Demolition Permits in Rockwall, TX: A Homeowner's Guide

When a permit is required, what cities charge, how long it takes, and what happens if you skip it. Every Rockwall-area city covered.

For a homeowner standing in the yard staring at a shed, a deck, or a pool ready to come down, the first question isn't "who do I hire?" โ€” it's "do I need a permit?" The short answer in Rockwall County is almost always yes. The longer answer depends on the structure, the city, and a couple of state laws that override every city.

This is the homeowner's version of the deeper Rockwall demolition permits guide, simplified for a one-sitting read.

When a permit is required (the basic rule)

A city demolition permit is required when removing:

A permit usually isn't required for:

City permit fees and lead times

Fees listed are city-published amounts for residential demolition permits. These are set by the municipality, not by any contractor.

CityLead timeCity permit fee (typical)
Rockwall5–10 days$75–$200
Heath7–14 days$100–$250
Fate5–10 days$50–$200
Royse City7–14 days$75–$200
Forney7–14 days$75–$200
Rowlett7–14 days$100–$250
Garland (east)10–14 days$100–$300

What's submitted with the application

The two state laws that override every city

1. Texas asbestos rules (25 TAC ยง295.34)

Any structure built before January 1, 1980 requires an asbestos survey before demolition. The survey must be performed by a Texas DSHS-licensed asbestos inspector. If asbestos-containing material (ACM) is found, licensed abatement is required before demolition. No exceptions. The TCEQ and DSHS both enforce; contractors who skip it lose their license, and homeowners face fines plus a property flag.

2. Texas 811 (One Call) before any digging

Before any post extraction, footing pull, or excavation, state law requires a Texas 811 utility-locate call placed at least 2 business days in advance. This applies to fence removal, deck footing extraction, pool demolition, and any structural demo with footings to pull. Hitting buried gas or fiber without an 811 ticket is a felony in some cases.

What happens if a permit is skipped

  1. Stop-work order. First sign of unpermitted demolition, the city posts one. Work has to halt until the permit is pulled retroactively (more expensive than pulling it ahead).
  2. Property flag. The city records the unpermitted work on the property. Future building permits on the same property may be delayed or denied.
  3. Fines. Vary by city and project scope.
  4. Resale problem. Title search and city records pull will surface the flag. Buyer's title insurance may require resolution before closing. This is where homeowners actually feel the pain, usually years after the demolition.

Pulling a permit as a homeowner vs hiring a permit-pulling contractor

Most cities allow homeowner-pulled permits for owner-occupied properties. The paperwork is the same. The question is whether to handle:

For a small shed demolition, this can be reasonable for a homeowner. For anything larger, a permit-pulling contractor is usually the better path once time and coordination cost are accounted for.

Looking for a contractor to handle all of it? Permit pull, utility disconnects, asbestos inspection coordination, HOA submissions โ€” typically all included on a written quote from a permit-pulling demolition contractor. Get a free estimate →

Skip the city office runaround.

A licensed contractor pulls the permit, schedules the disconnects, and coordinates inspections. The permit number ends up on the invoice.

The website shares information with local, licensed, and insured vendors who will reach out and contact you the consumer with the information provided here.

Free quote, tap to call (972) 435-7281