Georgetown's home-occupation rules require the business to remain secondary to residential use and preserve neighborhood character, which limits or prohibits commercial signage in residential zones. Texas HB 2464 protects no-impact home-based businesses only when their activities are not visible from the street, reinforcing the no-visible-signage expectation.
Signage for a home business in Georgetown is constrained from two directions. First, the Unified Development Code regulates home occupations as an accessory, secondary use that must preserve the residential character of the neighborhood, and Georgetown's sign regulations restrict commercial signage in residential districts; visible business signs are generally what distinguish a permitted low-impact home occupation from a prohibited commercial use. Owners should confirm the exact home-occupation signage limit in the City's adopted UDC, because the City sets whether any small identification sign is allowed and at what size. Second, the Texas Home-Based Business Fairness Act (HB 2464) only protects a no-impact home-based business when none of its activities are visible from a street, which functionally discourages outward business signage; a prominent sign that advertises the business to passing traffic can move the operation outside the no-impact protection and into the City's discretionary regulation. Georgetown also maintains separate sign-permit and historic-district sign rules (Certificate of Appropriateness in historic areas), which would apply to any permitted sign. The safest reading for a homeowner is that on-premises commercial signage in a residential zone is heavily restricted, and any sign should be confirmed against both the UDC home-occupation standards and the City's sign code before installation rather than assumed to be allowed.
An unpermitted or non-compliant business sign in a residential zone can prompt a code-compliance notice and a removal order, and a visible sign can cost a home business its no-impact protection under state law. Confirm signage allowances with Georgetown Planning and the sign code before posting any sign.
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