Seagoville

Also known as City of Seagoville, 75159, Far Southeast Dallas County, Old Seagoville Road corridor, US-175 corridor, Federal Correctional Institution Seagoville, Town of Seago

ADU Pass helps homeowners in Seagoville — a USPS locale inside Dallas, No 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 slope3.5%
Parcels over 12% slope4%

Soil:

Dominant classHouston Black clay (official Texas state soil) with Austin Chalk bedrock at variable depth — classic Blackland Prairie high-plasticity expansive clay. Some alluvial Trinity River floodplain soils along the far eastern and southern edges.
Expansive clay risk88%
Liquefaction risk6%

Lot profile:

Median lot size9,500 sqft
Median lot width65 ft
Median existing FAR0.18
Parcels with alley access20%
Flag-lot parcels2%

Geo-hazards:

Seismic designationSeismic Design Category A (lowest)
Parcels in FEMA SFHA8%
Bedrock depth (median)18 ft
Groundwater depth (median)22 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Approved / withdrawn / denied0 / 0 / 0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-196015%
% built pre-198040%
Median year built1,995

Electric service drop:

% overhead service70%
Panel-upgrade likelihood40%

Sewer lateral:

Replacement likelihood30%
Typical replacement cost$7,500

Water pressure:

ZoneSeagoville Water Distribution System (single distribution zone fed from the Seagoville water tower/reservoir, supplied wholesale from Dallas Water Utilities)
Typical PSI55 psi
Sprinkler trigger PSI20 psi

Gas availability: available — Atmos Energy serves Seagoville. Texas HB 17 (2021) prohibits cities from adopting gas bans; Seagoville has no electrification ordinance. Gas service is routine.

Locale property values

Median value$300,000
Median tax$5,280/yr
Effective rate1.8%

ZIP 75159 median residential value was approximately $299K-$305K in mid-2025 per ATTOM, Orchard, and Redfin aggregates. City of Seagoville FY 2024 adopted tax rate was $0.710932 per $100 valuation; Dallas ISD adds approximately $1.08 per $100; Dallas County, Parkland Hospital District, and Dallas County Community College District add the remainder. Combined effective rate is approximately 1.76% — slightly higher than the Dallas citywide 1.66% because Seagoville's municipal rate is higher than the City of Dallas municipal rate (Dallas is around $0.74 per $100 combined property-tax rate, but its sales-tax capture and higher appraised base partly offset the municipal-rate differential). Housing stock skews newer than Pleasant Grove — a substantial share is 1990s-2010s single-family tract development along US-175 and Malloy Bridge Rd, with older 1950s-1970s stock closer to the downtown Seagoville core.

Locale market rent

Sq ftRent
400$1,200/mo
600$1,370/mo
700$1,500/mo

Locale HOA prevalence

% parcels under HOA35%

Meaningfully higher HOA coverage than Pleasant Grove (~5%) or most Dallas in-city neighborhoods, because a substantial fraction of Seagoville's housing stock is post-1990 suburban tract development with HOA covenants. Texas Property Code Chapter 202 upholds HOA covenants where they exist, and many Seagoville HOAs restrict or prohibit detached accessory structures / secondary dwellings — a homeowner would need to check the CCRs before planning any accessory building.

Locale overlays (3)

  • flood-zone — FEMA-mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas along Tenmile Creek and smaller tributaries that cross the Seagoville municipal area. The downtown Seagoville core and most 1990s-2010s subdivisions are in Zone X. Parcels along Tenmile Creek and the far-southern edge toward Kaufman County can be in Zone A or AE. · +21d · +15% cost
    Seagoville participates in the National Flood Insurance Program. Parcels in Zone AE must elevate to or above the Base Flood Elevation; an accessory dwelling cannot be ground-floor sleeping space in SFHA. FEMA flood maps for Seagoville span Dallas and Kaufman Counties and are available via the FEMA Flood Map Service Center. The Trinity River main stem does not pass through Seagoville, but its East Fork and related tributaries do create localized floodplain exposure.
  • other — FCI Seagoville (Federal Bureau of Prisons low-security institution) occupies a substantial parcel on the north side of the city. While this is not a regulatory overlay in the zoning sense, it is a location-specific consideration that affects adjacent-parcel property values and can trigger additional federal-land-use coordination for properties immediately bordering the facility.
    Parcels immediately adjacent to the FCI have reported slower resale and some appraisal pressure. Not a permitting obstacle — the City of Seagoville zoning rules apply normally.
  • other — A small portion of Seagoville extends into Kaufman County. Parcels in that sliver are appraised by the Kaufman Central Appraisal District rather than Dallas CAD, and benefit from slightly lower Kaufman County and Kaufman County ESD tax rates. Building permits still issue from the City of Seagoville regardless of county.
    Dual-county taxation means the effective property-tax rate varies slightly across Seagoville. Kaufman-County Seagoville parcels typically see 0.1-0.2% lower overall rates than Dallas-County Seagoville parcels.
Dallas — city ADU rules and incentives

ADU legality: with-restrictions

Cross-listed entry. See dallas-county/dallas.json for the primary record. Dallas's overlay-petition framework is unusual: ADUs are largely opt-in by neighborhood vote rather than allowed citywide.

City cost envelope

$153,500 all-in for a 600 sqft ADU (permit + build). Midpoint scenario.

Permit fee bundle: $3,500 (2026-04).

City viability (selected uses)

Long-term rentalyes
Short-term rentalwith-restrictions
Home officeyes
Relative supportyes

City incentives

  • Texas Homestead Exemption — Owner-occupied primary residence exemption applies to primary structure; ADU added value generally taxed at full rate.
County: no attribution (synthetic bucket)

No county

This city sits in the state's "no county" bucket — its ADU rules derive directly from state law and city ordinance without a county intermediary. No county-level sections apply.

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

  • 75336

Post Office

  • 15300 Seagoville Rd, 75253