Field Notes · 01 May 2026 · Ground Up Guides

MUD vs PID — and What "Permit-Ready" Actually Means in North Texas

Three terms show up constantly in North Texas real estate — on tax bills, in listing descriptions, and at the closing table. Most buyers nod along like they understand. Here's what MUD, PID, and permit-ready actually mean — and the questions you need to ask before you sign anything.

Part 01 — What is a MUD?

A Municipal Utility District is a governmental entity — a political subdivision of Texas — created to provide water, sewer, and drainage services in areas where a city doesn't yet offer them, which often means you're in the ETJ.

When a developer builds a neighborhood outside city limits, someone has to pay for the infrastructure. That someone is eventually you — through a MUD tax that appears on your property tax bill on top of city, county, and school district taxes.

The MUD tax starts high when a neighborhood is new. Over 20–30 years it decreases as bonds pay off. When the bonds are fully retired the MUD tax can drop to zero.

"There's a line on your property tax bill most North Texas buyers don't notice until they're already at the closing table. It says MUD. And it could cost you $2,000–$4,000 a year — sometimes more — depending on where you're building."

— Brandi, Ground Up Guides

What buyers need to know: If you're buying in Celina, Princeton, Anna, Melissa, or anywhere outside established city utility service — there's a good chance you're in a MUD. Your MUD tax appears as a separate taxing entity on your county tax bill. Lenders factor it into your debt-to-income calculation — so it affects what you qualify for. Sellers must disclose MUD status by Texas law before contract execution. And MUDs don't automatically dissolve when a city annexes the land.

Part 02 — What is a PID and How is it Different?

A Public Improvement District is created by a city to fund public enhancements for a defined area — parks, trails, landscaping, entry features, and community amenities. It's what makes a master-planned community look polished and finished at opening.

Unlike a MUD, a PID is not a political entity. It's created by the city — not the state — and it funds a different category of improvements: the amenities that make a development attractive, not just the utilities that make it functional.

PID debt is repaid through a fixed assessment tied to your lot size — not your property value. That assessment doesn't change year to year. It can often be prepaid early. Once paid off it's never charged to that property again.

🌳 PID
FundsParks, trails & amenities
You pay viaFixed assessment by lot size
Duration10–20 yrs, stays flat
Created byCity government
Prepayable?Often yes — worth asking
Question to askMUDPID
Is it a red flag?No — financing toolNo — know the terms
Affects lending?Yes — factors into DTISometimes — ask lender
Pay off early?NoOften yes
Seller must disclose?Yes — Texas lawYes — Texas law
Can both exist on one lot?Yes — and in North Texas, they frequently do

What MUD and PID Actually Cost You — Real Numbers

Understanding the concept is one thing. Running the actual numbers before you underwrite a deal or qualify for a mortgage is another.

MUD Tax Example

In a newer North Texas development, MUD tax rates commonly range from approximately $0.50 to $1.25 per $100 of assessed value — verify current rates directly with the district, as these vary and change over time.

On a home assessed at $500,000, a MUD rate of $0.85 per $100 adds roughly $4,250 per year — over $350 per month your lender factors into your DTI. It affects what you qualify for from day one.

PID Assessment Example

PID assessments are fixed by lot size — not property value. A typical residential lot might carry an annual PID assessment anywhere from a few hundred to over a thousand dollars per year depending on the district and amenity package.

Many PIDs allow prepayment — meaning you can pay off the remaining balance in a lump sum and eliminate the annual assessment entirely. If you have cash available at closing, this is worth asking about.

When Both Exist

Add them. Don't evaluate them separately. If your MUD adds $4,250 per year and your PID adds $800 per year, your true carrying cost is $5,050 per year above standard taxes. Run that number before you fall in love with the lot.

Part 03 — What Does "Permit-Ready" Actually Mean?

It's one of the most overused — and most misunderstood — terms in land sales. Sellers use it constantly. Most of the time it's optimistic at best, misleading at worst.

Here's what permit-ready actually requires. All four of these must be true before a building permit can be issued:

1
The lot must be legally platted. An unplatted tract cannot receive a building permit — period. Platting requires a preliminary plat, engineering plans, city review cycles, and final plat recording. In most Texas municipalities this takes 4–12 months minimum.
2
Utilities must be available AND capacity confirmed. A water line near your property is not the same as water service to your property. Fire flow, sewer invert elevations, and transformer capacity all have to be verified in writing before you go hard on earnest money.
3
Zoning must match your intended use. Base zoning tells you the category. The use table tells you what's actually permitted. Deed restrictions and overlay districts can be even more restrictive than base zoning.
4
All required city approvals must be complete. Site plan approval, development agreement, impact fee calculation — depending on the jurisdiction all of these may be required before a single permit is issued.

"Permit-ready" from a seller is a claim. "Permit-ready" confirmed by the city — in writing — is a fact. Always verify directly with the jurisdiction before you go hard on earnest money.

Before You Close — Ask These Four Questions

On MUD status
Is this property inside a MUD? If yes — what is the current tax rate and how many years of bond debt remain?
On PID status
Is there a PID assessment? If yes — what is the annual amount, what is the term, and can it be prepaid early?
If both are present
Add both to your annual carrying cost before you underwrite the deal or qualify for a mortgage. Run the real numbers.
On permit-readiness
Ask the city directly: "What is the platting status of this parcel and what approvals are required before a building permit can be issued?" Get it in writing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you opt out of a MUD in Texas?
No. If your property is inside a Municipal Utility District, you cannot opt out. The MUD tax is a legal obligation tied to the land — not a choice. The only way it goes away is when the bonds are fully retired, which typically takes 20–30 years.
Does MUD tax go away eventually?
Yes — but slowly. MUD taxes decrease as the district's bond debt is paid down. In a fully mature district the rate can drop significantly or reach near zero. The problem is most buyers in North Texas are purchasing in newer developments where the bonds are fresh and the rate is at its peak. Always ask how many years of bond debt remain before you close.
Is a PID the same as an HOA?
No, and the distinction matters. An HOA is a private organization that enforces deed restrictions and manages shared amenities through dues. A PID is a government-created financing mechanism that funds the construction of those amenities through a fixed assessment on your property. You can have both a PID and an HOA on the same lot — and in many North Texas master-planned communities, you do.
Can both a MUD and a PID exist on the same property?
Yes — and in North Texas, this is common. Especially in fast-growing areas like Celina, Anna, Prosper, and parts of Denton County. Always check for both separately. They appear as different line items and are governed by entirely different rules.
What happens to a MUD when a city annexes the land?
Annexation does not automatically dissolve a MUD. The district can continue to exist and continue to collect taxes even after the city extends its boundaries. The city and the MUD negotiate the transition — and that process can take years. If you're buying in an area likely to be annexed, ask specifically what happens to the MUD tax post-annexation. Get the answer in writing from the jurisdiction — not from the seller.
What does "permit-ready" mean in a listing description?
Usually less than the seller intends it to mean. Permit-ready is a marketing term, not a legal status. A lot is genuinely permit-ready only when it is legally platted, utilities are confirmed available with capacity, zoning matches the intended use, and all required city approvals are complete. If any one of those four conditions isn't met, a permit cannot be issued — regardless of what the listing says.

Questions About Your Lot? Let's Talk.

If you're navigating a land purchase in North Texas and want a second set of eyes on what you're walking into — reach out directly. The Ground Up Guides bundle gives you everything you need to evaluate any lot before you close.