University Dallas
Also known as SMU area, M Streets, Vickery Place, Greenland Hills, Lower Greenville, University Park (City of), Highland Park (Town of), University Crossing, Mockingbird Station, University of Dallas (not this)
ADU Pass helps homeowners in University Dallas — a USPS locale inside Dallas, No County, Texas — navigate the permit paperwork for building an accessory dwelling unit. This locale covers 2 ZIP codes.
Map
Locale-specific ADU details
Site (parcel physics)
Slope:
Soil:
Lot profile:
Geo-hazards:
Recent ADU permit activity
Utility capacity (upgrade likelihood)
Housing stock age:
Electric service drop:
Sewer lateral:
Water pressure:
Gas availability: available — Full gas service available throughout the University Dallas cluster via Atmos Energy Mid-Tex Division. None of Dallas, University Park, or Highland Park have adopted all-electric or gas-service moratorium ordinances. Owners can freely choose gas or all-electric appliance packages.
Locale property values
The University Dallas USPS cluster spans two very different value tiers: (1) City of Dallas M Streets / Vickery Place / Lower Greenville parcels in ZIP 75206 with Zillow/Redfin 2024-2025 median sale prices in the $650K-$900K range; (2) City of University Park and Town of Highland Park parcels in ZIP 75205 with Zillow median home values in the $1.8M-$3M+ range. The blended median reported here (~$1.15M) weights the Dallas-jurisdiction portion more heavily, consistent with ZIP 75206's share of the cluster's residential address volume.
Locale market rent
| Sq ft | Rent |
|---|---|
| 400 | $1,450/mo |
| 600 | $1,800/mo |
| 800 | $2,100/mo |
Locale HOA prevalence
Voluntary neighborhood associations exist (Greenland Hills Neighborhood Association for the M Streets, Vickery Place Neighborhood Association) that advocate for conservation-district compliance but do not enforce covenants. A small fraction of post-2000 infill condominium or townhouse developments along Greenville Ave carry HOAs. Restrictive covenants on a handful of original plats (especially in University Park's Volk Park and Highland Park's Armstrong/Beverly addition) may constrain ADUs; verify the parcel's vesting deed before assuming none apply.
Locale overlays (3)
- historic-district — Vickery Place Conservation District (CD-9, adopted 1997) covers the pre-war neighborhood bordered roughly by Vickery Blvd, Belmont Ave, Greenville Ave, and Henderson Ave in ZIP 75206. Greenland Hills Conservation District (CD-13, adopted 2004), locally called 'the M Streets', covers the triangle bounded by Mockingbird Ln, Belmont Ave, and Greenville Ave in ZIP 75206. · +45d · +10% cost
Both CDs impose compatibility standards on new construction including ADUs: maximum height (typically 1 story in rear-yard accessory structures), roof form (matching pitch and material of primary dwelling), massing (proportional to main dwelling), siding materials (Tudor half-timber, brick, or stucco to match primary), window patterns and muntin profiles, and front setbacks. A Certificate of Appropriateness from the Dallas Landmark Commission is required before building permit issuance. CoA review typically runs 30-60 days with one pre-application conference plus one hearing. Compatibility requirements add roughly 8-12% to build cost (brick veneer, period-appropriate windows, custom trim). Not a prohibition; a design-standard overlay. Applies to Dallas-jurisdiction parcels only. - airport-noise-zone — The western fringe of ZIP 75205 (along Inwood Rd / Lemmon Ave) sits within the Dallas Love Field AICUZ 65 dB DNL contour. Most University Dallas residential parcels (SMU area, M Streets, Vickery Place) lie outside this contour and require no AICUZ compliance.
For parcels inside the AICUZ contour, additional sound-attenuation construction (higher STC-rated windows, walls, and doors) may be required. Not a prohibition; a construction-spec delta. - other — JURISDICTIONAL OVERLAY: ZIP 75205 contains parcels inside the City of University Park and Town of Highland Park — separate incorporated municipalities with their own zoning ordinances. Dallas Sec. 51A-4.510 does NOT apply in UP or HP.
This is not a conventional ADU overlay but a jurisdiction-boundary consideration. The USPS 'UNIVERSITY DALLAS' label is purely a mail-delivery cluster and does not reflect city limits. Address-level verification via Dallas Central Appraisal District (which labels taxing city) is required before applying any City of Dallas ADU rule to a 75205 parcel. University Park historically does not permit detached ADUs by right; Highland Park is similarly restrictive. Review each town's zoning ordinance before scoping.
Inherited from the city
These sections come from the city page. Click through to the Dallas ADU research for details.
- legal history
- size range
- permitting process & fees
- permit forms
- contacts
- utilities
- incentives
- viability
- pre-approved plans
- financing
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)
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.
- Texas SB 15 (89R, 2025) — Relating to size and density requirements for residential lots in certain municipalities; authorizing a fee — Prohibits municipalities of population greater than 150,000 located in counties of population greater than 300,000 from imposing minimum lot sizes greater than a specified threshold (3,000 sqft for certain residentially zoned subdivisions; lower for new subdivisions) and limits their authority over setbacks, parking, permeable-surface, and height on those lots. Not ADU-specific, but functionally expands the footprint of small-lot single-family housing in Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, San Antonio, and other qualifying cities. Signed 2025-06-20; effective 2025-09-01.
- Texas HB 24 (89R, 2025) — Relating to procedures for changes to a zoning regulation or district boundary — Raises the protest-petition threshold for neighboring property owners who wish to trigger a supermajority city-council vote on a rezoning from 20% to 60%, and constrains the ability of a small minority to block citywide zoning updates. Not ADU-specific; affects the procedural posture of any city-wide ADU-enabling rezoning. Signed 2025-06-20; effective 2025-09-01.
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 Codes
- 75360
- 75372
Post Office
- 5606 Smu Blvd, 75206