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Better Cities Project
  • Home
  • About Us
    Our Vision
    BCP’s vision is that free-market municipal policy solutions are broadly available, widely acceptable, and regularly employed, enabling American cities to achieve their full potential as engines of economic prosperity. We reject the idea that cities are lost to free-market principles or policies.
    Our Mission
    BCP uncovers ideas that work, promotes realistic solutions, and forges partnerships that help people in America’s largest cities live free and happy lives.
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    • About Better Cities Project
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    • Collaboration and Careers -- Work With BCP
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    Address

    304 S. Jones Blvd #2826
    Las Vegas NV 89107

    Phone

    (702) 608-2046‬

    Hours

    Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.

    Email

    info@better-cities.org

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Home Transportation and Infrastructure

Everything is bigger in Texas, except parking mandates

The Lone Star State is rolling back a costly regulation

Patrick TuoheybyPatrick Tuohey
May 19, 2025
in Transportation and Infrastructure
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Everything is bigger in Texas, except parking mandates
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Last week, Dallas took a bold step toward becoming a more affordable, walkable, and livable city. The City Council voted unanimously to eliminate mandatory parking minimums for new developments—joining a growing list of cities nationwide rethinking decades-old policies that prioritized car storage over people.

It’s a move rooted in common sense, and long overdue.

For decades, city codes required developers to build a minimum number of parking spots, regardless of whether future residents or businesses needed them. These mandates weren’t just arbitrary—they were costly. Estimates suggest each parking spot can add $28,000 to $56,000 to a project’s price tag, costs that inevitably get passed along to tenants and homeowners.

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Parking mandates have been a quiet killer of affordability, limiting the types of housing that can be built and raising costs for everyone. In a housing market already strained, that’s the last thing cities should be doing.

As D Magazine reported, the Dallas City Plan Commission voted earlier this year to recommend the change, citing how outdated requirements were choking development. Staff analysis backed them up: blanket mandates don’t make sense in a diverse city with different neighborhoods, incomes, and transit access.

Even the Dallas Morning News noted that dropping parking minimums can help developers build more homes, restaurants, and shops that serve people rather than vehicles. And Dallas isn’t going it alone. In fact, it’s a little late to the game.

Other Texas cities—Austin, Bastrop, Bandera and Taylor—have already repealed their mandates. Nationwide, over 3,000 cities have taken similar action, according to the Parking Reform Network.

This trend reflects a growing realization: when you require parking, you get cars. When you reduce the mandates, you get homes, walkable neighborhoods, and human-scaled development.

That’s not to say every development will do away with parking. But it’s a question of choice. If developers believe their tenants want it, they’ll build it. If not, they won’t. Let the market respond to actual demand, not government-imposed formulas based on outdated assumptions.

We’ve seen how costly and self-defeating zoning mandates can be. Dallas shows us another way forward. Cities can grow without pushing people out. They can embrace change without breaking the bank.

Sometimes, doing less—like getting rid of parking minimums—is exactly the kind of leadership cities need.

Tags: HousingHousing AffordabilityParkingRegulationZoning
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I study local government and Hurricane Helene forced me from my home − here’s how rural towns and counties in North Carolina and beyond cooperate to rebuild

Patrick Tuohey

Patrick Tuohey

Patrick Tuohey is co-founder and policy director of the Better Cities Project. He works with taxpayers, media, and policymakers to foster understanding of the consequences — sometimes unintended — of policies such as economic development, taxation, education, and transportation. He also serves as a senior fellow at Missouri's Show-Me Institute and a visiting fellow at the Virginia-based Yorktown Foundation for Public Policy.

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Recent News

Everything is bigger in Texas, except parking mandates

Everything is bigger in Texas, except parking mandates

May 19, 2025
I study local government and Hurricane Helene forced me from my home − here’s how rural towns and counties in North Carolina and beyond cooperate to rebuild

I study local government and Hurricane Helene forced me from my home − here’s how rural towns and counties in North Carolina and beyond cooperate to rebuild

May 13, 2025
Texas HB 24: A win for housing development—and a lesson for other cities

Texas HB 24: A win for housing development—and a lesson for other cities

May 7, 2025

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