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Moving to Houston, 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 Houston across 52 categories and 252 specific rules we track.

89 Permissive130 Moderate33 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.

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 30 regulates industrial noise through property-line decibel limits. Industrial and commercial properties must not exceed 68 dB(A) daytime and 58 dB(A) nighttime as measured at the receiving residential property line.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 30, Sec. 30-3Daytime Limit: 68 dB(A) at receiving property line

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Houston does not have a specific municipal aircraft noise ordinance. Aircraft noise is regulated primarily by the FAA and federal law. George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH) and William P. Hobby Airport (HOU) maintain voluntary noise abatement programs.

Local Ordinance: None; federal preemption appliesGoverning Law: 49 U.S.C. Section 47521 (Airport Noise & Capacity Act)

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Houston regulates barking dogs under both Chapter 6 (Animals and Fowl) and Chapter 30 (Noise). Persistent barking that disturbs neighbors constitutes a nuisance. BARC and HPD both handle complaints.

Code Sections: Ch. 6 & Ch. 30Enforcement: BARC & HPD

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Houston Code of Ordinances Chapter 30 sets residential sound limits of 65 dBA daytime and 58 dBA nighttime, measured at the property line. Quiet hours run from 10 PM to 8 AM. The 2022 amendments doubled maximum fines to $2,000.

Code Section: Chapter 30Day Limit: 65 dBA (8 AM to 10 PM)

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Houston allows construction 7 AM to 8 PM weekdays and Saturdays in residential areas. Sunday construction in residential zones is prohibited. Emergency utility work by CenterPoint Energy and city crews is exempt.

Weekdays: 7 AM to 8 PMSaturday: 7 AM to 8 PM

Leaf Blower Rules

Few Restrictions

Houston does not ban gas-powered leaf blowers. Leaf blower noise must comply with Chapter 30 sound limits of 65 dBA residential daytime and 58 dBA nighttime. Use during quiet hours (10 PM to 8 AM) may trigger citations.

Gas-Powered: Not bannedDay Limit: 65 dBA at property line

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Houston requires amplified sound permits for outdoor music within 300 feet of a residence. Permits allow up to 75 dBA. Options include Daily, Extended Daily, Annual, and Commercial Establishment permits issued by the ARA Department.

Permit Limit: 75 dBA with permitProximity Rule: 300 ft from residence

🏠 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.

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Houston adopted STR regulations in April 2025 (Ord. 2025-322), effective January 1, 2026. All STRs require a Certificate of Registration ($275 fee plus $33.10 admin fee). As of April 2026, platforms must remove unregistered listings.

Ordinance: Ord. 2025-322Effective: January 1, 2026

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Few Restrictions

Houston's 2024 short-term rental ordinance does not restrict STRs to operators' primary residences. Investor-owned whole-home rentals remain lawful citywide, subject to registration and hotel occupancy tax. Deed restrictions in many subdivisions independently prohibit transient rental use.

Primary-residence rule: Not imposed by HoustonInvestor STRs: Allowed citywide if registered

Repeat Violator Strikes

Some Restrictions

Houston has no formal STR three-strikes registration revocation matrix. Repeat nuisance complaints at a short-term rental are addressed through Chapter 28 building and nuisance enforcement, civil-suit deed-restriction actions, and police habitual-nuisance abatement under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code Chapter 125.

Three-strikes matrix: Not codified in HoustonPrimary tool: Chapter 28 nuisance enforcement

Host Presence Rule

Few Restrictions

Houston's short-term rental framework, advanced by City Council in 2024 and limited in scope, does not require a host to remain on-site during a guest stay. Operators register and collect hotel occupancy tax, but no Chicago-style hosted-only rule applies; deed restrictions may still bar STRs.

Hosted-only rule: Not required citywideFramework: Registration + HOT remittance

Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Houston's STR ordinance does not create a tiered extended home-share license for stays of 30+ days or longer-term home-sharing arrangements. Stays beyond 29 nights generally fall outside hotel occupancy tax and STR registration, and are treated as residential leases under Texas Property Code Chapter 92.

Extended home-share tier: Not in Houston ordinance30-day threshold: TX Tax Code Chapter 156

Host Platform Liability

Few Restrictions

Texas does not impose statutory liability on Airbnb, Vrbo, or similar platforms for unregistered host listings. Houston's 2024 STR ordinance regulates operators directly, not the marketplace. Platform tax-collection agreements remain voluntary, though all major platforms collect Texas state hotel occupancy tax.

Platform mandate: None in TX or HoustonOperator duty: Register and remit HOT

Registration Rules

Some Restrictions

Houston Ordinance 2025-322, codified at Code of Ordinances Chapter 28 Article XXIII, requires every short-term rental in city limits to obtain an annual certificate of registration from the Administration & Regulatory Affairs (ARA) Department. The ordinance was adopted April 16, 2025 and took effect January 1, 2026, with a $275 annual registration fee.

Code: Ch. 28 Art. XXIIIEnabling Ordinance: 2025-322

Night Caps

Few Restrictions

Houston's short-term rental ordinance (Chapter 28 Article XXIII, adopted by Ordinance 2025-322) sets a one-night minimum stay for every registered STR but does not impose a maximum cap on rental nights per year. Texas has no statewide STR night cap and Houston has no zoning code, so rental frequency is governed only by Article XXIII's operational standards.

Code: Ch. 28 Art. XXIIIEnabling Ordinance: 2025-322

Taxes & Fees

Some Restrictions

Houston STR operators owe a combined 17% hotel occupancy tax: 6% state, 7% city, 2% Harris County, and 2% Harris County-Houston Sports Authority. Major platforms like Airbnb and Vrbo auto-collect both state and city portions.

State HOT: 6%City HOT: 7%

Insurance Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Houston's STR ordinance requires operators to maintain a $1 million liability insurance policy during any period the rental property is available for booking. This is one of the strictest insurance mandates for STRs among major US cities.

Insurance Minimum: $1 million liability policyWhen Required: During any period property is available for booking

Parking Rules

Few Restrictions

Houston's STR ordinance (Ord. 2025-322) does not impose specific off-street parking requirements for STRs beyond standard residential parking rules. Street parking is subject to the 24-hour limit under Chapter 26.

STR Parking Mandate: None in ordinanceStreet Limit: 24-hour max (Ch. 26)

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

STR guests must comply with Chapter 30 sound limits (58 dBA nighttime residential). Two or more noise citations within 12 months may result in the operator's Certificate of Registration being revoked under Ord. 2025-322.

Night Limit: 58 dBA residentialEvents: Prohibited at STRs

Occupancy Limits

Some Restrictions

Houston's 2025 STR ordinance (Chapter 28, Art. XXIII) regulates short-term rentals citywide. The ordinance defines STRs as dwellings rented for less than 30 consecutive days and requires a certificate of registration. Specific occupancy caps are tied to the property's capacity as determined during registration.

Ordinance: Houston Code Ch. 28, Art. XXIII (adopted April 2025)Registration Fee: $275 + $33.10 admin fee, renewed annually

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.

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Propane in Houston regulated by the Houston Fire Code. NFPA 58 setbacks. Over 500 gallons requires HFD permit.

Under 500 gal: Standard setbacksOver 500 gal: HFD permit required

Smoke Detectors

Heavy Restrictions

Smoke alarms in Houston dwellings are governed by Tex. Health & Safety Code Chapter 766 and the Houston Fire Code, which adopts the International Fire Code (2021 edition) with local amendments. Tex. Property Code Sec. 92.255 requires landlords to install at least one smoke alarm in each separate bedroom plus one on each level of the dwelling.

State Law: Tex. H&S Code Ch. 766Rental Statute: Tex. Prop. Code Sec. 92.255

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

Houston does not have designated wildfire risk zones within its city limits. The Houston Fire Code, based on the International Fire Code, contains general wildfire-risk provisions but these are largely inapplicable in Houston's urban Gulf Coast setting.

Wildfire Zones in Houston: None designated within city limitsFire Code Basis: 2021 International Fire Code with Houston amendments

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Open burning is prohibited within Houston city limits under the adopted Fire Code and TCEQ 30 TAC Β§111.209. The Houston-Galveston-Brazoria ozone nonattainment area adds air quality restrictions. Report violations to HFD at 832-394-6900.

Open Burning: Prohibited in city limitsTCEQ Rule: 30 TAC Β§111.209

Brush Clearance

Some Restrictions

Houston requires property owners to maintain vegetation to prevent fire and safety hazards. Grass must be 9 inches or less; brush and shrubbery 7 feet or less. Vegetation over 48 inches is declared an immediate danger and may be abated without notice.

Grass Max: 9 inchesBrush Max: 7 feet

Fire Pit Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Houston prohibits open burning within city limits. Recreational fire pits are permitted only in approved containers (manufactured fire pits, chimineas). Open-flame devices must be 10 feet from combustible construction. Sky lanterns are banned.

Open Burning: Prohibited in cityFire Pits: Approved containers only

Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

All consumer fireworks are illegal within Houston city limits including sparklers. Fines are $500 to $2,000 per firework with no warnings issued. Parents are liable for minors' violations.

Consumer Fireworks: All banned in cityFine: $500-$2,000 each

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.

Curb Color Rules

Some Restrictions

Only the City of Houston, through Public Works traffic engineering and Chapter 26 of the Code, may paint or authorize curb-color markings such as red (no parking), yellow (loading), green (short-term), or white (passenger). Texas Transportation Code Section 544.011 makes unofficial curb painting unenforceable.

Authority: Houston Public Works onlyStatute: TX Transp Code 544.011

Loading Zones

Some Restrictions

Houston Code of Ordinances Chapter 26 authorizes the City to establish and mark commercial loading zones, typically painted yellow with signage, restricted to active loading or unloading of goods or passengers within posted time limits. Unauthorized standing in a loading zone draws citation and potential tow.

Authority: Houston Code Chapter 26Yellow curb: Commercial loading zone

EV Charging

Few Restrictions

Houston does not have a specific municipal ordinance regulating EV charging station parking. The city follows general parking regulations under Chapter 26 and has been expanding public EV charging infrastructure through municipal programs rather than dedicated ordinances.

Municipal EV Parking Ordinance: None specific to EV chargingGeneral Parking Code: Houston Code Ch. 26

Overnight Parking

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Sec. 26-93 prohibits parking any vehicle on a public street for more than 24 consecutive hours. This effectively regulates overnight parking by preventing indefinite street parking. No separate overnight parking ban exists in most areas.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 26, Sec. 26-93Time Limit: 24 hours maximum on public streets

Abandoned Vehicles

Some Restrictions

Houston defines an abandoned vehicle under City Code Chapter 8 and Texas Transportation Code Β§683 as one left on a public right-of-way more than 48 hours (inoperable) or 7 days (operable). HPD tags the vehicle, waits the required period, then tows. Vehicles in driveways or yards that are inoperable, wrecked, or junked are handled as a nuisance under Houston Code Chapter 10.

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Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Houston's Chapter 26, Β§26-93 limits street parking to 24 hours. Vehicles left for 48+ hours are subject to towing. Cars must park with the flow of traffic. Fire zones and driveways must remain clear.

Max Duration: 24 hours (Β§26-93)Tow Threshold: 48+ hours

Dibs & Space Saving

Few Restrictions

Houston does not have a dibs or space-saving ordinance because it rarely experiences significant snowfall. Placing objects in public parking spaces to reserve them is not a recognized practice and may be treated as obstruction.

Dibs System: Not applicableSnow Frequency: Extremely rare

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

Houston regulates RV and boat parking under Chapter 26 and Chapter 28, Article X. Large vehicles (over 8 ft tall or 22 ft long) have a 2-hour street limit and are banned on residential streets from 2 AM to 6 AM. Vehicles must be on improved surfaces.

Large Vehicle: Over 8 ft tall or 22 ft longStreet Limit: 2 hours max

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Houston's Chapter 26, Article VIII requires off-street parking for new development. Vehicles must not block driveways or sidewalks. Chapter 28, Article X requires vehicles to be parked on improved surfaces on residential property.

Driveway Blocking: ProhibitedSurface Required: Improved (concrete/asphalt)

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Houston bans commercial and large vehicles from parking on residential streets from 2 AM to 6 AM under Chapter 26. Large vehicles (over 8 ft tall or 22 ft long) have a 2-hour limit. Towing starts at $459 per hour.

Overnight Ban: 2 AM to 6 AM all streetsStreet Limit: 2 hours for large vehicles

🧱 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

Houston requires building permits for retaining walls that exceed certain height thresholds or are constructed of masonry or concrete. When a fence is built on top of a retaining wall, the combined height is considered for permit purposes under the 8-foot threshold.

Permit Trigger: Retaining walls over 4 ft or combined fence/wall over 8 ftMasonry/Concrete: Always requires permit regardless of height

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Houston requires pool barriers of at least 48 inches under Chapter 43 (Pool and Spa Safety) and the adopted 2018 International Swimming Pool and Spa Code (ISPSC). All residential pools must be completely enclosed by a barrier with self-closing, self-latching gates.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 43; 2018 ISPSC with amendmentsMinimum Height: 48 inches

Neighbor Fence Rules

Few Restrictions

Texas has no shared fence cost statute. Each property owner is responsible for fences on their own property. Fences must be built entirely on the owner's lot. Deed restrictions and HOAs are the primary enforcement mechanism in Houston.

Shared Cost: No TX statuteResponsibility: Each owner, own property

Material Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Houston allows wood, PVC vinyl, composite, metal ornamental, and chain link fences. Barbed wire, razor wire, and electrified fences are prohibited for residential use. Masonry or concrete fences require a building permit at any height.

Allowed: Wood, vinyl, composite, metal, chain linkProhibited: Barbed wire, razor wire, electric

Permit Requirements

Few Restrictions

Houston exempts most residential fences from permits. Permits are required for fences over 8 feet, fences made of masonry or concrete (any height), fences in floodplains, and fences in historic districts. Processing takes about 10 days.

Exempt: Under 8 ft, non-masonryRequired: Over 8 ft or masonry/concrete

Height Limits

Few Restrictions

Houston allows fences up to 8 feet in rear and side yards without a permit (unless masonry or concrete). Front yard fences are limited to 4 feet and require Planning Department approval. Permits required for fences over 8 feet.

Rear/Side Yard: Up to 8 ft no permitFront Yard: 4 ft max

πŸ” Animal Ordinances

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

Animal Hoarding

Some Restrictions

Animal hoarding in Houston addressed through Houston Code of Ordinances Chapter 6 and BARC Animal Shelter. Texas Penal Code 42.092 for cruelty.

Code: Chapter 6BARC: 311 or (713) 229-7300

Cat Rules

Some Restrictions

Houston Chapter 6 treats cats as companion animals subject to rabies vaccination, BARC licensing, and humane care. Free-roaming cats may be impounded; community cat caretakers should follow trap-neuter-return protocols.

Authority: Houston Ch. 6; TX HSC 826Rabies shot: Required after four months

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Few Restrictions

Houston has no broad mandatory spay-neuter ordinance. Sterilization is required for shelter-adopted animals and free-roaming cats in TNR programs. BARC and partners run low-cost and free clinics throughout the city.

Mandate scope: Shelter adoptions and TNR onlyOwned pets: Sterilization not mandatory

Microchipping

Some Restrictions

Houston BARC microchips every dog and cat at adoption and reclaim, registering the chip to the new owner. While Chapter 6 does not require microchips on all pets, BARC strongly recommends scanning and registering for lost-pet recovery.

Adoption chip: Always implanted by BARCOwner mandate: Not generally required

Coyote Management

Some Restrictions

Coyotes are protected nongame wildlife under Texas Parks and Wildlife jurisdiction. Houston BARC handles urban coyote complaints with hazing guidance, while lethal removal generally requires TPWD authorization or licensed wildlife control operators.

Jurisdiction: TPWD plus Houston BARCStatus: Nongame protected wildlife

Veterinary Clinic Zoning

Few Restrictions

Houston has no traditional zoning, so veterinary clinics open citywide subject to deed restrictions, parking, noise, and waste-disposal rules. State licensure through the Texas Board of Veterinary Medical Examiners remains mandatory.

Local zoning: None in HoustonPrimary controls: Deed restrictions plus state license

Pet Store Rules

Few Restrictions

Texas has no statewide ban on pet store sales of dogs and cats, and Houston has not adopted a humane retail pet ordinance. Stores must follow USDA, state animal welfare, and basic Houston Chapter 6 standards.

Statewide ban: None in TexasCity ban: None in Houston

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Houston Code of Ordinances Chapter 6 generally limits residences to four dogs and four cats over four months old per household. Exceeding the limit requires a kennel or breeder permit and may trigger zoning concerns.

Dog limit: Four dogs over four monthsCat limit: Four cats over four months

Pet Groomer Rules

Few Restrictions

Texas does not license pet groomers, so Houston groomers operate under general business permits, sales tax registration, and Houston Chapter 6 humane standards. Mobile groomers must follow city vehicle, noise, and water-discharge rules.

State license: None for groomersCity permit: Standard business registration

Bird Protection

Heavy Restrictions

Most native birds in Houston are protected by the federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act and Texas Parks and Wildlife Code Chapter 64. Killing, capturing, or disturbing nests, eggs, or feathers without a permit is illegal year-round.

Federal law: Migratory Bird Treaty ActState law: TX Parks and Wildlife Ch. 64

Wildlife Feeding

Few Restrictions

Houston does not have a specific municipal ordinance prohibiting wildlife feeding on private property. City parks have rules managed by the Parks and Recreation Department, and general nuisance provisions under Chapter 10 may apply if feeding creates unsanitary conditions.

Municipal Ordinance: No specific wildlife feeding banParks: Houston Parks may restrict feeding in city parks

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 6, Art. III prohibits the possession of wild or exotic animals within city limits. It is unlawful for any person to keep any wild or exotic animal upon any premises within the city, with limited exceptions for zoological parks, circuses, and veterinary hospitals.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 6, Art. IIIRule: Wild/exotic animals prohibited within city limits

Dog Leash Laws

Heavy Restrictions

Houston requires dogs to be leashed or under physical control in all public spaces under Chapter 6. Fines range from $500 to $2,000 per violation. Mandatory microchipping required since January 2022. BARC enforces.

Leash Required: All public spacesFine: $500 to $2,000 per day

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Houston has no breed-specific legislation. Texas prohibits BSL statewide under Health and Safety Code Chapter 822. Houston uses behavior-based dangerous dog determinations under Chapter 6. No breed is banned or restricted.

Breed Bans: Prohibited statewideState Law: HSC Ch. 822, Sec. 822.047

Beekeeping

Few Restrictions

Houston has no city-specific beekeeping ban. The Texas Apiary Inspection Service (TAIS) regulates bees at the state level under Agriculture Code Chapter 131. Deed restrictions and HOAs may impose local limits.

City Ban: NoneState Agency: TAIS (Texas A&M)

Chickens & Livestock

Few Restrictions

Houston allows up to 30 domestic fowl per lot with no roosters and a 100-foot setback from neighboring buildings under Chapter 6. No permit is required. Texas HB 1750 prevents cities from banning chickens, but HOA deed restrictions still apply.

Fowl Limit: 30 per lotRoosters: Prohibited

🌿 Landscaping Rules

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

Composting

Few Restrictions

Backyard composting permitted in Houston. No Texas mandate for organic diversion. Houston Solid Waste provides green waste collection.

Composting: PermittedState Mandate: None

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Houston prohibits overgrown weeds under Β§10-453. Property owners must maintain grass at 9 inches or less and brush at 7 feet or less. Open storage of debris, junk, and rubbish on lots is also prohibited.

Weed/Grass Max: 9 inchesBrush Max: 7 feet

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Houston requires grass to be maintained at 9 inches or less under Β§10-453 of the Code of Ordinances. Violations escalate from $50 to $2,000. Grass over 48 inches is declared an immediate danger and may be abated without notice, with costs liened.

Max Height: 9 inchesCode Section: Β§10-453

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 33, Art. VI (Protection of Certain Trees) requires permits for removing protected trees. Tree removal/trimming permits are processed by the Urban Forestry Division with a $90 per diameter inch fine for unauthorized removal of protected trees.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 33, Art. VIProtected Species: Live Oak, Pecan, Magnolia, Bald Cypress

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Houston does not restrict residential rainwater harvesting. Texas Property Code Sec. 202.007 protects homeowners' right to install rain barrels and rainwater harvesting systems, prohibiting HOAs from banning these devices.

State Protection: Texas Property Code Sec. 202.007HOA Restrictions: Cannot ban; can only regulate appearance if visible

Artificial Turf

Few Restrictions

Houston has no municipal restrictions on residential artificial turf installation. Texas Property Code Sec. 202.007 protects 'water-conserving natural turf' but is ambiguous on artificial turf, leaving HOAs some authority to regulate synthetic grass installations.

Municipal Restriction: NonePermit Required: No

Native Plants

Few Restrictions

Texas Property Code Sec. 202.007 protects homeowners' rights to install drought-resistant landscaping and water-conserving natural turf. Houston does not restrict native plant landscaping and encourages water conservation through its municipal programs.

State Protection: Texas Property Code Sec. 202.007HOA Rules: Cannot unreasonably deny drought-resistant landscaping plans

Tree Trimming

Some Restrictions

Houston's Tree and Shrub Ordinance (Chapter 33, Article V) protects certain trees and sets minimum planting requirements for development. Trees in the public right-of-way are protected. Dead trees must be removed or face $200 to $2,000 fines.

Code Section: Ch. 33, Art. VProtected Trees: Right-of-way trees protected

Water Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Houston enforces water conservation through a tiered Drought Contingency Plan under Chapter 47, Article VII. Stage 1 limits outdoor watering to twice weekly between 7 PM and 8 AM. Stage 2 assigns specific days by address. Drip irrigation is typically exempt.

Code Section: Ch. 47, Art. VIIStage 1: Twice weekly, 7 PM to 8 AM

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.

Cottage Food Operations

Few Restrictions

Texas Cottage Food Law (Health & Safety Code Ch. 437) allows Houston residents to produce and sell certain foods from home without permits, inspections, or licenses. No municipal zoning ordinance can ban cottage food operations. Annual revenue is capped at $50,000 (increasing to $150,000 effective September 1, 2025).

Governing Law: Texas Health & Safety Code Ch. 437; SB 541Permits Required: None for cottage food operations

Home Daycare

Some Restrictions

Home daycares in Houston are regulated by the Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHS) under Human Resources Code Chapter 42, not by city ordinance. Three permit tiers exist: Listed Family Home (up to 3 unrelated children), Registered Home (up to 6), and Licensed Home (7-12).

Regulatory Authority: Texas HHS Child Care RegulationListed Family Home: Up to 3 unrelated children; $20/year

Zoning Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Houston is the only major US city without zoning. Home businesses are governed by deed restrictions, HOA rules, and general nuisance ordinances. Chapter 10, Article XV authorizes the city to enforce deed restriction violations by injunction.

Zoning: NONE (unique in US)Control: Deed restrictions & HOAs

Signage Rules

Some Restrictions

Houston's Chapter 46 Sign Code regulates all signage within city limits. Home-based businesses generally cannot display commercial signage without a Certificate of Occupancy. Each business is limited to five signs total under the Sign Code.

Code Section: Chapter 46Sign Limit: 5 per business

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Houston has no zoning restrictions on customer traffic to home businesses. Deed restrictions are the primary control and typically prohibit regular customer visits that create parking issues or commercial activity patterns in residential neighborhoods.

City Restriction: None (no zoning)Deed Rules: Usually restrict customer visits

🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas

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

Pool Permits

Some Restrictions

Houston requires building permits for all swimming pool construction under the adopted 2018 International Swimming Pool and Spa Code (ISPSC) with Houston Amendments. Applications inactive after 180 days. Flood zone properties need additional permits.

Code: 2018 ISPSC with Houston AmendmentsPermit: Required for all pools

Above-Ground Pools

Some Restrictions

Above-ground pools in Houston must meet the same barrier requirements as in-ground pools under Chapter 43 and the International Swimming Pool and Spa Code. Ladders or steps must be capable of being secured, locked, or removed to prevent unauthorized access.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 43; ISPSCBarrier Required: 48 inches minimum, same as in-ground pools

Hot Tub Rules

Some Restrictions

Houston regulates hot tubs and spas under Chapter 43 (Pool and Spa Safety) and the ISPSC. Spas with powered safety covers complying with ASTM F1346 are exempt from barrier requirements. Hot tubs over a certain capacity require building permits.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 43; ISPSCBarrier Exemption: Powered safety cover meeting ASTM F1346

Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Houston requires a minimum 48-inch barrier around all pools holding 24+ inches of water. Gates must be self-closing, self-latching with latches at 54 inches. Chain link is prohibited for new pool enclosures after January 1, 1994.

Min Height: 48 inchesMax Gap: 4 inches

Safety Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Houston pools must display a No Swimming When Unattended sign. Pool covers must support the weight of a child or adult. Doors providing pool access require alarms and keyless deadbolts at 36+ inches.

Sign Required: No Swimming When UnattendedDoor Alarm: Required for pool access

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.

ADU Owner Occupancy

Few Restrictions

Houston has no municipal owner-occupancy requirement for ADUs. With no zoning ordinance, owner-occupancy is governed entirely by deed restrictions in specific subdivisions. Some Houston HOAs and historic deed restrictions require the owner to live in either the main dwelling or the ADU.

City Rule: No owner-occupancy requirementReal Governance: Deed restrictions

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Houston does not impose traditional municipal impact fees on residential ADUs. The Houston Permitting Center charges only standard permit and plan-review fees plus utility tap fees. Houston Public Works charges water and wastewater capacity fees where new service connections are required.

Municipal Impact Fees: None for residential ADUsPermit Fee Range: $145-$500 typical

ADU Permits

Few Restrictions

Houston permits ADUs (locally called garage apartments or quarters) through the Houston Permitting Center. With no zoning ordinance, ADUs are regulated by Chapter 42 development code, building code, and deed restrictions. Building permits are required for all habitable accessory structures.

Filing Portal: Houston Permitting CenterCode Authority: Chapter 42 + IRC amendments

ADU Rental Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Houston does not restrict long-term rental of ADUs. Texas state law (Property Code Section 92.0091) preempts most local rental regulation. Short-term rental of ADUs requires registration with the City under Chapter 28 effective 2024. Deed restrictions often impose rental bans or minimum-lease terms.

Long-Term Rentals: No city restrictionSTR Registration: Required (Chapter 28)

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Carports in Houston require a building permit through the Houston Permitting Center. They must comply with building setback requirements under Chapter 42 and applicable building codes. Since Houston has no zoning, deed restrictions may impose additional requirements.

Permit Required: Yes, through Houston Permitting CenterInspections: Pre-construction and final inspections required

Tiny Homes

Some Restrictions

Houston allows secondary dwelling units (ADUs) including tiny homes, with a maximum size of 900 sq ft or 50% of the main home's floor area. The 2023 Livable Places amendments to Chapter 42 expanded ADU allowances. Since Houston has no zoning, most restrictions come from building codes and deed restrictions.

Max ADU Size: 900 sq ft or 50% of main home, whichever is smaller2023 Amendments: Livable Places expanded ADU allowances

ADU Rules

Few Restrictions

Houston permits ADUs (secondary dwelling units) by right up to 900 sq ft with kitchen and bathroom. One ADU per single-family lot. Setbacks are 5 feet from rear and side property lines. Deed restrictions may prohibit ADUs.

Max Size: 900 sq ftPermitted: By right (no CU)

Shed Rules

Few Restrictions

Houston exempts accessory structures under 200 sq ft and 15 ft tall from building permits. Larger structures require permits. Setbacks are 5 feet from side and rear property lines (10 ft rear if over 15 ft tall). Must be behind the front building line.

Permit Exempt: Under 200 sq ft and 15 ft tallSide/Rear Setback: 5 ft (10 ft rear if over 15 ft)

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Houston allows garage conversions to living space or ADUs with a building permit. Converting to an ADU requires 3 total off-street parking spaces. Over-garage ADUs that preserve parking below are a popular alternative.

Permit: RequiredParking: 3 total spaces if ADU

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

🌍 Environmental Rules

Vehicle Idling Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Houston falls within the Houston-Galveston-Brazoria ozone nonattainment area, where TCEQ Rule 30 TAC 114.512 limits heavy-duty vehicle idling to five minutes when ambient temperatures are between 40 and 90 degrees.

Idle limit: 5 minutes maximumVehicle threshold: Over 14,000 pounds GVWR

Gas Leaf Blower Ban

Few Restrictions

Houston has not adopted a gas-powered leaf blower ban. Texas Health and Safety Code Section 382.0622 preempts cities from regulating outdoor power equipment emissions, leaving such restrictions exclusively to state authority.

Local ban: None adoptedState preemption: TX H&S 382.0622

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Some Restrictions

Houston adopted its Climate Action Plan in April 2020, setting targets to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050 with interim 40 percent emission reductions by 2030 across transportation, energy, buildings, and materials management.

Adopted: April 2020Net zero target: 2050

Sustainable Procurement

Some Restrictions

The Houston Sustainable Operations Plan directs city departments to favor environmentally preferable goods and services, prioritizing recycled content, energy-efficient equipment, low-emission vehicles, and locally sourced products in municipal contracting decisions.

Authority: Mayoral executive ordersLead division: Strategic Procurement Division

Cool Roof Requirements

Some Restrictions

Houston Energy Code amendments to Chapter 28 require low-slope commercial roofs to meet minimum solar reflectance and thermal emittance values, reducing heat absorption and lowering cooling demand in the citys hot, humid climate.

Reflectance minimum: 0.55 aged or SRI 64Emittance minimum: 0.75 thermal emittance

Heat Island Mitigation

Some Restrictions

Houstons Climate Action Plan and Bayou Greenways 2020 program target urban heat island reduction through expanded tree canopy, green infrastructure, and the citywide goal of planting 4.6 million trees by 2030 to cool neighborhoods.

Tree planting goal: 4.6 million by 2030Bayou Greenways: 150 miles of parks

Erosion Control

Heavy Restrictions

Houston requires erosion control measures for construction and development under Chapter 47 and the City of Houston Design Manual. Erosion control methods are required when design velocities exceed 3 feet per second. An engineered grading plan is required for more than 1,000 cubic yards of fill.

Velocity Trigger: Erosion control required when velocity exceeds 3 ft/secGrading Plan: Required for >1,000 cubic yards of fill

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Houston's Chapter 19 floodplain ordinance, significantly strengthened after Hurricane Harvey in 2018, requires new structures in the 100-year floodplain to be elevated 24 inches above the 500-year flood elevation. This is among the strictest floodplain regulations in the nation.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 19 (amended April 2018)Elevation Requirement: 2 feet above 500-year flood elevation

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 47, Art. XII regulates stormwater discharges. New development on parcels of one acre or larger and significant redevelopments (adding 0.2+ acres of impervious surface) must obtain a Stormwater Quality (SWQ) permit. Houston's Design Manual Chapter 9 sets detailed stormwater design requirements.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 47, Art. XIIPermit Trigger: New development on 1+ acre parcels

Coastal Development

Few Restrictions

Houston does not have a municipal coastal development ordinance. The city is approximately 50 miles inland from the Gulf of Mexico. Coastal development in the greater Houston-Galveston region is regulated by the Texas General Land Office and FEMA.

Houston Coastal Ordinance: None; city is ~50 miles inlandState Authority: Texas General Land Office (GLO)

Grading & Drainage

Heavy Restrictions

Houston's Chapter 19 and Design Manual Chapter 9 impose strict grading and drainage requirements. Detention is required for most new development. An engineered grading plan is mandatory for more than 1,000 cubic yards of fill. Post-Harvey rules expanded Zero Net Fill to the 500-year floodplain.

Code Sections: Houston Code Ch. 19; Design Manual Ch. 9Grading Plan: Required for >1,000 cubic yards of fill

Shoreline Management

Some Restrictions

Houston's shoreline management is primarily governed by the Harris County Flood Control District and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Regulations apply to development along Buffalo Bayou, other bayous, and the Houston Ship Channel. The city enforces buffer zones and setback requirements near waterways to reduce erosion and flood risk.

Buffer Zones: Required along bayous and regulated waterwaysPrimary Authority: Harris County Flood Control District

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Social Equity Licensing

Few Restrictions

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

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

Buffer Zones

Few Restrictions

Houston has no cannabis dispensary buffer-zone rules because Texas does not authorize recreational dispensaries. Compassionate Use Program (CUP) sites operate as low-volume medical providers with no statewide school or daycare buffer mandate. Hemp/CBD retailers are treated as ordinary commercial uses.

Buffer rule: None in TX or HoustonHouston zoning: No traditional zoning code

Cannabis Delivery Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Texas prohibits all recreational cannabis delivery. Compassionate Use Program low-THC products may be delivered to qualifying patients only by the three licensed dispensing organizations. Hemp-derived products under 0.3% delta-9 THC may be delivered legally under Texas Agriculture Code Chapter 122.

Recreational delivery: Felony statewideCUP delivery: Allowed for registered patients

Personal Cultivation Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Texas prohibits personal cannabis cultivation entirely. Houston cannot authorize home grows under home-rule authority while state law treats marijuana possession and manufacture as criminal offenses. Hemp cultivation requires a Texas Department of Agriculture license and is not a personal-grow exception.

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

Commercial Cannabis Zoning

Few Restrictions

Houston has no traditional zoning code, so cannabis-style commercial siting rules do not exist. Recreational cannabis retail is illegal statewide. Hemp-derived CBD retailers operate under Texas Agriculture Code Chapter 122 plus Houston Chapter 28 building rules and any private deed restrictions on the parcel.

Houston zoning: No traditional zoning codeCannabis retail: Prohibited statewide

Dispensary Zoning

Heavy Restrictions

Cannabis dispensaries are not permitted in Houston. Texas allows only a limited number of licensed compassionate-use dispensing organizations statewide under the Compassionate Use Act. Houston has no zoning code, and recreational cannabis remains illegal statewide.

Recreational Dispensaries: Illegal in TexasMedical Dispensaries: Limited state licenses via Compassionate Use Act

Home Cultivation

Heavy Restrictions

Home cultivation of marijuana is illegal in Houston and throughout Texas. Possession of any amount of marijuana is a criminal offense under the Texas Controlled Substances Act. Texas does not allow home cultivation for medical or recreational purposes.

Status: Illegal; no home cultivation allowedGoverning Law: Texas Health & Safety Code Ch. 481

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

Digital Billboards

Heavy Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 46 sign code prohibits new off-premise digital billboards citywide. On-premise digital signs face brightness, dwell-time, and proximity limits enforced by the Sign Administration division.

Code Citation: Houston Code Chapter 46Off-Premise Digital: Prohibited citywide

Window Signs

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 46 limits commercial window signs to 25 percent coverage of any single window pane. Permanent signs may require permits; temporary promotional signs face duration limits.

Coverage Cap: 25 percent per paneCode Citation: Houston Code Chapter 46

Garage Sale Signs

Some Restrictions

Houston prohibits placing garage sale signs on public property under the bandit sign provisions of Chapter 28 and Chapter 46 (Sign Code). Signs on public streets, sidewalks, utility poles, and rights-of-way are subject to impoundment and fines of $300-$500.

On Public Property: Prohibited (bandit sign)Fine: $300-$500 per violation per day

Political Signs

Few Restrictions

Houston regulates political signs under content-neutral temporary sign rules in Chapter 28 of the Code of Ordinances. Residential properties may display temporary signs up to 36 square feet per parcel without a permit. Texas state law (Tex. Transp. Code Β§393.0025) preempts most local content-based political-sign timing rules, so Houston treats them as ordinary temporary signs.

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Holiday Displays

Few Restrictions

Houston does not have specific ordinances regulating residential holiday displays. General sign code provisions under Chapter 46 and electrical code safety requirements apply. HOA deed restrictions may impose neighborhood-specific rules on timing and aesthetics.

Municipal Ordinance: No specific holiday display regulationSign Code: Ch. 46 primarily covers commercial/permanent signs

🏚️ Property Maintenance

Snow & Sidewalk Clearing

Few Restrictions

Houston does not have a snow or ice sidewalk clearing ordinance. Snow and ice events are extremely rare in Houston's subtropical climate. The city has no standing snow removal program or requirements for property owners to clear sidewalks.

Snow Clearing Ordinance: NoneClimate: Subtropical; snow events extremely rare

Property Blight

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 10, Art. XI (Neighborhood Nuisances) and Community Code Enforcement address property blight including overgrown lots, graffiti, trash accumulation, dangerous buildings, and junked vehicles. Fines range from $200 to $2,000.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 10, Art. XIWeed Height Limit: 48 inches maximum

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Houston's Solid Waste Management Department requires trash and recycling bins to be curbside by 7 AM and removed by 10 PM on collection day. Bins must be placed at least 3 feet apart from other objects. Houston Code Chapter 39 governs solid waste and litter control.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 39Placement Time: At curb by 7 AM on collection day

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Some Restrictions

Houston requires vacant lot owners to maintain their property free of overgrown vegetation, trash accumulation, and nuisance conditions under Chapter 10, Art. XI. Weeds exceeding 48 inches must be abated. The city may mow overgrown lots and bill the owner.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 10, Art. XI; Texas HSC Sec. 342.008Vegetation Limit: 48 inches maximum height

Garage Sale Rules

Few Restrictions

Houston does not regulate garage or yard sales and does not require a permit. Texas state law limits residents to two garage sales per 12-month period before requiring a sales tax permit, or total sales must stay under $3,000 annually.

City Permit: Not requiredState Limit: 2 sales per 12 months or $3,000 annual cap

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

Security Deposit Rules

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code Section 92.103 requires landlords to refund a tenant's security deposit within 30 days of move-out, with itemized deductions for damage beyond normal wear and tear; Houston has no stricter local rule.

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

Relocation Assistance

Few Restrictions

Texas law does not require landlords to pay relocation assistance when terminating a tenancy, demolishing a building, or converting use, and Houston has no local ordinance creating such a duty for displaced renters.

Local ordinance: None exists in HoustonState requirement: None under Texas law

Cash-for-Keys Agreements

Few Restrictions

Texas does not regulate cash-for-keys agreements between landlords and tenants, and Houston has no ordinance setting minimum payments, written-disclosure requirements, or cooling-off periods for voluntary move-out deals.

Local rule: None in HoustonMinimum payment: No statutory floor

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Few Restrictions

Texas Property Code Section 92.331 prohibits landlord retaliation for a narrow set of tenant actions, but Houston has no Tenant Anti-Harassment Ordinance like Los Angeles or Seattle covering broader landlord harassment.

Retaliation statute: TX Property Code Section 92.331Lookback window: 6 months from protected activity

No-Fault Evictions

Few Restrictions

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

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

Pass-Through Charges

Few Restrictions

Texas does not regulate landlord pass-through of utility, capital, or operating costs to tenants beyond lease terms, and Houston has no local ordinance limiting them; submetered utilities follow PUC rules.

Local ordinance: None in HoustonSubmetered utilities: Governed by 16 TAC Ch. 24

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Few Restrictions

Houston has not adopted a source-of-income antidiscrimination ordinance, so private landlords may legally refuse Section 8 vouchers, SSI, or housing-subsidy income; Texas state law preempts most local SOI protections.

Houston ordinance: None existsState preemption: TX Local Gov't Code Section 250.007

Section 8 Voucher Acceptance

Some Restrictions

Houston Housing Authority administers the federal Housing Choice Voucher program for over 18,000 households, but landlord participation is voluntary because Texas preempts mandatory voucher acceptance ordinances.

Administrator: Houston Housing AuthorityVouchers issued: Approximately 18,000 households

Rent Control

Few Restrictions

Houston has NO local rent control ordinance and cannot adopt one under Tex. Local Gov't Code Β§ 214.902, which preempts municipal rent control unless the governor approves it after a declared housing-emergency disaster. The Houston Code of Ordinances 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

Few Restrictions

Houston has NO local just-cause eviction ordinance. Texas is a no-cause termination state under Tex. Prop. Code Β§ 91.001 β€” a month-to-month tenancy may be ended by either party on 30 days' written notice without stating a reason. Fixed-term leases may be terminated for breach under Tex. Prop. Code Ch. 24.

Local Ordinance: None β€” state law governsMonth-to-Month Termination: 30-day notice, no cause required (Β§ 91.001)

Rental Registration

Few Restrictions

Houston does not have a mandatory rental property registration or licensing program. Texas state preemption under HB 2127 limits the city's ability to create new local rental regulations. The only registration requirement is for short-term rentals under the 2025 STR ordinance.

Rental Registration: Not required for long-term rentalsLandlord License: Not required

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling

Yard Waste Collection

Few Restrictions

Houston picks up yard waste weekly on the same day as garbage. Material must be in compostable kraft paper bags or 32-gallon containers, weighing no more than 50 pounds each. Tree limbs are bundled. Citywide leaf and tree-waste recycling runs October through March.

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Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

Houston Solid Waste Management provides curbside garbage and recycling collection under Chapter 39. Bins must be at the curb by 7 AM and removed by 10 PM on collection day. Recycling is collected every other week.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 39Garbage Collection: Weekly

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

Houston requires trash and recycling bins to be placed at the curb at least 3 feet apart from other objects on collection day. Bins must be accessible and not blocked. Chapter 39 governs solid waste placement requirements.

Spacing Requirement: 3 feet minimum between carts and objectsLid Requirement: Must fully close; no overfilling

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

Houston provides curbside bulk waste collection for large items like furniture and appliances on a scheduled basis. Chapter 39 governs solid waste disposal. Certain items like hazardous materials, construction debris, and electronics have separate disposal requirements.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 39Bulk Collection: Scheduled curbside service

Recycling Requirements

Some Restrictions

Houston provides curbside single-stream recycling collected every other week in the green 96-gallon cart. While recycling is strongly encouraged, Houston does not mandate residential recycling. Contamination rules restrict what can go in the green bin.

Collection Frequency: Every other weekContainer: Green 96-gallon cart

🚁 Drone Rules

Airport Proximity Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Drone flights near IAH and HOU airports require FAA LAANC authorization in controlled airspace. Houston cannot regulate airspace itself but enforces takeoff and landing on city property.

Required System: FAA LAANC authorizationIAH Airspace: Class B controlled

Event Drone Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

FAA Temporary Flight Restrictions ban drones over NRG Stadium, Toyota Center, and Minute Maid Park during major events. The 3-mile no-drone zone applies one hour before through after events.

Federal Authority: FAA Stadium TFRLateral Range: 3 nautical miles

Park Drone Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Houston Parks and Recreation Department prohibits drone operation in city parks without a special-use permit under the Houston Parks Ordinance. Memorial Park, Hermann Park, and Buffalo Bayou Park all post no-drone rules. Texas state law (Govt Code Β§423) supplements with restrictions over critical infrastructure and crowds.

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Commercial Drones

Some Restrictions

Commercial drone operations in Houston require an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. Texas does not add state-level commercial licensing requirements. Texas Government Code Ch. 423 restricts drone surveillance, particularly over critical infrastructure like petrochemical facilities.

FAA Certificate: Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate requiredTest Cost: $175; 60 questions; valid 24 months

Recreational Drones

Some Restrictions

Houston permits recreational drones subject to FAA rules and limited park bans. Pilots must register drones over 0.55 lbs with the FAA ($5/3 years), complete the TRUST test, fly below 400 feet AGL, and keep line of sight. Houston Parks & Recreation prohibits drones in most city parks without a permit, and Memorial Park has strict no-fly zones.

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πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors

πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door

πŸŒ™ Curfew Laws

πŸ“ Building Setbacks & Zoning

🌳 Tree Protection

Tree Removal Permits

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 33, Art. VI requires permits for removing protected trees. Applications are filed with the Urban Forestry Division with a processing time of 10 business days. Permits are valid for one year.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 33, Art. VIApplication: Email treepermit@houstontx.gov or call (713) 867-0378

Heritage & Protected Trees

Heavy Restrictions

Houston's Tree Preservation Ordinance (Chapter 33, Art. VI) provides special protection for heritage and significant trees including Live Oak, Pecan, Magnolia, and Bald Cypress. Unauthorized removal carries fines of $90 per diameter inch plus daily penalties of up to $500.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 33, Art. VIProtected Species: Live Oak, Pecan, Magnolia, Bald Cypress

Tree Replacement Requirements

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 33, Art. V requires minimum tree planting for new development. Lots under 5,000 sq ft must have at least one tree. Replacement requirements apply when protected trees are removed. The ordinance establishes street tree, parking lot tree, and landscape buffer standards.

Code Section: Houston Code Ch. 33, Art. VSmall Lots (<5,000 sq ft): Minimum 1 tree required

Tree Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Houston's tree and shrub ordinance (Chapter 33 of the Code of Ordinances) requires the preservation of protected trees during development. Trees with a diameter of 8 inches or more at breast height are considered protected. Developers must submit tree surveys and obtain permits before removing protected trees on development sites.

Protected Tree Size: 8 inches DBH or greaterGoverning Chapter: Chapter 33, Houston Code of Ordinances

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

🏘️ HOA Rules

Board Procedures

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code Chapter 209 (TRPOPA) requires HOA boards to hold open meetings with advance notice to owners, conduct elections by secret ballot, and maintain detailed records available to members on request.

Governing Law: TX Property Code Ch. 209Meeting Notice: 10+ days written notice

Architectural Review

Some Restrictions

Texas HOAs may require architectural review for exterior modifications per their CC&Rs, but state law limits HOA authority on solar panels, satellite dishes, and certain drought-resistant landscaping. Denials must be in writing within 30 days.

Solar Panels: Cannot be banned (PC 202.010)Response Time: Per CC&Rs or 30 days

Assessment & Dues

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code governs HOA assessments, requiring notice before liens and limiting foreclosure. HOAs must send at least two written notices before filing a lien, and cannot foreclose for fines alone under most circumstances.

Lien Notice: Two notices, 30 days eachForeclosure: Not for fines alone

Dispute Resolution

Some Restrictions

Texas law provides a structured dispute resolution process for HOA conflicts. Property Code 209.00593 allows owners to request a hearing before the board, and disputes may be taken to a Justice of the Peace or through mandatory pre-litigation mediation.

Pre-Suit Mediation: Required (PC 209.007)Hearing Notice: 10+ days before fine

CC&R Enforcement

Some Restrictions

Texas law requires HOAs to adopt a formal enforcement policy and send written violation notices before imposing fines. Owners must receive notice of the specific violation and an opportunity to cure before penalties accrue.

Enforcement Policy: Required since Jan 2024Written Notice: Required before fines

πŸŒ€ Hurricane Preparedness

πŸ›’ Street Vending

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Some Restrictions

Houston Chapter 28 building amendments adopt the IRC sprinkler trigger thresholds for new commercial and multifamily construction. Texas state law preempts mandatory sprinklers in one and two-family homes despite IRC R313.

Authority: Houston Chapter 28Multifamily threshold: 3 or more units

Childcare Center Rules

Some Restrictions

Houston Chapter 28 requires childcare centers to meet IBC Group E or I-4 occupancy standards while Texas Health and Human Services Commission licenses operations, sets staff ratios, and inspects programs serving children outside their own homes.

City code: Houston Chapter 28State licensing: Texas HHSC

Door Locking Hardware

Some Restrictions

Houston Chapter 28 adopts International Fire Code Section 1010 governing door locking hardware on means of egress. Hardware must allow single-motion unlatching from the egress side, with limited exceptions for delayed-egress and access-controlled systems.

Code section: IFC Section 1010Release rule: Single motion unlatch

Green Building Code

Few Restrictions

Houston has not adopted a mandatory green building code. Voluntary programs include the Houston Green Office Challenge, energy code updates, and LEED certification incentives offered through the Office of Sustainability for new commercial development.

Mandatory code: None for green buildingVoluntary program: Green Office Challenge

Elevator Maintenance

Some Restrictions

Texas TDLR requires annual inspections of all elevators, escalators, and related equipment. Building owners must register equipment and maintain current certificates of compliance displayed in each elevator cab.

Governing Body: TDLRInspection: Annual required

Lead Paint

Some Restrictions

Houston follows federal EPA lead-based paint disclosure rules for pre-1978 housing and requires asbestos surveys before demolition or renovation. The Houston Health Department handles airborne lead paint complaints via 311.

Disclosure: Required for pre-1978 homesRenovation Rule: EPA RRP (40 CFR 745)

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Houston Code of Ordinances Chapter 10 requires property owners to keep premises free from insect and rodent infestation. The Houston Health Department runs Vector Control programs for mosquitoes and rodents, and issues abatement orders.

Code Section: Ch. 10 Art. IXMosquito Control: Health Dept Vector Control

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Some Restrictions

Houston follows the 2021 International Building Code for scaffold and construction safety. Scaffolding on public rights-of-way requires a permit from the Houston Permitting Center. OSHA standards apply to all construction sites.

Building Code: 2021 IBC with amendmentsROW Permit: Required for public areas

πŸŽͺ Special Events & Permits

πŸ“’ Noise from Specific Sources

πŸ“‹ Code Violation Reporting

πŸŽ‹ Invasive Plant Rules

πŸ“· Privacy & Surveillance

License Plate Readers

Some Restrictions

HPD operates Automated License Plate Readers without specific Texas statute or city ordinance regulating retention. Department policy governs use; data retention typically 90 days for non-hit plates.

Texas Statute: No specific ALPR lawRetention Default: 90 days non-hit plates

Privacy Screening

Few Restrictions

Houston does not require building permits for most residential fences. Fences up to 8 feet tall that are not masonry/concrete and not electrically energized are exempt from permits under the Houston Amendments to the International Residential Code. Houston has no zoning-based height restrictions, but deed restrictions may apply.

Permit Exempt: Up to 8 ft (non-masonry)Masonry Fences: Permit required

Security Camera Rules

Few Restrictions

Texas is a one-party consent state for audio recording under Texas Penal Code Section 16.02. Video surveillance on your own property is generally lawful. Audio recording requires consent from at least one party. Cameras must not be aimed at areas where others have a reasonable expectation of privacy per Texas Penal Code Section 21.15.

Consent Type: One-party consent (audio)Video Only: Generally lawful on own property

Recording & Consent Laws

Some Restrictions

Texas is a one-party consent state for recording under Texas Penal Code Section 16.02. You may record a conversation if you are a party to it or have consent from one party. Recording without any party's consent is a second-degree felony. Texas also has specific protections against invasive visual recording.

Consent Standard: One-party consentStatute: TX Penal Code Β§16.02

πŸ“ Permit Requirements

Shed & Outbuilding Permits

Few Restrictions

In Houston, residential storage sheds under 120 sq ft are exempt from building permits. Sheds over 200 sq ft require permits with fees starting around $50-$145. All sheds must comply with setback requirements and, in flood zones, may need a floodplain development permit.

Exempt Size: Under 120 sq ftPermit Fee: $50-$145+ (200+ sq ft)

Fence Permits

Few Restrictions

Houston does not require permits for most residential fences. Fences up to 8 feet tall that are not masonry or concrete are exempt. Masonry fences and fences over 8 feet require permits. Properties in flood zones need a floodplain development permit for fences. Deed restrictions may add requirements.

Permit Exempt: Under 8 ft, non-masonryMasonry Fences: Permit required

Deck & Patio Permits

Few Restrictions

In Houston, decks not exceeding 200 sq ft, not more than 30 inches above grade, not attached to a dwelling, and not serving a required exit door are exempt from permits. Larger or elevated decks require permits. At-grade patios are generally exempt. Flood zone properties need additional permits.

Exempt Deck: 200 sq ft or less, under 30 inMust Be: Detached and not at exit

Renovation Permits

Some Restrictions

Most renovation work in Houston requires a building permit through the Houston Permitting Center. Permits are required for structural alterations, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work. Cosmetic work is exempt. A Notice of Commencement is required on most jobs over $5,000.

Online Portal: Houston Permitting CenterNotice of Commencement: Required over $5,000

πŸ”« Firearms

🚬 Tobacco & Vaping

πŸ›οΈ Single-Use Items

πŸ’Ό Employment Preemption

🚜 Right to Farm

πŸ›‚ Immigration Policy

πŸ›οΈ Homelessness & Encampment Rules

πŸ›΄ Mobility & Curb Rules

πŸ’§ Water Use Rules

πŸ—ΊοΈ Zoning Overlays & Bonuses

🩺 Public Health Rules

Restaurant Grade Cards

Some Restrictions

Houston Health Department inspects food establishments under Code Ch. 20 and Texas Food Establishment Rules, posting numeric demerit scores online. Houston uses a numeric demerit system rather than the A/B/C letter grades used by Los Angeles County.

City code: Houston Code Chapter 20State rules: 25 TAC Β§228 Food Rules

Rodent Control

Some Restrictions

Houston requires property owners to control rats, mice, and other vermin under Code Chapter 21 (health) and Texas Health and Safety Code Ch. 343, which classifies rodent harborage as a public health nuisance subject to abatement.

City code: Houston Code Chapter 21State law: TX H&S Code Ch. 343

Bed-Bug Rules

Some Restrictions

Texas Property Code Chapter 92 requires landlords to provide habitable housing free of pests, and Houston Code Chapter 27 minimum housing standards let inspectors cite bed bug infestations as substandard conditions requiring professional treatment.

State law: TX Property Code Ch. 92City code: Houston Code Chapter 27

Syringe Disposal

Some Restrictions

Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 728 prohibits placing used needles and sharps in regular trash. Houston Solid Waste accepts properly contained household sharps at neighborhood depository sites and through limited collection events.

State law: TX H&S Code Β§728.002Container: FDA-cleared sharps container

Healthy Food Retail

Few Restrictions

Houston has no fast-food moratorium like Los Angeles, but the Health Department's Go Healthy Houston initiative and Healthy Eating Active Living grants encourage corner stores and community gardens to expand fresh food access in food-desert neighborhoods.

Lead agency: Houston Health DepartmentInitiative: Go Healthy Houston

Calorie Labeling

Some Restrictions

Calorie labeling on menus in Houston is governed by federal FDA rules under 21 CFR Β§101.11, requiring chains with 20 or more locations to post calorie counts. Texas and Houston have no separate municipal menu-labeling ordinance.

Federal rule: 21 CFR Β§101.11Threshold: Chains with 20+ locations

Food Handler Certification

Some Restrictions

Under Texas Health and Safety Code Β§438.046, every food employee in Houston must obtain an accredited food handler certificate within 60 days of hire. Cards are valid for two years and enforced by Houston Health Department inspectors.

Statute: TX H&S Code Β§438.046Deadline: Within 60 days of hire

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸ›οΈ Historic Preservation

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

Towing Companies

Some Restrictions

Houston towing companies must hold a Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation license under Texas Occupations Code Chapter 2308 and a Houston permit under Code Chapter 8. Nonconsent tow rates are capped, vehicles must be posted, and storage fees are limited.

State law: TX Occupations Code Ch. 2308City code: Houston Ch. 8

Adult Entertainment

Heavy Restrictions

Houston regulates sexually oriented businesses under Code of Ordinances Chapter 28, Article III, requiring annual permits, manager screening, 1,500-foot zoning buffers from churches, schools, parks, and homes, plus interior layout standards drawn from Texas Local Government Code Chapter 243.

Code reference: Houston Ch. 28 Art. IIIState authority: TX Local Gov Code Ch. 243

Massage Establishments

Some Restrictions

Massage therapists and establishments in Houston must hold Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation credentials under Texas Occupations Code Chapter 455, with Houston police and code enforcement targeting illicit massage parlors through inspections, zoning checks, and human-trafficking investigations.

State licensing: TDLR under TX Occupations Ch. 455City enforcement: HPD Vice and ARA

Tattoo & Body Modification

Some Restrictions

Tattoo and body-piercing studios in Houston operate under a Texas Department of State Health Services license issued under Health and Safety Code Chapter 146, with the Houston Health Department supporting inspections. Tattooing minors is generally banned and reusable instruments must be autoclaved.

State law: TX H&S Code Chapter 146License issuer: Texas DSHS

Secondhand Dealers

Some Restrictions

Houston secondhand dealers, including used-jewelry buyers, used-merchandise stores, and metal recyclers, must register under Texas Occupations Code Chapter 1956 and report transactions to police. Houston Police runs the LeadsOnline reporting system to recover stolen goods.

State law: TX Occupations Ch. 1956Reporting system: LeadsOnline within 48 hours

Tobacco Retail License

Some Restrictions

Every Houston retailer selling cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, e-cigarettes, or alternative nicotine products must hold an annual retailer permit from the Texas Comptroller under Texas Tax Code Chapter 154 and Health and Safety Code Chapter 161. Houston has no separate city tobacco license.

Permit issuer: Texas Comptroller of Public AccountsPermit term: Two-year renewal

Pawnbrokers

Some Restrictions

Pawnbrokers operating in Houston must hold a Texas Office of Consumer Credit Commissioner license under Texas Finance Code Chapter 371. Maximum interest is 20% per month on small pawns, items must be held 30 days, and Houston Police monitor transaction reporting through LeadsOnline.

State law: TX Finance Code Ch. 371Licensing agency: Office of Consumer Credit Commissioner

🚷 Public Conduct

Aggressive Panhandling

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 28, Article XV bans aggressive solicitation involving touching, blocking pedestrians, persistent following, threatening conduct, or solicitation near ATMs and bus stops. Texas Penal Code Section 22.06 covers any physical contact. Passive sign-holding remains protected speech.

Code section: Houston Ch. 28 Art. XVFirst fine ceiling: Up to $500 Class C

Public Urination

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 28 and Texas Penal Code Section 42.01 (Disorderly Conduct) prohibit urinating or defecating in any public place. The act is a Class C misdemeanor, and aggravated cases near minors can support enhanced charges or sex-offender screening.

State law: TX Penal Code Section 42.01Base fine: Up to $500 Class C

Loud Party Ordinance

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 30 caps residential noise at 65 dB(A) day and 58 dB(A) overnight, while Texas Local Government Code Section 250.008 backs city authority. HPD can cite hosts and occupants when amplified music or shouting is plainly audible 100 feet away.

Code section: Houston Ch. 30 NoiseState authority: TX Local Gov Code 250.008

Outdoor Smoking Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

The 2007 Houston Smoke-Free Air Ordinance, codified at Code of Ordinances Chapter 21, bans smoking in restaurants, bars, workplaces, sports venues, and within 25 feet of building entrances. Public parks and library plazas are also covered. E-cigarettes were added by 2017 amendment.

Code section: Houston Ch. 21Adopted: 2007 Smoke-Free Air Ordinance

Jaywalking

Some Restrictions

Texas Transportation Code Section 552.005 requires pedestrians outside marked crosswalks to yield to oncoming vehicles. Houston Police continue to cite jaywalkers, unlike California's Freedom to Walk reform, with base fines around $100 plus court costs.

State law: TX Transp. Code Section 552.005Charge level: Class C misdemeanor

Public Marijuana Use

Heavy Restrictions

Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 481 makes any marijuana possession or use illegal statewide, including in Houston. Harris County's diversion program treats two-ounce-or-less possession as a citation, but public use can still trigger arrest and prosecution.

State law: TX H&S Code Sec. 481.121Two ounces: Class B misdemeanor

Public Alcohol Use

Some Restrictions

Houston Code Chapter 28 bans open containers and public consumption in city parks and most public spaces, while Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code Section 109 governs statewide open-container limits. Downtown's Main Street Square allows alcohol within designated outdoor entertainment areas during sanctioned events.

City code: Houston Ch. 28State authority: TX TABC Sec. 109.35

Overall: What to Expect in Houston

Houston has 252 ordinances on file across 52 categories. Of these, 89 are rated permissive, 130 moderate, and 33 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Houston 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.

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