Burleson County, TX — Solar Development Risk Assessment

Local solar ordinance barriers, board sentiment, and utility policies that affect development timelines and risk.

36.5
Risk Grade
Good
Grade B: Noise-based ordinance provides a defined (not hostile) permitting pathway. No moratorium. Growing county with stable trajectory. SUP required but feasible.
Assessment Snapshot
Population
17642
State Rank
#22
Compliance
45%
Trajectory
50

Moratorium Status

✓ No Active Moratorium
No specific moratorium information available.

Ordinance & Regulations

Setback Requirements
40 dB limit at residential property lines; 60 dB in non-residential zones. No solar-specific physical setback codified.
Zoning Mechanism
Special Use Permit with noise compliance demonstration required.
Acreage Caps
None confirmed.
Density Caps
None.
Spacing Rules
None.
Size Restrictions
None.

Board Sentiment & Political Risk

Sentiment Analysis
Neutral — noise ordinance adopted pragmatically; not solar-hostile.
Basis for Assessment
Central Texas county northeast of Bryan/College Station; growing area; 2020 noise ordinance creates defined compliance path rather than blocking development; R-majority board; Oncor territory.
Political Risk Factors
Stable
Board Members
Commissioners Court | 4 Commissioners + County Judge | Caldwell, Texas | 4-yr partisan terms | R-majority

Grid, Utilities & State Context

Grid Operator
ERCOT
Utilities
Oncor Electric Delivery
State Permitting Process
No state siting board for solar in Texas. PUCT regulates utilities; ERCOT manages interconnection for ERCOT service territory (most of state); SPP governs Panhandle/northwest TX. County Commissioners Court governs unincorporated areas under Texas Local Government Code. Many rural TX counties have NO zoning authority — solar is essentially by-right without county approval requirement. HB 2527 (2023) requires counties with solar ordinances to provide a 'reasonable' permitting framework. No statewide preemption prevents county restrictions. ERCOT interconnection queue is severely congested — grid study delays of 2-4+ years common.
State Incentives
Texas has no state RPS mandate. Key incentives: Federal ITC (30% base + bonus adders for energy communities/domestic content). Property tax abatement via Chapter 312/313 successor frameworks (county-level negotiation required). ERCOT wholesale market provides strong merchant revenue stack. No state income tax benefits developer HQ decisions. USDA REAP available for rural projects.

Development Activity

Active/Completed Projects
No confirmed utility-scale solar projects on public record as of Apr 2026.
Denied/Withdrawn Projects
None documented.

Explore the Full Tracker

View risk assessments for all 3,100+ US counties, compare states, and download detailed ordinance data for your solar development pipeline.

Launch SolarRisk Tracker