Most private landowners clearing their own rural acreage in unincorporated Collin County do not need a permit. The situations where permits kick in are specific: floodplains, Celina city limits with a tree ordinance, developer-scale construction projects, and HOA-restricted communities. The rest of this page walks through each case.
When You Do and Don't Need a Permit
Tree preservation ordinance may apply to protected trees on platted lots with an active building permit.
Floodplain development permit required for significant earthmoving near Zone A or AE areas.
TCEQ Construction General Permit and SWPPP required if stormwater discharges to surface water.
Review deed restrictions: some require HOA approval before vegetation removal.
Easement terms may prohibit or restrict ground disturbance within the easement boundary.
Generally no permit required. This covers most private landowners in the area.
City of Celina Tree Preservation Rules
Celina has a tree protection ordinance that applies within city limits. The ordinance is primarily intended to apply during the platting and development review process. It affects builders and developers clearing lots tied to subdivision plats and building permits, not necessarily private landowners making improvements to rural property outside the platted area.
Protected trees are typically defined by a minimum trunk caliper (diameter measured at 4.5 feet above ground level). Significant trees above that threshold on a lot undergoing development review may require mitigation or a tree removal permit from the city. Your clearing contractor should know what constitutes a protected tree, or you can call Celina's Development Services directly with your property address.
If you're clearing a private residential lot in Celina's city limits for a home you're already permitted to build, your builder or GC typically handles the tree ordinance review as part of the permit process. If you're clearing before pulling a building permit, the timing can matter. Verify with the city before starting.
FEMA Floodplain: The Rule That Catches People Off Guard
Collin County has significant floodplain acreage along its creek systems. Brush Creek, Rowlett Creek, and their tributaries cross through many rural properties in the area. FEMA maps these as Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHA), and any substantial development activity within or immediately adjacent to these zones typically requires a floodplain development permit from the local floodplain administrator.
"Development" in the floodplain context includes grading, fill, and earthmoving, not just building structures. Clearing vegetation near a creek bank followed by rough grading can qualify. Check your parcel against FEMA's Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRM) before any clearing work starts. You can search by address at the FEMA Flood Map Service Center.
If your property has floodplain on it, that doesn't mean you can't clear the upland portions. It means work near the floodplain boundary needs coordination with the appropriate authority first. We've worked around floodplain boundaries on many Collin County properties. It's manageable with the right planning.
What Celina Land Clearing Handles vs. What's Your Responsibility
We handle the clearing work. Permit research and applications are the property owner's or builder's responsibility, though we're happy to flag anything we notice during the site visit that might affect the job scope.
If you're not sure whether your clearing project needs a permit, the safest path is a quick call to Collin County's Development Services or Celina's Development Services department with your property address. They'll tell you definitively. It's a 10-minute call that can prevent a work-stop order mid-job.
- Collin County Development Services FAQ: permit requirements for land disturbance and grading
- TCEQ Construction General Permit: stormwater rules for land disturbance of 1 acre or more
- FEMA Flood Map Service Center: search your property's floodplain status by address
We'll walk the property and flag anything that looks like it needs a closer look before we start.