Unincorporated Bexar County does not regulate HVAC noise; complaints rely on TX Penal Code 42.01. San Antonio Chapter 21 applies residential dBA limits at the property line to fixed equipment.
Air conditioning is essential in South Texas summers where daytime highs exceed 100 degrees for weeks. In unincorporated Bexar County, there is no setback requirement, no dBA cap, and no permit condition for residential HVAC condensers beyond the electrical and mechanical permit issued through Bexar County Public Works. TX Penal Code 42.01 applies only if the unit produces unreasonable noise relative to time and location. Within the City of San Antonio, Chapter 21 treats condenser noise as a fixed-source sound and measures it at the property line against the residential limit (~63 daytime/~56 nighttime dBA); a unit placed on a narrow side yard adjacent to a neighbor bedroom commonly triggers complaints. San Antonio building code (IRC-based) requires mechanical equipment placement that meets manufacturer clearance and does not obstruct egress, but does not set acoustic setback. Commercial rooftop units at strip centers in unincorporated county are subject to TCEQ 30 TAC 101.4 if they interfere with nearby residential enjoyment. Mitigation options include sound blankets, equipment pads, fence enclosures with airflow cutouts, and variable-speed compressors (typically 55 to 62 dBA). Heat pumps for pool heating are covered by the same rules as condensers. Window units are generally exempt from enforcement because they are shielded by the structure.
TX Penal Code 42.01 first offense is Class C, up to $500. San Antonio Chapter 21 fixed-source violation can result in Notice of Violation and municipal fines up to $500 per day. TCEQ nuisance action against commercial equipment may reach $25,000 per day under Water Code 7.052.
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