Prestonwood

Also known as Far North Dallas, North Dallas, Prestonwood Country Club, 75240, 75248, Bent Tree, Preston Highlands, North Dallas Bank Tower area, Prestonwood Town Center

ADU Pass helps homeowners in Prestonwood — a USPS locale inside Dallas, Dallas County, Texas — navigate the permit paperwork for building an accessory dwelling unit. This locale covers 1 ZIP code.

1 ZIP code

Locale-specific ADU details

Site (parcel physics)

Slope:

Mean slope2%
Parcels over 12% slope1%

Soil:

Dominant classHouston Black clay (Vertisol, Udic Haplustert) — the Texas state soil — overlying Austin Chalk bedrock. Classic Blackland Prairie high-plasticity expansive clay
Expansive clay risk90%

Lot profile:

Median lot size11,500 sqft
Median lot width80 ft
Median existing FAR0.3
Parcels with alley access15%
Flag-lot parcels2%

Geo-hazards:

Seismic designationA
Parcels in FEMA SFHA1%
Bedrock depth (median)10 ft
Groundwater depth (median)28 ft

Recent ADU permit activity

Window12 months ending 2024-12-31
Approved / withdrawn / denied0 / 0 / 0
Dominant typenone-identified

Utility capacity (upgrade likelihood)

Housing stock age:

% built pre-19602%
% built pre-198065%
Median year built1,978

Electric service drop:

% overhead service40%
Panel-upgrade likelihood25%

Sewer lateral:

Replacement likelihood25%
Typical replacement cost$7,500

Water pressure:

ZoneDallas Pressure Zone 3 (north-central)
Typical PSI58 psi
Sprinkler trigger PSI20 psi

Gas availability: available — Full gas service available throughout Prestonwood via Atmos Energy Mid-Tex Division. No gas-service moratorium. Texas HB 17 (2021) prohibits cities from adopting gas bans. Some recent Prestonwood construction has elected all-electric (heat-pump HVAC, induction cooking) for energy-efficiency and insurance reasons rather than regulatory mandate.

Locale property values

Median value$825,000
Median tax$13,695/yr
Effective rate1.7%

ZIPs 75240 and 75248 sit roughly 2.5-3x the Dallas citywide median of $295K. Market character is upper-middle to high-end established suburb, NOT teardown-and-rebuild aggressive like 75230 Preston Hollow — Prestonwood homes are largely 1970s-1980s one- and two-story brick construction on 10,000-20,000 sqft lots; teardowns are uncommon because HOA covenants lock architectural style. Tax burden in absolute dollars ($13.7K) is meaningful but the Texas Residence Homestead 10% appraisal cap (Tax Code Sec. 23.23) limits year-over-year assessed-value growth. Parcels on the Collin County side of Prestonwood (CCAD bucket) carry materially different assessment rolls and tax rates; this profile does NOT cover those — see the sibling locale-adu-research file at texas/collin-county/dallas/prestonwood.json.

Locale market rent

Sq ftRent
400$1,350/mo
600$1,625/mo
800$1,900/mo

Locale HOA prevalence

% parcels under HOA95%

Approximately 95% of Prestonwood-area residential parcels (Dallas County side) carry active mandatory HOA coverage through the Prestonwood Homeowners Association or golf-course-adjacency sub-associations tied to Prestonwood Country Club. This is substantially higher than the Dallas citywide ~15% HOA-coverage rate and reflects the neighborhood's character as a country-club-anchored planned community. Covenants typically (1) prohibit detached accessory dwellings, (2) impose minimum-lease terms of 6 or 12 months, (3) prohibit short-term rental occupancy, (4) restrict outbuilding size, placement, and materials, (5) require architectural-committee approval of any exterior alteration. Texas Property Code Chapter 202 upholds these covenants and state has NOT preempted HOA ADU bans (SB 673 died 2025-06-02). A Dallas-issued ADU permit does NOT override Prestonwood HOA covenants — the practical effect is that ADU construction is structurally blocked on ~95% of Prestonwood parcels regardless of city-side permitting availability.

Locale overlays (2)

  • other — Approximately 95% of Prestonwood parcels (Dallas County side) carry recorded HOA covenants through the Prestonwood Homeowners Association or golf-course-adjacency sub-associations. Covenants typically prohibit detached accessory dwellings, limit outbuilding size and placement, impose minimum-lease terms on any rental activity, and restrict any short-term rental occupancy. Enforced by the HOA and adjacent property owners under Texas Property Code Chapter 202. · +90d
    The HOA covenant regime is the dominant regulatory constraint on ADU construction in Prestonwood — more binding than any city zoning rule. A Dallas-issued ADU permit does NOT override HOA covenants. Before ADU design, the owner MUST pull the parcel's vesting deed and any recorded subdivision covenants via DCAD and confirm the covenants do not bar accessory dwellings or intended rental use. Covenants are privately enforced through civil litigation by the HOA board or by adjacent property owners with standing; enforcement outcomes have historically favored the HOA in North Texas courts. Owners considering an ADU project despite the covenants face significant litigation and enforcement risk that must be modeled separately from city-permitting friction.
  • other — Dallas Tree Preservation Ordinance (Sec. 51A-10.130) applies citywide. Prestonwood has a mature oak, pecan, cedar-elm, and crape-myrtle canopy from its 1970s-80s original plantings plus subsequent replacements; protected-tree removal frequently triggers mitigation review on detached ADU projects. · +14d · +3% cost
    Protected-tree removal requires mitigation either by replanting on-parcel or payment into the city's Reforestation Fund. Typical Prestonwood ADU project encounters 1-3 protected trees requiring mitigation; $1,000-$2,500 added project cost is typical.

Inherited from the city

These sections come from the city page. Click through to the Dallas ADU research for details.

  • ADU legality
  • legal history
  • size range
  • permitting process & fees
  • permit forms
  • contacts
  • utilities
  • viability
  • pre-approved plans
  • financing
  • service complexity
Dallas — city ADU rules and incentives

ADU legality: unclear

Texas leaves ADU regulation to local municipalities under home-rule or Dillon-rule authority. Dallas permits ADUs subject to local conditions per its zoning ordinance.

City cost envelope

$117,300 all-in for a 525 sqft ADU (permit + build). Midpoint scenario.

Permit fee bundle: $2,905 (2026-04).

City viability (selected uses)

Long-term rentalyes
Short-term rentalwith-restrictions
Home officeyes
Relative supportyes
Dallas County — county ADU rules and overlays

County regulatory overlays

Dallas County's county-level overlays apply only inside its small unincorporated footprint (under 10% of county land, primarily southeastern Dallas County). The two material overlays at county scope are FEMA-mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas administered by Dallas County Public Works under the county's floodplain ordinance, and the countywide Trinity Common Vision Program governing floodplain management along the Trinity River corridor. Inside incorporated cities — where the vast majority of Dallas County residents and ADU-candidate parcels sit — overlay administration is a city function (e.g., the City of Dallas administers its own Escarpment Zone at Dallas Development Code Art. V and its own Floodplain regulations at Div. 51A-5.100). There is no countywide WUI / wildland-fire hazard overlay of the kind seen in California or Washington; North Texas's fire-hazard regime is ESD-by-ESD rather than a county-administered WUI zone.

  • Dallas County Floodplain Management (FEMA NFIP participation) — A new ADU in a Zone AE parcel must be elevated to or above the Base Flood Elevation per the county ordinance and is generally not permitted as a basement or ground-floor sleeping space.
  • Trinity Common Vision Program — Structures including ADUs proposed within the Common Vision corridor face stricter review than FEMA NFIP alone and may require a No-Rise Certificate from a Texas-licensed engineer.
  • On-Site Sewage Facility (OSSF) jurisdiction — An ADU counts as an additional dwelling for OSSF sizing purposes, which can trigger system expansion on undersized lots and may be infeasible on very small unincorporated parcels.

County permitting (unincorporated parcels)

Dallas County regulates construction in unincorporated areas through the Department of Unincorporated Area Services (DUAS), in partnership with the Dallas County Fire Marshal's Office and Public Works. Because the county has no zoning authority (see countyOrdinance), DUAS does not restrict whether an ADU may be built — it regulates only subdivision/plat compliance, residential building-code inspection, on-site sewage (OSSF) compliance, floodplain compliance, 911 addressing, and nuisance abatement. A detached secondary dwelling on an unincorporated parcel is permitted as an ordinary residential structure through DUAS's building-permit pathway; there is no separate 'ADU permit' because there is no county use category for accessory dwellings. Unincorporated Dallas County comprises under 10% of county land area, primarily in the southeastern corner of the county. Most ADU activity in Dallas County occurs in incorporated cities (notably the City of Dallas ADU Overlay at Dallas Development Code Sec. 51A-4.510), which are governed by city-level permitting, not this section.

DepartmentDallas County Department of Unincorporated Area Services (DUAS)
AddressRecords Building, 500 Elm Street, Suite 6100, Dallas, TX 75202
Phone214-653-6565
Emaildevelopment@dallascounty.org
Texas state — ADU law and programs

State ADU law

Texas has NOT enacted a statewide ADU preemption or ADU-by-right statute. Local governments (municipalities and counties) retain full authority over ADU zoning, setbacks, parking, size limits, owner-occupancy, and permitting. Two recent housing-reform bills in the 89th Legislature (2025) touch density and zoning procedure but do NOT preempt ADU-specific local rules: SB 15 (Bettencourt, signed 2025-06-20, effective 2025-09-01) caps minimum single-family lot sizes in cities over 150,000 in counties over 300,000, and HB 24 (signed 2025-06-20, effective 2025-09-01) raises the protest petition threshold for zoning changes. A dedicated ADU-preemption bill — SB 673 (Hughes, 2025) — passed the Texas Senate on 2025-04-10 and was reported favorably by the House Land & Resource Management Committee on 2025-05-08, but died on the General State Calendar when the 89th Regular Session adjourned on 2025-06-02. In the absence of a state ADU statute, homeowners must consult the ordinance of the municipality (or the county's subdivision rules for unincorporated areas) where the lot sits.

State financing programs

Texas does not operate an ADU-specific statewide loan, grant, or forgivable-loan program comparable to California's CalHFA ADU Grant. The Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA) administers the state's general housing finance programs — My First Texas Home, My Choice Texas Home, Mortgage Credit Certificates, multifamily Housing Tax Credits, the Homeowner Assistance Fund, and Housing Trust Fund awards. None target ADU construction directly, but several can apply to an ADU as part of a primary-residence purchase or refinance when program criteria are met. ADU-specific financing in Texas is primarily local: the City of Austin's ADU Loan Program (administered through Neighborhood Housing and Community Development) and a handful of smaller pilot programs are the most visible, but these sit at the city tier, not the state tier.

Federal (United States) — ADU-relevant rules and programs

Federal ADU law

The United States has no federal statute that directly regulates accessory dwelling unit entitlement or design. Land-use authority over ADUs resides with states and local governments under the traditional police power. Federal engagement is limited to financing (Fannie/Freddie/FHA/VA/USDA), flood insurance (FEMA/NFIP), and discretionary housing programs (HUD), which are recorded in sibling sections of this file.

Federal financing programs

Federal housing-finance agencies and GSEs set nationwide underwriting rules that govern whether an ADU can be financed, appraised, and counted toward mortgage qualifying income. The relevant actors are Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHA (HUD), VA, and USDA Rural Development.

Federal tax credits

There is no ADU-specific federal tax credit. ADUs may incidentally qualify for existing federal energy-efficiency and clean-energy tax credits when the ADU construction includes qualifying measures.

Federal housing programs

HUD administers several discretionary programs that can fund ADU-related activity at the grantee's election, but none is an ADU-specific program.

ZIP Code

  • 75248

Post Office

  • 5995 Summerside Dr, 75248