Flower Mound does not require landlords to register rental properties with the town. There is no rental registration program, rental licensing requirement, or mandatory rental inspection regime at the municipal level. Landlords must comply with the same general building code and property maintenance standards that apply to all properties in the town, but face no additional registration obligations, fees, or inspections specific to the rental use of the property. Texas state law does not mandate municipal rental registration programs, and Flower Mound has not adopted one voluntarily. Code compliance officers respond to maintenance complaints at rental properties under the same Chapter 14 building code and Chapter 30 property maintenance standards that apply to owner-occupied homes. Tenants experiencing habitability concerns should first notify the landlord in writing and may pursue statutory remedies under Texas Property Code Section 92.056 if the landlord fails to make necessary repairs within a reasonable time.
Unlike some Texas municipalities that have adopted rental registration ordinances for specific geographic areas experiencing concentrated code violations, Flower Mound does not operate a rental property registration program of any kind. Landlords are not required to register individual rental units with the town, obtain a separate rental operating license, pay annual rental registration or inspection fees, or undergo pre-lease property inspections before renting to new tenants. There is no mandatory periodic inspection program for residential rental properties in Flower Mound. The town does not maintain a registry or database of rental properties within its jurisdiction. Landlords remain subject to the town's general building code standards under Chapter 14 and property maintenance requirements under Chapter 30 of the Code of Ordinances. These are the same standards that apply to all residential properties regardless of occupancy type. Code compliance officers respond to complaints about property conditions at rental homes using the same enforcement process as for owner-occupied properties: investigation, notice to the property owner of record, a compliance deadline, and escalating enforcement if the violation is not corrected. The primary difference is that the notice is sent to the property owner at their mailing address on file with Denton County, which for rental properties is typically a different address than the rental unit itself. Tenants who experience habitability concerns such as broken plumbing, non-functional heating or cooling systems, pest infestations, or structural deficiencies should first notify the landlord in writing describing the condition. If the landlord fails to make necessary repairs within a reasonable time after receiving written notice, the tenant may pursue remedies under Texas Property Code Section 92.056, which establishes the landlord's duty to repair conditions that materially affect the health or safety of an ordinary tenant. Available remedies include rent reduction, repair and deduct for certain conditions, and lease termination in severe cases. The town does not intervene in private landlord-tenant repair disputes but will enforce building code violations reported by any party. Denton County Tax Assessor records identify property ownership, but the town does not cross-reference ownership records against occupancy to identify rental properties. Some HOA communities in Flower Mound restrict the percentage of homes within the subdivision that may be leased or impose minimum lease terms, typically 12 months. These are private covenant restrictions enforceable by the HOA, not municipal regulations.
Not applicable. There is no rental registration requirement in Flower Mound to violate. Landlords who fail to maintain rental properties in compliance with building and property maintenance codes face the same enforcement actions as any property owner, including fines up to $2,000 per day for continuing code violations.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Flower Mound, TX
Flower Mound has no specific leaf blower ordinance separate from the general noise ordinance. Gas and electric leaf blowers are permitted during standard day...
Flower Mound, TX
Flower Mound regulates industrial and commercial noise through Sec. 34-131 and zoning use conditions in Ch. 98. Industrial uses are concentrated along Lakesi...
Flower Mound, TX
Flower Mound Code of Ordinances Sec. 34-131 (Article III, Noise Control) prohibits unreasonable noise that disturbs the peace and quiet of any neighborhood o...
Flower Mound, TX
Flower Mound Sec. 34-131 prohibits amplified music or sound that creates an unreasonable disturbance beyond the property line. No specific decibel threshold ...
Flower Mound, TX
Flower Mound does not impose a town-wide overnight street parking ban, but TX Transportation Code Sec. 545.307 prohibits overnight commercial vehicle parking...
Flower Mound, TX
TX Transportation Code Sec. 545.307 prohibits overnight commercial motor vehicle parking (10 PM to 6 AM) in residential subdivisions with posted signs. Flowe...
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