Building Permits in Granbury and Hood County, TX
Who issues your residential building permit
New-home permitting in the Granbury area is split by where the home is built. Homes inside city limits are permitted and inspected by the City of Granbury; homes in the wider county fall under Hood County. The two paths differ in plan-review turnaround, fee schedules, and the exact inspections required. Confirm which office issues your residential building permit early, because it sets the realistic start date for your framing crew.
HOA architectural review usually comes first
In communities such as Pecan Plantation and Harbor Lakes, the homeowners association architectural committee is often the real gatekeeper — sometimes stricter and slower than the government permit. Expect to submit elevations, exterior materials, masonry percentages, roofline, and color selections for approval before framing can begin. Budget several weeks for this review so a permit-ready plan does not stall waiting on the design committee.
The residential inspection sequence
A new home moves through a predictable inspection rhythm: pre-pour, framing, then mechanical, electrical, and plumbing rough-ins, followed by insulation, and a final inspection before the certificate of occupancy that lets you move in. Your builder of record should own this calendar, book inspectors ahead, and sequence subcontractors so framing, roofing, and trim crews are never idle waiting on a sign-off.
What to confirm before signing the build contract
Ask which party is the builder of record and pulls the permits, how permit and impact fees appear in the contract, and how change orders affect the permitted plan. Getting these answers in writing keeps accountability clear and protects your move-in timeline when a build spans both City of Granbury and Hood County requirements.
