximum 3 per 24 hoursOn-premises sales: Prohibited (direct marketing/delivery allowed)

Home Daycare

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park follows Texas Human Resources Code Chapter 42 for in-home childcare. State law requires listing (1-3 children), registration (4-12), or licensing (13+) with DFPS and treats family homes as residential use for zoning purposes.

3 or fewer unrelated kids: List with DFPS (no state license)4-12 children: Registered family home with DFPS

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park's sign code limits signs at a single-family or duplex residence to 6 square feet total and does not authorize commercial signage for a home occupation. Political and other noncommercial signs follow Reed v. Gilbert content-neutral standards.

Max sign face, single-family/duplex: 6 sq ft totalHome-occupation commercial sign: Not authorized in the residential sign schedule

Cottage Food Operations

Few Restrictions

Cedar Park does not regulate cottage food operations beyond the home-occupation standards. State law (Tex. Health & Safety Code Β§437.0193) governs and preempts local permitting, licensing, and inspection of cottage food producers.

Local permit required: No (state preempts; Tex. H&S Code Β§437.0193)Annual gross sales cap: $50,000

🏊 Swimming Pools & SpasFull swimming pools & spas guide β†’

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

Above-Ground Pools

Some Restrictions

Above-ground pools in Cedar Park require a building permit and must meet the same 48-inch barrier rule under the 2021 ISPSC; the pool wall itself can serve as part of the barrier if at least 48 inches tall and any ladder is removable or secured.

Permit threshold: Water depth > 24 inchesPool wall as barrier: Allowed if β‰₯48 in (ISPSC Β§305.5)

Hot Tub Rules

Few Restrictions

Hot tubs and spas in Cedar Park require a permit but are exempted from the standard pool barrier rules if equipped with a listed, lockable safety cover that meets ASTM F1346.

Permit required: Yes β€” building/electrical permitBarrier exemption: ASTM F1346 lockable safety cover (ISPSC Β§305.6)

Safety Rules

Some Restrictions

Residential pools must meet ISPSC entrapment, alarm, and barrier rules; conduct at city pools and public water playscapes is governed by Article 8.03 of the Code of Ordinances and Parks Department rules.

Drain covers: VGB-compliant anti-entrapment required (ISPSC Β§310)GFCI: Required on pool/spa circuits

Pool Permits

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park requires a building permit for any in-ground or above-ground pool and spa, reviewed under the 2021 International Swimming Pool and Spa Code (ISPSC) adopted by Article 3.01 of the City Code.

Permit required: Yes β€” building permit for all pools and spasAdopted code: 2021 International Swimming Pool & Spa Code (ISPSC)

Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Residential pool barriers in Cedar Park must comply with the 2021 ISPSC (adopted under Article 3.01) β€” at least 48 inches tall, self-closing/self-latching gates, with no openings allowing a 4-inch sphere to pass.

Minimum barrier height: 48 inches (ISPSC Β§305)Max opening: 4-inch sphere may not pass

πŸ—οΈ Accessory StructuresFull accessory structures guide β†’

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

ADU Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Building an ADU in Cedar Park requires a two-step approval: (1) a Conditional Use Permit (CUP) approved by the Planning & Zoning Commission and City Council under Article 11.02 Division 4, and (2) a residential building permit under Article 3.02. Detached accessory buildings over 80 sq ft always require a building permit.

Conditional use permit: Required (P&Z + Council)Building permit: Required (Art. 3.02)

ADU Owner Occupancy

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park requires that the ADU and principal dwelling be owned by the same person(s), occupied by members of the same immediate family (or authorized employees), and share a single address and mailbox. This is an absolute owner-occupancy/common-ownership rule, not a discretionary one.

Common ownership: RequiredShared address/mailbox: Required

ADU Impact Fees

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park assesses water and wastewater impact fees per Living Unit Equivalent (LUE) at the time of building permit issuance under Article 8.000. Because Article 11.04 Division 2 prohibits separate utility service to ADUs, an ADU typically does not trigger an additional LUE-based impact fee β€” it is served by the principal dwelling's existing connection.

Wastewater impact fee: $3,170 per LUE (current schedule)Separate ADU utility service: Prohibited

Carport Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park bans temporary, pre-assembled, and field-assembled carports outright in every zoning district. Permanent permitted carports and porte-cocheres are capped at one story or 20 feet, whichever is less, under Chapter 11, Article 11.04, Division 6.

Temporary/prefab/kit carports: Prohibited citywidePermanent carport height limit: 1 story or 20 ft (lesser)

ADU Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park permits accessory dwelling units (ADUs) only as a conditional use in four large-lot residential districts and only for use by the principal-dwelling owner's immediate family or authorized employees. Detached ADUs must be 400-650 gross sq ft; attached ADUs may not exceed 200 sq ft or 25% of the conditioned area of the principal dwelling, whichever is less.

Permit required: Yes β€” conditional use permit + building permitDetached ADU size: 400-650 gross sq ft

ADU Rental Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park flatly prohibits renting, subletting, or separately selling an ADU. Under Article 11.04 Division 2, the ADU and principal dwelling must remain under common ownership and may only be occupied by the property owner's immediate family or authorized employees on the premises.

Rental allowed: NoShort-term rental: No

Shed Rules

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park allows detached storage sheds up to 80 sq ft without a building permit, but anything larger requires a permit and must meet setback, size, and lot-coverage limits in Chapter 11 (Zoning), Article 11.04, Division 6 (Accessory Use, Building, and Structure Standards).

Permit-free shed size: 80 sq ft or lessPermit required above: 80 sq ft

Tiny Homes

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park has no separate 'tiny home' permitting track. A tiny dwelling on a permanent foundation must meet the city's minimum dwelling size (450 sq ft) and full IRC building code; tiny homes on wheels (RVs/THOWs) are treated as recreational vehicles and cannot be used as a permanent residence on a residential lot.

Minimum dwelling size: 450 sq ftTiny home on permanent foundation: Allowed β€” full IRC + zoning

Garage Conversions

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park requires a building permit for any garage conversion, and the city's zoning code expressly prohibits placing an accessory dwelling unit (ADU) inside a converted detached garage. Conversions must meet residential building, egress, and parking standards under Chapter 11.

Permit required: Yes β€” alwaysADU in detached garage: Prohibited (Art. 11.04, Div. 4)

🌍 Environmental RulesFull environmental rules guide β†’

Stormwater Management

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park operates an MS4 under TPDES General Permit TXR040000 and prohibits sweeping, dumping, or discharging anything other than uncontaminated stormwater into the storm sewer system or waterways.

MS4 permit: TPDES General Permit TXR040000Design manual: City of Austin Drainage Criteria Manual (adopted)

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

All development inside a FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area requires a Floodplain Development Permit; the City enforces FIRMs adopted from the Williamson County FIS (9/6/2008) and Travis County FIS (1/6/2016).

Permit required: Yes β€” Floodplain Development PermitWilliamson Co. FIRM date: September 6, 2008

Erosion Control

Some Restrictions

Site plans must show temporary and permanent erosion controls; controls must be installed before fill or grading begins and maintained until the site is revegetated.

Controls in place before grading: RequiredSite plan must show controls: Yes

Coastal Development

Few Restrictions

No local coastal development ordinance β€” Cedar Park is an inland Central Texas city in Williamson and Travis Counties, roughly 165 miles from the Gulf of Mexico, and outside the jurisdiction of the Texas Open Beaches Act and the Coastal Management Program.

Coastal jurisdiction: None β€” inland cityDistance to Gulf: Approx. 165 miles

Grading & Drainage

Some Restrictions

Fill or grading requires a Site Fill/Grading Permit from the Engineering Department; all drainage design must comply with the City of Austin Drainage Criteria Manual as adopted by Cedar Park.

Permit required (fill/grading): Yes β€” Site Fill/Grading PermitDesign manual: City of Austin Drainage Criteria Manual

πŸͺ§ Sign RegulationsFull sign regulations guide β†’

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & RecyclingFull trash & recycling guide β†’

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

Republic Services requires Cedar Park carts at the curb by 7 a.m., with wheels facing the curb, spaced at least 3 feet apart, and weighing no more than 75 pounds each.

Set-out time: By 7:00 a.m. on collection dayCart orientation: Wheels toward the curb

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park contracts solid waste collection through a non-exclusive franchise (Republic Services). Trash is collected weekly and recycling every other week; carts must be set out by 7 a.m. on collection day.

Trash frequency: WeeklyRecycling frequency: Every other week

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

Republic Services collects up to 7 bulk items or extra bags per household per week on the normal trash day. Bundled tree/brush trimmings must be no more than 4 feet long, 4 inches in diameter, and 40 pounds.

Weekly bulk allowance: 7 items outside the cartBundle dimensions: Max 4 ft long x 4 in diameter

Recycling Requirements

Some Restrictions

Recycling is collected every other week in the 95-gallon blue cart. Cedar Park prohibits plastic bags, Styrofoam, pizza boxes, shredded paper, wet cardboard, and food-soiled items from the recycling stream.

Frequency: Every other weekCart: 95-gallon blue, single-stream

Yard Waste Collection

Some Restrictions

Yard trimmings are recycled only during a 6-week spring window and a 2-week fall window; outside those dates they go to landfill as bulk. Trimmings must be in brown paper yard-waste bags or bundles (4 ft x 4 in, 40 lb max).

Spring recycling window: ~6 weeks (Mar 30 - May 8, 2026)Fall recycling window: 2 weeks (date varies annually)

Illegal Dumping

Heavy Restrictions

Dumping refuse, yard waste, or litter on streets, sidewalks, or others' property is prohibited under Cedar Park Code Sec. 8.06.006(b) and is also a state offense under Tex. Health & Safety Code Β§365.012, with penalties scaling from Class C misdemeanor up to state-jail felony based on weight or volume.

Local citation: Cedar Park Code Sec. 8.06.006(b)Local fine cap: Up to $2,000/day (Sec. 1.01.009)

🚁 Drone RulesFull drone rules guide β†’

πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile VendorsFull food trucks & mobile vendors guide β†’

πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-DoorFull soliciting & door-to-door guide β†’

πŸŒ™ Curfew LawsFull curfew laws guide β†’

🌳 Tree ProtectionFull tree protection guide β†’

Tree Removal Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park requires a construction or site development permit before removing any tree on public right-of-way or any protected tree (8-caliper-inch or larger) on a development site under Article 14.07 of the Code of Ordinances.

Permit required: Yes - construction or site development permitProtected tree threshold: 8-inch caliper (measured 1 ft above ground)

Tree Replacement Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park requires developers to mitigate removed protected trees by replanting on-site, on public property, or paying a tiered fee-in-lieu ranging from $150 to $450 per diameter inch under Article 14.07.

Retention requirement: 50% of 6-inch+ trees from preferred plant listMitigation options: On-site replant, public property planting, or fee

Heritage & Protected Trees

Heavy Restrictions

Cedar Park's 2019 revised tree ordinance defines heritage trees as those 26 inches or more in diameter measured one foot above the ground, and assesses the highest mitigation fee tier ($450 per diameter inch) for their removal.

Heritage tree definition: 26+ inches diameter measured 1 ft above groundHeritage mitigation fee: $450 per diameter inch

Parkway Planting

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park requires a construction permit from the chief building official before removing any tree in the public right-of-way, and allows abutting landowners to landscape the nonpaved parkway strip subject to the Transportation Criteria Manual visibility rules.

Right-of-way tree removal permit: Required - construction permit from chief building officialLandowner parkway landscaping: Allowed but city may require removal at any time

Protected Tree Species

Some Restrictions

Cedar Park does not designate specific species as 'protected' but applies its 50% retention requirement to trees on the city's preferred plant list (built from the Austin Grow Green Guide and LCRA list), which includes native oaks, cedar elm, and bald cypress.

Formal protected species list: No - retention based on caliper + preferred plant listPreferred plant list source: Austin Grow Green Guide + LCRA plant list

Overall: What to Expect in Cedar Park

Cedar Park has 101 ordinances on file across 18 categories. Of these, 22 are rated permissive, 51 moderate, and 28 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Cedar Park 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?