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St. Lucie County Zoning Changes & DecisionsDelivered Same-Day

in the St. Lucie County Market

Of the 55 land-use decisions this board made over the last 24 months, 60% were approved. We read every St. Lucie County hearing and pull the outcome, the vote split, and the conditions, so you see how this board actually rules.

Active in St. Lucie County
12
Meetings Monitored
2051
Zoning Insights
Jun 18, 2026
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What gets approved in St. Lucie County

In St. Lucie County, 60% of land-use board decisions were approved over the last 24 months. Land use / comp-plan amendment clear 29%, Industrial / warehouse 100%. ZoneWire analyzed 55 land-use board decisions in St. Lucie County over the last 24 months. Here are the most active project types and how often each one clears.

Project typeDecisionsApproval rate
Land use / comp-plan amendment1729%
Industrial / warehouse10100%
Multifamily / attached housing825%
Mixed-use5100%
Single-family homes580%

How St. Lucie County rules on land use

In St. Lucie County approval is not your risk, the conditions, the opposition, and the timeline are. The Board approves nearly everything that reaches a final vote and has denied nothing outright, but it routinely sends projects back: roughly 24 land-use items in the current record were deferred or continued rather than denied, several of them multiple times (Indrio Groves, Sunnyland Farms/44, Fort Pierce Commerce Center). Most approvals carry real conditions. And the recommending Planning and Zoning Commission has teeth even when staff does not: it has voted unanimously to recommend denial, with the Board approving one of those projects only after the applicant cut density. We sell the playbook for getting to yes here: what conditions stick, which projects get continued and why, and how to clear the P and Z hurdle.

Who decides
Planning & Zoning Commission recommends, Board of County Commissioners decides
The pattern
About 31 of ~57 land-use items on record were approved, with zero outright Board denials. The only two denials are unanimous advisory Planning and Zoning recommend-denials (a 96-lot Okeechobee Road PUD and a 117-townhome Kitterman Road PUD), one of which the Board later overturned (Kitterman, approved 06-02). Around 24 land-use items were deferred or continued rather than denied, on a 12-meeting base.

Proof

Rezoning at 322-340 Kitterman Rd. to PUD

Jun 2, 2026

The Planning and Zoning Commission unanimously recommended denial of this 117-unit fee-simple townhome PUD on April 16. The applicant came back with a reduced-density plan, staff recommended approval, and the Board of County Commissioners approved the rezoning on June 2. The path to yes ran through a redesign and a board that does not treat its own advisory commission's denial as the last word.

Full breakdown

St. Lucie County decides land use at the Board of County Commissioners Regular Meeting, with the Planning and Zoning Commission recommending first.

On the items we have on record so far, the Board approves almost everything that reaches a final up or down vote: about 31 land-use approvals and zero outright Board denials.

The only two denials in the record are advisory recommendations from the Planning and Zoning Commission, and the Board later overturned one of them. So approval is not where deals die here. The real friction is the cost of yes.

Most approvals carry real conditions, from buffer easements and tree-preservation benchmarks to roadway and sidewalk commitments. And a large share of land-use items, around 24 in the current record, get deferred or continued rather than decided, several of them more than once.

Indrio Groves, the Sunnyland Farms and Sunnyland 44 applications, and the Fort Pierce Commerce Center all bounced across multiple meetings before resolving. The other thing to know is that the Planning and Zoning Commission is not a rubber stamp.

We have it voting unanimously to recommend denial twice, including a 96-lot PUD on Okeechobee Road and a 117-townhome PUD on Kitterman Road, both against a staff approval.

The Kitterman project shows the path to yes: the applicant came back with reduced density, staff recommended approval, and the Board approved the rezoning on June 2. The Okeechobee Road PUD never reached a final Board vote. So the sellable read for a developer is this.

Plan for the conditions, plan for the timeline, and clear the P and Z hurdle before you count on the Board. We are still gathering data in this market, and the picture sharpens as we add hearings.

See Real Meeting Intelligence

Here's what ZoneWire found in the latest St. Lucie County meeting

Planning & Zoning Commission Meeting - 2026-06-18

1h 31m150 keywords
zoningpublic hearingrezoningland useresidentialPUD

The St. Lucie County Planning and Zoning Commission unanimously (6-0) recommended approval of the Indrio Town Center rezoning from AG1 to Planned Retail Workplace (PRW), along with a preliminary site plan and a one-time 1,500-foot extension of the urban service boundary, on an 85…

See full analysis
1
Decisions
1
Zoning Changes
2
Developments
4
Market Signals

Key Decisions

  • Rezoning of Indrio Town Center from AG1 to PRW with preliminary site plan and USB extension

Board of County Commissioners Regular Meeting - 2026-06-02

Jun 2, 2026105

Board of County Commissioners Regular Meeting - 2026-05-19

May 19, 2026187

Board of County Commissioners Regular Meeting - 2026-05-05

May 5, 2026163

Plus every other session we monitor

Every St. Lucie County insight is sourced from official public meeting records and analyzed within hours, updated daily.

St. Lucie County Board of County Commissioners and the Planning and Zoning Board process FLUM amendments, rezoning petitions, and PUD applications along Florida's Treasure Coast. The Tradition development area west of I-95 is one of the county's most active master-planned growth centers. Port St. Lucie's Crosstown Parkway corridor has opened new development nodes, driving commercial and residential rezoning activity. Agricultural-to-residential land use conversions remain a recurring theme as the county absorbs population growth from the South Florida metro area.

Governing Bodies:
St. Lucie County Board of County CommissionersSt. Lucie County Planning and Zoning Board
Key Topics Tracked:
FLUM amendmentsrezoningplanned unit developmentssubdivision platsspecial exceptionsagricultural land conversionsconcurrencyLive Local Actcomprehensive plan amendment

Monthly Zoning Activity

St. Lucie County had 2 public meetings in June 2026 with 255 zoning insights detected, down 27% from May.

Monthly zoning activity for St. Lucie County, showing meetings and zoning insights per month
MonthMeetingsZoning Insights
Jun 20262255
May 20262350Roundup
Apr 20263705Roundup
Mar 20263583Roundup
Feb 20262158Roundup

Source: ZoneWire analysis of St. Lucie County public meeting transcripts. Updated daily.

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ZoneWire has analyzed 12 St. Lucie County council meetings, flagging 2051 rezoning, variance, and development items.

Frequently Asked Questions

Zoning in the unincorporated area of St. Lucie County is governed by the county's Land Development Code, published on Municode. Chapter III establishes the zoning districts, which were created to carry out the goals and policies of the St. Lucie County Comprehensive Plan. Under the Code, no structure or land in the unincorporated area may be constructed, moved, remodeled, used, or occupied except in accordance with the requirements of the zoning district in which it is located, unless it qualifies as a legal nonconformity. Incorporated municipalities such as Fort Pierce and Port St. Lucie administer their own separate zoning codes.

Chapter III of the Land Development Code establishes the county's zoning districts, including agricultural districts (AG-1, AG-2.5, and AG-5), Residential/Conservation (R/C), Agricultural-Residential (AR-1), residential estate districts (RE-1, RE-2), single-family residential districts (RS-2, RS-3), and commercial districts such as Commercial, General (CG), among others. As examples, the AG-1 district is intended to protect productive commercial agriculture and limits residential density to a maximum of one dwelling unit per gross acre, and the CG district is intended to accommodate a wide variety of commercial uses serving a large market area. The full list of districts and their permitted and conditional uses is set out in the Land Development Code.

The St. Lucie County Planning and Zoning Commission serves as the county's designated Local Planning Agency and makes recommendations on rezonings, land development code amendments, and comprehensive plan and Future Land Use Map amendments. According to the county, the Planning and Zoning Commission meets on the third Thursday of the month at 6:00 PM in the County Commission Chamber of the Roger Poitras Administration Annex, located at 2300 Virginia Avenue, Fort Pierce, Florida. The Board of County Commissioners takes final action on land-use applications.

Applications are handled by the county's Planning and Development Services / Planning Division, which oversees current and long-range planning in unincorporated St. Lucie County, including site plan applications, conditional use permits, zoning, text amendments to the Land Development Code and Comprehensive Plan, and Future Land Use Map amendments. Applications can be submitted through the county's online Citizen Self Service platform (Tyler EnerGov). Applications are coordinated with the Development Review Committee, which includes agencies such as Engineering, Public Works, Building & Code Regulations, Utilities, the School Board, the Health Department, the Fire District, and the Sheriff's Office.

Yes. Applicants requesting a rezoning to a Planned Development zoning district, a Conditional Use Permit, a Future Land Use Map amendment to a Mixed Use or Special District, or a Development Agreement must provide for public participation through a community meeting. If a required community meeting is not held, the Planning and Development Services Department will not proceed with scheduling the application for a public hearing. Land-use applications are then heard at public hearings before the Planning and Zoning Commission and the Board of County Commissioners.

Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for St. Lucie County 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.

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