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Plat Decisions in Houston

How plat requests are decided across Houston, TX council meetings, the vote and the conditions on the record

Meetings
14
Mentions
292
Last Detected
Jun 25, 2026
Year
2026

Plat is one of the most actively tracked zoning topics in Houston, TX. ZoneWire has analyzed 14 council meetings and detected 292 instances of plat activity. Below are the most recent discussions.

What is Plat?

A surveyed map that subdivides a larger parcel into individual lots, streets, and easements for legal recording.

A plat (or "subdivision plat") is a surveyed map that divides a larger parcel of land into individual lots, streets, easements, and public spaces. Once recorded with the county, the plat creates legally recognized parcels that can be individually sold, transferred, and developed.

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Plat in Houston, TX

A surveyed map that subdivides a larger parcel into individual lots, streets, and easements for legal recording. In Houston, TX, local government bodies regularly discuss plat as part of zoning and land use decisions.

ZoneWire has analyzed 14 meetings in Houston and detected 292 mentions of plat, an average of 20.9 mentions per meeting.

Recent Plat meetings in Houston

February 5, 20261h 26m13,827 words
175commercialplatvariancepublic hearingresidential
Agenda available
February 3, 20264h 36m40,164 words
20land usecommercialresidentialplatsubdivision
Agenda available
January 22, 20261h 0m9,117 words
124platvariancetabledsubdivisionapproved
Agenda available
January 8, 20261h 38m15,328 words
176subdivisionmotion to approvecommercialplatpublic hearing
Agenda available
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Why Track Plat?

Platting is the step that converts raw land into sellable lots. Tracking plat applications reveals new subdivisions entering the pipeline, which sections of a master-planned community are being platted next, what product types the developer is planning based on lot sizes, and when roads and utilities will be built. Unlike rezoning (which may be speculative), platting involves significant engineering investment and indicates near-term development activity.

Plat Regulations in Texas

Texas sets the regulatory framework that governs how plat decisions are made at the county and municipal level. State statutes define zoning authority, hearing requirements, and appeal processes that directly affect plat outcomes in Houston.

View all Texas zoning activity

Every Plat decision in Houston

See how every plat request in Houston was decided: the vote, the conditions attached, and how it moved through its hearings.

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Plat in Other Counties

Clark CountyMaricopa CountyMiami-Dade CountyMecklenburg CountyBexar CountyNashville-Davidson CountyFulton CountyRiverside CountyOrange CountyTarrant CountyAustinKing CountyHillsborough CountyColumbusDenverBostonMilwaukeeSan FranciscoDallasSan Diego CountyBroward CountyPortland MetroSan JosePrince George's CountyChicagoMaui CountyHawaii CountyCharlotteSalt Lake CitySacramentoJacksonvilleBaltimoreLos AngelesLos Angeles CountyLas VegasLouisvilleHennepin CountyPolk CountyDouglas CountyRamsey CountyDakota CountyMartin CountyJuneauHuntsvilleMobileMesaPhoenixSanta Cruz CountyButte CountyFontanaFresnoLong BeachOaklandRancho CordovaSan DiegoSanta ClaraNapa CountySan Mateo CountyLovelandPueblo CountyNorwalkCitrus CountyMiamiLake CountyPasco CountyPinellas CountySt. Lucie CountyCobb CountyCook CountyOverland ParkWyandotte CountyLivoniaOakland CountyWillmarSpringfieldGulfportMissoula CountyJacksonvilleBismarckJersey CityHillsborough TownshipAlbuquerqueWestchester CountyTulsaTulsa CountyPortlandDeschutes CountyAllentownProvidenceGreenvilleLancaster CountyMinnehaha CountyFranklinBrazoria CountyCollege StationColleyvilleFort WorthLeanderMansfieldSan AntonioSugar LandSalt Lake CountyChesterfield CountyHanover CountySpotsylvania CountyStafford CountySeattleSnohomish CountyGreen BayCharlestonLoudoun CountyPrince William CountyFairfax CountyMemphisLaramie CountyNew AlbanyCoweta CountyEagle MountainStorey CountyNewton CountyMount PleasantPort WashingtonSt. Joseph CountyAtlantaConwayWest Des MoinesKunaCaddo ParishLewistonSarpy CountyNottinghamSouth BurlingtonNew Castle County

Frequently Asked Questions

A plat (or "subdivision plat") is a surveyed map that divides a larger parcel of land into individual lots, streets, easements, and public spaces. Once recorded with the county, the plat creates legally recognized parcels that can be individually sold, transferred, and developed. ZoneWire tracks plat activity across Houston, TX public meetings.

ZoneWire monitors Houston, TX planning and council meetings, transcribes them, and flags plat activity. As of the latest update we have analyzed 14 meetings and detected 292 plat mentions.

Tracking plat in Houston surfaces zoning and development signals early, so developers, investors, and brokers can evaluate parcels and approvals before they reach the broader market.

Houston City Council and the Planning Commission are tracked by ZoneWire for deed restriction enforcement, Chapter 42 development applications, special minimum lot size designations, subdivision plat approvals, and land use ordinance changes. Houston is the largest U.S. city without traditional zoning, relying instead on deed restrictions and the subdivision ordinance.

Houston City Council meets weekly, with the Planning Commission holding hearings twice per month. Despite lacking formal zoning, Houston generates substantial land use activity through deed restriction enforcement, Chapter 42 filings, and subdivision plat approvals.

Chapter 42 of the Houston Code of Ordinances governs subdivision and development standards in the absence of traditional zoning. It regulates lot sizes, building setbacks, parking, and buffering requirements. Chapter 42 amendments are the closest equivalent to rezoning in Houston and are a key signal for development changes.

Houston is the largest U.S. city without formal zoning. Instead, it relies on deed restrictions enforced by neighborhoods, the Chapter 42 subdivision ordinance, special minimum lot size designations, and buffering rules. ZoneWire tracks all of these regulatory mechanisms across Houston City Council and Planning Commission meetings.

Key land use terms for Houston include deed restriction, Chapter 42, special minimum lot size, subdivision plat, building line, buffering, prevailing lot size, and setback variance. ZoneWire tracks all of these automatically across every Houston governing body.

Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Houston 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.

Know how plat requests get decided in Houston, TX

Get the vote, the conditions, and how each plat request was decided, the day it lands.

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What gets approved in Houston

In Houston, 77% of land-use board decisions were approved over the last 24 months. Variance clear 73%, Subdivision / plat 86%. ZoneWire analyzed 240 land-use board decisions in Houston over the last 24 months. Here are the most active project types and how often each one clears.

Project typeDecisionsApproval rate
Variance11373%
Subdivision / plat7086%
Industrial / warehouse2483%
Multifamily / attached housing1656%
Single-family homes580%

14 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.

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