Annexation Decisions in Boston
How annexation requests are decided across Boston, MA council meetings, the vote and the conditions on the record
Annexation is one of the most actively tracked zoning topics in Boston, MA. ZoneWire has analyzed 0 council meetings and detected 0 instances of annexation activity. Below are the most recent discussions.
What is Annexation?
The process of incorporating unincorporated land into a municipality, bringing it under city zoning and services.
Annexation is the process by which a municipality extends its corporate boundaries to include previously unincorporated land. Once annexed, the land becomes subject to the municipality's zoning authority, building codes, tax jurisdiction, and public services (water, sewer, police, fire).
Read full definitionAnnexation in Boston, MA
The process of incorporating unincorporated land into a municipality, bringing it under city zoning and services. In Boston, MA, local government bodies regularly discuss annexation as part of zoning and land use decisions.
ZoneWire has analyzed 0 meetings in Boston and detected 0 mentions of annexation.
Recent Annexation meetings in Boston
No meetings with annexation activity found yet. Check back soon. We're monitoring every session.
Why Track Annexation?
Annexation can be initiated by:
Annexation Regulations in Massachusetts
Massachusetts sets the regulatory framework that governs how annexation decisions are made at the county and municipal level. State statutes define zoning authority, hearing requirements, and appeal processes that directly affect annexation outcomes in Boston.
View all Massachusetts zoning activityEvery Annexation decision in Boston
See how every annexation request in Boston was decided: the vote, the conditions attached, and how it moved through its hearings.
7-day free trial. Cancel anytime.
Annexation in Other Counties
Frequently Asked Questions
Annexation is the process by which a municipality extends its corporate boundaries to include previously unincorporated land. Once annexed, the land becomes subject to the municipality's zoning authority, building codes, tax jurisdiction, and public services (water, sewer, police, fire). ZoneWire tracks annexation activity across Boston, MA public meetings.
ZoneWire monitors Boston, MA planning and council meetings, transcribes them, and flags annexation activity. As of the latest update we have analyzed 0 meetings and detected 0 annexation mentions.
Tracking annexation in Boston surfaces zoning and development signals early, so developers, investors, and brokers can evaluate parcels and approvals before they reach the broader market.
The Boston Planning and Development Agency (BPDA), Zoning Board of Appeal, and Boston City Council are tracked by ZoneWire for Article 80 reviews, zoning variances, PDA (Planned Development Area) applications, conditional use permits, and institutional master plan amendments.
Boston has approximately 8 zoning-related meetings per month across the BPDA board, Zoning Board of Appeal, and City Council. The BPDA board meets monthly, while the Zoning Board of Appeal typically meets weekly.
Article 80 is the section of the Boston Zoning Code that governs the development review process. Large projects go through Article 80 Large Project Review, which includes public comment periods and BPDA board approval. Article 80 filings are the primary signal for major commercial and residential development in Boston.
The highest volume of zoning activity in Boston occurs in the Seaport district for large-scale commercial and residential towers, the Fenway area for institutional master plan expansions, East Boston and Dorchester for residential density increases, and downtown for PDA applications and Article 80 filings.
Key zoning terms for Boston include Article 80, PDA (Planned Development Area), variance, conditional use permit, institutional master plan, small project review, 309 exception, and IPOD (Interim Planning Overlay District). ZoneWire tracks all of these automatically across every Boston governing body.
Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Boston at no cost, with the agenda for each meeting. ZoneWire Pro adds full transcripts, zoning and development analysis, and keyword alerts for $129 per market per month.
Related Articles
Atlanta Zoning Decisions: May 2026
Atlanta, GA zoning decisions for May 2026: 27 approved, 2 denied, 3 deferred across 7 public meetings.
Zoning DecisionsAustin Zoning Decisions: May 2026
Austin, TX zoning decisions for May 2026: 11 approved, 0 denied, 1 deferred across 8 public meetings.
Zoning DecisionsBismarck Zoning Decisions: May 2026
Bismarck, ND zoning decisions for May 2026: 21 approved, 0 denied, 1 deferred across 13 public meetings.
Know how annexation requests get decided in Boston, MA
Get the vote, the conditions, and how each annexation request was decided, the day it lands.
7-day free trial, cancel anytime.
What gets approved in Boston
In Boston, 92% of land-use board decisions were approved over the last 24 months. Commercial / office / retail clear 91%, Variance 93%. ZoneWire analyzed 336 land-use board decisions in Boston over the last 24 months. Here are the most active project types and how often each one clears.
| Project type | Decisions | Approval rate |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial / office / retail | 80 | 91% |
| Variance | 57 | 93% |
| Multifamily / attached housing | 53 | 92% |
| Single-family homes | 42 | 95% |
| Mixed-use | 24 | 96% |
| Special exception / conditional use | 25 | 92% |
| Land use / comp-plan amendment | 11 | 64% |
| Subdivision / plat | 6 | 100% |
| Industrial / warehouse | 5 | 80% |
20 decisions that went against the odds
These are the denials and deferrals in categories that usually sail through, the deals worth understanding before you commit capital.
Create a free account to see themGet free alerts for Boston zoning meetings
Get an email when a new meeting is posted for Boston, with the agenda. No card required. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.
Get free alertsSee our Privacy Policy.