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San Antonio

Annexation Decisions in San Antonio

How annexation requests are decided across San Antonio, TX council meetings, the vote and the conditions on the record

Meetings
13
Mentions
38
Last Detected
Jun 15, 2026
Year
2026

Annexation is one of the most actively tracked zoning topics in San Antonio, TX. ZoneWire has analyzed 13 council meetings and detected 38 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).

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Annexation in San Antonio, TX

The process of incorporating unincorporated land into a municipality, bringing it under city zoning and services. In San Antonio, TX, local government bodies regularly discuss annexation as part of zoning and land use decisions.

ZoneWire has analyzed 13 meetings in San Antonio and detected 38 mentions of annexation, an average of 2.9 mentions per meeting.

No material zoning changes in San Antonio in the last 30 days. We monitor every San Antonio, TX meeting and surface new opportunities here as they happen.

Recent Annexation meetings in San Antonio

June 15, 20263h 5m28,916 words
298zoningvariancesetbackapprovedmotion to approve
Agenda available
May 18, 20263h 9m28,492 words
282variancesetbackzoningresidentialdensity
Agenda available
May 14, 20262h 37m21,100 words
18public hearingmotion to approveannexationhistoric preservationrezone
Agenda available
May 4, 20263h 45m33,455 words
290variancesubdivisionsetbackzoningresidential
Agenda available
March 9, 20262h 14m22,102 words
198zoningvarianceresidentialdensityapproved
Agenda available
February 23, 20264h 34m44,020 words
332zoningvarianceresidentialapproveddensity
Agenda available
February 12, 20263h 32m26,566 words
22public hearingapprovedannexationhistoric preservationresidential
Agenda available
February 9, 20262h 46m27,970 words
229zoningvariancesetbackapprovedannexation
Agenda available
February 5, 20262h 47m24,197 words
58motion to approvehistoric preservationindustrialresidentialmotion to deny
Agenda available
February 4, 20263h 2m29,862 words
60approvedresidentialcommercialdeferreddenied
Agenda available
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Why Track Annexation?

Annexation can be initiated by:

Annexation Regulations in Texas

Texas 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 San Antonio.

View all Texas zoning activity

Every Annexation decision in San Antonio

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

See Annexation decisions in San Antonio, TX

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Annexation 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 CityHoustonSacramentoJacksonvilleBaltimoreLos 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 WorthLeanderMansfieldSugar 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 CountyArchuleta CountyBox Elder CountyWashtenaw CountyMorgantownSaint Paul

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 San Antonio, TX public meetings.

ZoneWire monitors San Antonio, TX planning and council meetings, transcribes them, and flags annexation activity. As of the latest update we have analyzed 13 meetings and detected 38 annexation mentions.

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

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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Know how annexation requests get decided in San Antonio, TX

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

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What gets approved in San Antonio

In 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 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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