Step 1 β Find Your Austin Sign District
Austin's sign permit system is built around sign districts β each with its own rules for allowable sign types, maximum square footage, height limits, and illumination. This is the most important step and the one most business owners skip, which leads to permit rejections.
Austin has several sign district types, including:
- Commercial Sign Districts β most retail corridors; broadest allowances for sign types and sizes
- Neighborhood Commercial Districts β more restrictive; often limits to monument and wall signs only
- Downtown Austin Sign Districts β the Central Business District (CBD) has its own specific allowances, including provisions for upper-story signage on office towers
- Corridor Overlay Districts β South Congress, East 6th, The Domain, and other character areas have additional overlay restrictions
- Historic Sign Districts β 6th Street Entertainment District and historic commercial buildings have design review requirements
To find your sign district:
- Go to Austin's Sign District Determination Tool at austintexas.gov/page/sign-permits
- Enter your street address
- The tool returns your sign district designation and links to the applicable regulations
If you're in a standard commercial zone, Austin's Land Development Code Chapter 25-10 governs your signs. If you're in an overlay or special district, you'll also need to review the applicable overlay requirements.
Step 2 β Know What Requires a Permit in Austin
Per Austin's Land Development Code, a sign permit is required for any outdoor sign that is:
- Any permanent sign attached to a building or structure
- Any freestanding sign (monument, pole, pylon)
- Any illuminated sign, regardless of size
- Any sign in a public right-of-way (requires additional approval)
- Any banner or temporary sign displayed for more than 14 consecutive days
Exempt in Austin (generally):
- Non-illuminated window signs covering 25% or less of the window area
- Interior signs not visible from outside
- Address numbers and building identification
- Official traffic and governmental signs
- Political signs (regulated separately, with specific time limits)
- Construction project signs meeting size limits
Step 3 β Understand Austin's Permit Fees
Austin's Development Services Department uses a tiered fee schedule for sign permits. As of 2024β2025, fees are structured as follows:
| Sign Type | Base Fee | Per-Sq-Ft Charge | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wall sign (non-illuminated) | $54 | $1.25/sq ft | Minimum fee applies |
| Wall sign (illuminated) | $54 | $1.25/sq ft | Electrical permit separate |
| Ground / monument sign | $54 | $1.75/sq ft | Height determines type |
| Pole / pylon sign | $54 | $2.00/sq ft | Engineering may be required |
| Digital/EMC sign | $54 | $2.50/sq ft | Additional review required |
| Temporary banner permit | $38 | β | Per banner, valid 30 days |
| Electrical permit (illuminated signs) | $54+ | Based on electrical scope | Issued by Electrical Division |
Fees change annually. Verify current fee schedule at austintexas.gov before submitting.
Austin Sign Fee Example
A 24 sq ft illuminated wall sign: $54 base + (24 Γ $1.25) = $54 + $30 = $84 sign permit fee, plus a separate electrical permit fee (typically $54β$120 depending on electrical scope). Total estimated cost: $138β$204.
Step 4 β Submit Your Application
Austin processes sign permits through the Austin Build + Connect (AB+C) portal at austintexas.gov/abc. Most permits can be submitted fully online. Here's what you'll need:
- β Completed sign permit application β initiated through the AB+C portal after logging in or creating an account
- β Site plan β a drawing showing the property, building footprint, and the exact location where the sign will be installed
- β Sign drawing / rendering β to scale, showing the sign face dimensions, overall height, letter height, and materials. Must include a dimension summary.
- β Photograph of the building face β at least one clear photo of where the sign will go
- β Property owner authorization β if you're a tenant, you'll need written consent from the building owner (a simple letter or landlord authorization form works)
- β Electrical drawings β required for illuminated signs; must be prepared by a licensed Texas electrician or engineer
- β Contractor information β Texas Electrical Contractor license number if sign is illuminated
- β Sign District documentation β a note referencing your sign district and confirming the sign meets district requirements
Step 5 β Know the Timeline
Austin's plan review timelines depend on sign complexity and current review queue depth. General estimates:
- Simple wall sign (non-illuminated): 5β10 business days
- Illuminated wall sign: 10β15 business days (sign + electrical permit reviews run concurrently)
- Monument or ground sign: 10β20 business days
- Signs in historic or overlay districts: 3β6 weeks (includes design review board hearing, if required)
- Digital / EMC signs: 4β8 weeks (additional review layers)
Austin publishes current permit review cycle times on the DSD website. Check before submitting to set accurate expectations for your sign installer and any grand opening timeline.
Step 6 β After Approval
Once your permit is approved:
- Download your permit from the AB+C portal. Print a copy to have on-site during installation.
- Schedule your sign installation. Your installer should post the permit number visibly during the installation process.
- For illuminated signs, schedule an electrical inspection through the AB+C portal after wiring is complete and before the sign is energized.
- For structural signs (monument, pylon), a building inspection is required after installation and before the sign is placed in service.
- Once all inspections pass, the permit is finalized and recorded. Keep a copy of the finalized permit indefinitely.
Austin Sign Permit Contact Information
| Contact | Details |
|---|---|
| Department | Development Services Department (DSD), Signs and Banners |
| Address | 6310 Wilhelmina Delco Drive, Austin, TX 78752 |
| Online portal | austintexas.gov/abc (Austin Build + Connect) |
| Sign district tool | austintexas.gov/page/sign-permits |
| Phone | (512) 978-4000 (DSD main line) |
| Hours | MonβFri 7:30 a.m.β4:00 p.m. (in-person); online portal 24/7 |
Common Mistakes Austin Business Owners Make
- Ordering the sign before checking the sign district β sign companies don't always know Austin's district rules for your specific location
- Assuming the previous tenant's sign is permitted β inherited signs are frequently unpermitted or non-conforming
- Not getting landlord authorization in writing β verbal landlord approval is not accepted; DSD requires written authorization
- Installing before the permit is finalized β common when business owners receive "approval" emails that are actually requests for revisions, not final approval
- Forgetting the electrical permit for illuminated signs β a sign permit alone does not authorize energizing an illuminated sign; the electrical permit and inspection must also be completed
Austin Sign Permit FAQs
Yes. South Congress Avenue is within a corridor overlay district with additional design standards. Signs must be compatible with the pedestrian-oriented character of the corridor. Certain sign types that would be allowed in a standard commercial zone may be restricted or require design review approval. Contact DSD specifically about South Congress overlay requirements when planning your sign.
Yes. Austin allows temporary banner permits for new businesses within the first 90 days of opening. The banner must meet size limits for your sign district, and the permit is issued for 30 days. You may apply for a second 30-day period. After that, you'll need to have your permanent signage installed. Apply through the AB+C portal using the "temporary sign permit" option.
Signs on vehicles (including food trucks) are generally not regulated as permanent signs and don't require a sign permit. However, if you have a food trailer at a fixed location with signs attached to a structure (a canopy, a fence, a booth), those signs may require permits. Temporary A-frame or sandwich boards near your trailer may require a temporary sign permit or a right-of-way use permit if placed on a public sidewalk. Check with DSD if you're in a permanent food trailer park location.
Applying for an Austin sign permit?
Download our universal sign permit checklist β formatted for the Texas application process β to make sure you have everything before you submit.
Download Checklist β All Texas cities βDisclaimer: This guide is based on Austin's Development Services Department policies and Land Development Code as of 2024β2025. Fee schedules and procedures are subject to change. Always verify current requirements at austintexas.gov/page/sign-permits or by contacting DSD directly before submitting your application.