Georgetown requires a permit for spas and hot tubs, in residential and commercial use, under the City-adopted 2021 Swimming Pool and Spa Code. Spas and hot tubs are reviewed for electrical bonding and safety, and the City's barrier and door-alarm provisions apply to pool/spa installations.
Georgetown's permit guidance lists spas and hot tubs alongside pools as installations that require a permit in either commercial or residential use. The City enforces the 2021 Swimming Pool and Spa Code, which is the same model code that addresses portable and built-in spas, including electrical bonding, GFCI protection, and access control. Many manufactured portable hot tubs with a lockable, rigid safety cover are evaluated differently from open spas, but Georgetown still requires the permit and the associated electrical inspection because the spa connection and bonding are safety-critical. The City's barrier provision (a fence, wall, or barrier completely surrounding the pool) and its door-alarm provision (audible alarm on doors with direct access) apply to spa installations integrated with a pool or located in the pool yard; a standalone portable spa with an approved locking cover may satisfy the adopted code's barrier alternative, which is verified at inspection rather than assumed. Because the 2021 Swimming Pool and Spa Code governs the technical details, homeowners should confirm with Development Services whether their specific hot tub model needs a full barrier or qualifies for a safety-cover alternative, and should not energize the spa until the electrical and final inspections pass. Texas Chapter 757 enclosure rules apply only to multiunit and POA spas, not single-family installations.
Installing or energizing a spa or hot tub without the required permit and electrical inspection can lead to a stop-work order and after-the-fact permitting. A spa lacking an approved barrier or locking safety cover may fail final inspection. Verify cover and barrier requirements with the City.
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