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City of San Antonio Zoning Changes & DecisionsDelivered Same-Day

in the San Antonio City Market

Of the 410 land-use decisions this board made over the last 24 months, 74% were approved. We read every City of San Antonio hearing and pull the outcome, the vote split, and the conditions, so you see how this board actually rules.

Active in City of San Antonio
133
Meetings Monitored
8970
Zoning Insights
Jul 2, 2026
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What gets approved in City of San Antonio

In City of San Antonio, 74% of land-use board decisions were approved over the last 24 months. Variance clear 77%, Commercial / office / retail 74%. ZoneWire analyzed 410 land-use board decisions in City of San Antonio over the last 24 months. Here are the most active project types and how often each one clears.

Project typeDecisionsApproval rate
Variance11177%
Commercial / office / retail6174%
Special exception / conditional use5971%
Single-family homes4384%
Land use / comp-plan amendment4073%
Industrial / warehouse3577%
Multifamily / attached housing2446%
Mixed-use1788%
Subdivision / plat540%

9 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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How City of San Antonio rules on land use

A San Antonio staff denial is the start of the negotiation, not the verdict. On the land-use cases where city staff recommended against a request, City Council still approved it about 4 out of 5 times, because the Zoning or Planning Commission had already flipped to approval. The one configuration that actually kills a request is a double denial: when staff AND the recommending commission both say no, those cases stuck 100% of the time on record. We tell a developer which side of that line their case sits on before they spend a cent on the hearing.

Who decides
Zoning Commission recommends, City Council (Zoning and Land Use Session) decides
The pattern
approved 95% of the 21 requests staff recommended denying

Proof

Plan amendment and rezoning at 206 West Hart Avenue

Mar 19, 2026

Plan amendment of the South Central San Antonio community plan (low density residential to neighborhood commercial) and rezoning R-6 to C-1 S with specific use authorization for a medical clinic. Staff recommended denial; Planning and Zoning Commission recommended approval; City Council approved (District 5 council member spoke in favor). A clean override: staff said no, the commission flipped, the council followed the commission.

See the decision and its conditions
Full breakdown

San Antonio decides land use in its City Council Zoning and Land Use Session. The Zoning Commission recommends on zoning cases, the Planning Commission recommends on plan amendments, and City Council adopts the ordinance and casts the binding vote.

So a staff "recommend denial" is a recommendation, not a ruling, and the record shows the council treats it that way. Of the land-use items where the structured record captures a staff recommendation of denial or a denial-with-alternate, 32 in all, City Council approved 26 (26 of 32, 81%).

Two more were continued and only four were denied. Pull out the cases where the recommending commission did not also line up against the request and the override rate climbs higher: 26 approvals on 29 such items, about 90%. The Zoning and Planning Commissions are the swing.

When they flip staff to approval, the council follows almost every time. The signal that actually holds is the double denial. On the three land-use cases where staff and the commission BOTH recommended denial, all three were denied, every one.

The clearest tell in the data: three tobacco and vape shop rezonings near schools drew denials from both bodies and died at council. (A fourth vape shop, at 6430 Callahan, was also denied at council, but there the commission had recommended approval, so it was a council denial, not a double denial.) A staff denial alone is noise.

A staff plus commission denial is the wall. A concrete override: at 206 West Hart Avenue (March 19, 2026), the transcript reads "Staff recommends denial, planning and zoning commission recommend approval" for a plan amendment and C-1 rezoning for a medical clinic.

District 5's council member spoke in favor and the council approved it. Staff said no, the commission said yes, the building goes up. Two caveats kept honest.

First, the staff-recommendation field is filled on only 74 of 695 decisions here (about 11%), so the override and double-denial rates above are computed on that structured, recently-analyzed slice, not the whole corpus.

Second, conditions matter: 7 of the 26 staff-denial approvals carried conditions, so "approved over staff" often means "approved with strings," which is exactly the negotiated outcome a developer wants mapped in advance.

See Real Meeting Intelligence

Here's what ZoneWire found in the latest City of San Antonio meeting

Building Standards Board - 2026-07-02

2h 16m15 keywords
public hearinghistoric preservationresidentialcommercial

The San Antonio Building Standards Board ordered the demolition of five dilapidated structures at its July 2, 2026 meeting, all on unanimous or 6-0 votes with 30-day compliance windows.

See full analysis
5
Decisions
2
Market Signals

Key Decisions

  • Demolition order for 4426 Eisenhower Road
  • Demolition order for 3446 Roosevelt Avenue
  • Demolition order for 224 South Home

Historic and Design Review Commission (HDRC) - 2026-07-01

Jul 1, 202637

Historic Compliance and Technical Advisory Board (CTAB) - 2026-06-26

Jun 26, 202619

Planning Commission Meeting - 2026-06-24

Jun 24, 20261

Plus every other session we monitor

Every City of San Antonio insight is sourced from official public meeting records and analyzed within hours, updated daily.

San Antonio's Unified Development Code (UDC) governs entitlements processed by the Zoning Commission and City Council. The Historic and Design Review Commission (HDRC) reviews projects in 30+ local historic districts including King William, Monte Vista, Lavaca, and the River Walk corridor. The city's infill incentive zones along Broadway, Fredericksburg Road, and the Midtown area drive mixed-use rezoning filings. Rapid growth on the far north side along US-281, Loop 1604, and the Texas Research Park corridor generates high-volume subdivision and PUD activity.

Governing Bodies:
San Antonio City CouncilSan Antonio Zoning CommissionHistoric and Design Review CommissionBoard of Adjustment
Key Topics Tracked:
rezoningUDC amendmentshistoric district reviewplanned unit developmentssubdivision platsvariancesETJ (extraterritorial jurisdiction)MUD (municipal utility district)TIRZChapter 380 agreements

Monthly Zoning Activity

City of San Antonio had 2 public meetings in July 2026 with 52 zoning insights detected, down 97% from June.

Monthly zoning activity for City of San Antonio, showing meetings and zoning insights per month
MonthMeetingsZoning Insights
Jul 2026252
Jun 2026221502
May 2026231620Roundup
Apr 2026221428Roundup
Mar 2026171317Roundup
Feb 2026231311Roundup

Source: ZoneWire analysis of City of San Antonio public meeting transcripts. Updated daily.

How ZoneWire Works in City of San Antonio

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ZoneWire has analyzed 133 City of San Antonio council meetings, flagging 8970 rezoning, variance, and development items.

Frequently Asked Questions

Zoning in the City of San Antonio is governed by the Unified Development Code (UDC), which is Chapter 35 of the City Code. It is administered by the City's Development Services Department through its Zoning Section, which can be reached at 210-207-1111. Permitted uses in each district are set out in the UDC (see Section 35-311), and the full code is published on the Municode Library.

The UDC establishes a range of base zoning districts. Residential districts run from lower to higher density, including RP (Resource Protection), RE (Residential Estate), the single-family R districts (R-20, R-6, R-5, R-4, R-3, R-2, R-1), the Residential Mixed districts (RM-6, RM-5, RM-4), and multi-family districts (MF-18, MF-25, MF-33, MF-40, MF-50, MF-65). Nonresidential districts include office (O-1, O-1.5, O-2), commercial (NC Neighborhood Commercial, C-1 Light Commercial, C-2 Commercial, C-3 General Commercial), the Downtown 'D' district, and industrial districts (L Light Industrial, I-1 General Industrial, I-2 Heavy Industrial).

An applicant files a Master Plan Amendment and/or Zoning application with the Development Services Department by a published application deadline. Cases requiring a plan amendment go to the Planning Commission, and zoning change requests are heard by the Zoning Commission at a public hearing before a final decision by City Council. State law requires publication of a notice of the public hearing in an official or general-circulation newspaper under Texas Local Government Code Section 211.006(a). For details on the process, staff can be reached at 207-7720.

Zoning Commission public hearings are held at 1:00 p.m. in the Board Room of the Cliff Morton Development and Business Services Center at 1901 South Alamo Street, unless a meeting is held virtually. Planning Commission public hearings are held at 2:00 p.m. at the same location. Dates, times, and locations are subject to change, and agendas are posted on the City's Legistar calendar.

In addition to base districts, the UDC provides overlay districts (Section 35-330) that add regulations on top of the underlying zoning. These include the AHOD Airport Hazard Overlay District, the ERZD Edwards Recharge Zone District (which restricts certain uses over the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone), Historic Districts and Historic Landmark (HL) districts regulated by the Office of Historic Preservation, Military Airport Overlay Zones (MAOZ), Neighborhood Conservation Districts (NCD), Viewshed Protection (VP) districts, the Mission Protection Overlay Districts (MPOD), and River Improvement Overlay (RIO) districts.

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