HOA-Approved Native Plants for Texas Yards
You can have a native front yard in Texas without getting a letter from your HOA. It takes the right plants, a little structure, and a plan that shows your board you know what you're doing. This page pulls together everything we've written about making that work.
Quick version
- •Texas law protects your right to use native plants, drought-resistant plants, and xeriscaping (TX Property Code 202.007)
- •Most HOA complaints aren't about the plants. They're about the yard looking messy. Clean edges, mulch, and visible structure fix that.
- •Submitting a plan before you plant makes a huge difference. Boards respond better when they can see what you're doing.
- •Cities like Austin, San Antonio, and Dallas offer real money back for replacing turf with native plants.
Your rights in Texas
Texas has some of the strongest protections in the country for homeowners who want to landscape with native plants.
TX Property Code 202.007 says your HOA can't prohibit xeriscaping or the use of drought-resistant landscaping. That's been on the books since 2013.
HB 517 (2023) went further. HOAs now can't ban water-conserving natural turf or require specific grass types if a water-conserving alternative exists. They also can't fine you for not watering your lawn during a drought.
That said, your HOA can still set rules about how your yard looks (height, maintenance, tidiness). The law protects your plant choices, not a messy yard. So structure and presentation still matter.
How to make it work with your HOA
These articles cover the practical side: how to present your yard, respond to violations, and build a plan your board can actually say yes to.
How to Get Your HOA to Approve Native Landscaping (Step by Step)
The actual process: what to submit, when to submit it, and how to frame it so your board says yes.
Read moreMy HOA Sent Me a Violation Letter: How to Respond with a Native Landscaping Plan
Got a letter? Don't panic. Here's how to respond with a plan that shows intention.
Read moreHOA-Conscious Native Landscaping: Why Structure Matters More Than Plant Choice
Most HOA complaints aren't about what you planted. They're about how it looks from the street.
Read moreIntentional vs Natural: The One Word That Changes How Your HOA Sees Your Native Yard
The difference between a yard that gets a letter and one that gets compliments.
Read moreHOAs Don't Hate Native Plants. They Hate Chaos.
The real issue isn't what you're planting. It's whether your yard looks like someone planned it.
Read moreMulch, Edging, and Visibility: The 3 Simple Design Cues HOAs Actually Notice
Three cheap, fast changes that signal "this yard is taken care of" to any HOA board member.
Read moreThe HOA-Conscious Native Garden Maintenance Checklist
A seasonal checklist so your native yard stays looking intentional year-round.
Read moreFree HOA Landscape Plan Template for Native Plant Gardens
A printable template you can fill in and bring to your HOA board or landscaper.
Read moreDesign guides
Longer, deeper guides on how to pick plants, make your yard look intentional, and work with your HOA from the start.
HOA 101
What HOAs actually care about, how to talk to your board, and what Texas law says about your yard.
Read guide GuideCues of Care
Mulch, edging, mowing strips, sign placement. The visual signals that tell your neighbors "someone planned this."
Read guide GuideGetting Started
New to native landscaping? Start here. Covers soil, sun, zone, and how to pick your first few plants.
Read guideCheck for rebates in your area
A lot of Texas cities will pay you to replace your lawn with native plants. Austin, San Antonio, and Dallas all have active programs. Enter your zip code to see what's available.
Find plants for your city
Every Texas city has different soil, different ecoregions, and different rebate programs. These guides give you plant picks and local details.
Austin, Texas
Up to $2,500 in rebates from Austin Water
Dallas, Texas
Dallas Water Utilities rebate programs
San Antonio, Texas
SAWS WaterSaver landscape coupons
Fort Worth, Texas
Fort Worth Water rebate options
Don't see your city? Browse all Texas city guides
Ready to plan your native yard?
Pollinator Patch helps you pick the right plants for your zone, lay them out, and build a plan you can print and bring to your HOA board.
Try the Free BetaLast updated: February 2026