Almanac / Community & Zoning / Understanding Zoning: What You're Allowed to Grow and Raise
Community & Zoning

Understanding Zoning: What You're Allowed to Grow and Raise

Before you build that coop or roadside stand, know your local rules. Here's a plain-language guide to zoning, ordinances, and how to find out what's actually allowed where you live.

J By Jordan Polasek · 9 min read · El Campo, TX
Understanding Zoning: What You're Allowed to Grow and Raise illustration

Few things are more frustrating than building out your homestead dream and then getting a notice from the city telling you to tear it down. Zoning and local ordinances govern what you can do with your land — what you can build, what animals you can keep, whether you can sell from your property. The rules vary wildly from one town to the next, so the only real answer to 'can I do this?' is 'check your local code.' But here's how to navigate it. (This is general information, not legal advice — confirm with your local authority.)

Zoning vs. ordinances vs. deed restrictions

  • Zoning — how land is classified (residential, agricultural, commercial) and what's allowed in each zone. Set by the city or county.
  • Ordinances — specific local rules: how many chickens, whether roosters are allowed, fence heights, setbacks, noise.
  • Deed restrictions / HOA rules — private rules attached to your property that can be stricter than the city's. An HOA can ban chickens even where the city allows them.

Common things that are regulated

ActivityOften regulated by
Keeping chickens / livestockNumber, roosters, coop setbacks from property lines
Selling from your propertyWhether a roadside stand or home business is allowed
StructuresPermits for sheds, greenhouses, fences over a height
Front-yard gardensSome towns restrict; most don't
Water catchmentGenerally allowed, occasionally regulated
CompostingRarely restricted, sometimes for odor/pests

How to find your rules

1

Identify your jurisdiction

City limits or unincorporated county? They have different rules. Unincorporated land is usually far less restricted.

2

Find your zoning

Most cities have an online zoning map. Search '[your city] zoning map' or call the planning department.

3

Read the relevant code

Search '[your city] municipal code chickens' or 'ordinances.' Many are posted online.

4

Check for an HOA

If you have one, read its covenants — they can override looser city rules.

5

Just call

The planning or code enforcement office will usually answer plainly. A five-minute call saves a torn-down coop.

Jordan’s tipSelling plants or produce from home — like a roadside stand — can trigger home-business, cottage-food, or agricultural rules. Texas cottage food law, for example, allows certain home-produced food sales, and farm/nursery products have their own rules. If you're going to sell, confirm what your area allows before you set up the stand.

When the rules don't fit

If your town's rules are stuck in a more restrictive era, they can change — many cities have updated chicken and front-yard-garden ordinances in recent years because residents organized and asked. Show up to a council meeting, bring neighbors, point to other towns that allow it. Local rules are more changeable than people think, and food-growing has a lot of public goodwill behind it right now.


Written by Jordan Polasek, founder of Texas Roots, from his greenhouse in El Campo, Texas. Free to share. If this helped, the best thanks is to grow something or pass it along.