Vacant and weedy lots in unincorporated Hidalgo County are regulated as public nuisances under Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 343. Overgrown lots, dumped debris, and drainage-blocking brush are the main targets of the county's Nuisance Abatement Program.
Unincorporated Hidalgo County does not zone or license vacant lots the way a city does, but it can abate a vacant parcel that becomes a public nuisance under Chapter 343. Section 343.011 covers premises maintained so as to harbor mosquitoes, rodents, and vermin, and premises where weeds or brush create a hazard. The county's Nuisance Abatement Program works with owners of weedy lots and lots where dumped trash or brush blocks drainage ditches. After verifying the problem, the county contacts the owner; a five-business-day mowing warning may be issued, then a certified letter gives 31 days to mow or request a hearing. If the lot is still not mowed, county crews may mow it and lien the parcel if unpaid.
Chapter 343 requires written notice describing the nuisance and a compliance deadline. If the owner does not act, the county abates it, assesses mowing costs, and records a lien under Section 343.022. Repeat nuisances get the shortened 10-business-day notice.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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See how Hidalgo County's vacant lot maintenance rules stack up against other locations.
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