Apply For A Loan Today
Tell us some basic details about your project below and let us work on structuring the best loan for you. We value your time and will reach back out to you shortly!
Hard money loans in Texas
If you’re building a home, or if you’re a developer working on construction of a new building, you may have finally discovered your local floor area ratio (FAR) requirements. If you’ve never had to deal with these before, or never in your current market, it can feel like an unexpected setback.
But rest assured, understanding and calculating FAR is not as complicated as it may first appear. It’s a very simple calculation, and you just need to be aware of local exemptions and requirements.
Floor area ratio (FAR) is a measurement, expressed as a decimal, that describes the total amount of usable floor space in a building compared to the size of the lot that the building is on.
Note that the “gross building floor area” is not necessarily the same as the building’s footprint area. It may be close to the same for single-story buildings, but in multiple story buildings, the usable floor space of each floor is added together for the total building floor area.
Floor spaces that are not consistently used—like non-residential basements, elevator shafts, parking garages, stairwells, etc.—are generally not considered in FAR calculations.
Cities, towns, and municipalities will establish limitations and guidelines for buildings’ FAR in various neighborhoods, to maintain development standards and guide or restrict the development of local communities.
Additionally, cities have a “safe load factor,” which represents the population density that can be safely maintained. FAR restrictions are one way that local governments maintain safe capacities.
In Austin, Texas, for example, the McMansion Ordinance requires a maximum FAR of “the larger of 0.4 to 1 (40%), or 2,300 square feet.”
In general, the floor area ratio is calculated by dividing the total floor area by the total property area. Local laws, however, will vary in the details of what should or should not be included in those areas. Basements and attics, for example, may or may not need to be included in your floor area sum, so make sure you’re familiar with local regulations.
Let’s consider a hypothetical example (with small, round numbers, just to make it easy): a real estate developer wants to build a three-story residential building on an empty lot. The property has 400 feet of street frontage and is 600 feet deep. Each floor of the building—minus the elevator and stairwell—is 200 by 300 feet.
The usable floor area of each story is 60,000 square feet (200 x 300), which means the total usable floor area of the building is 180,000 square feet (60,000 sq ft x 3 stories).
The property area is 240,000 square feet (400 x 600).
The floor area ratio, then, is 0.75 (180,000 / 240,000).
If you’re building in Austin, or across the State of Texas, be sure to consider Texas’ list of exemptions—or spaces that do not need to be considered as parcel or floor area size.
You can take advantage of a number of exemptions regarding parking facilities. For instance, deduct 450 sq ft if your building’s parking structure is:
Deduct 200 sq ft if:
Getting both exemptions for your building’s parking area is also possible.
It might sound surprising, but FAR regulations in Texas exempt some porches, basements, and attics.
For example, the ground-floor porch is exempt if it is not attached to any driveway or not accessible by the vehicles.
FAR may exempt habitable basements if they;
All habitable attics are exempt if:
FAR regulations often creep up as an unexpected complication in designing a house or other property for construction. A local architect, however, will not be surprised by the requirements, so make sure you’re working with an experienced professional.
And once you understand what the FAR is, why it’s important, and how to calculate it, you see how small a hurdle it usually is. Your first step to calculating the FAR is to make sure you understand all of your local government’s requirements and exemptions.
As you get ready to kick off a building project in Texas, be sure to also investigate how hard money construction financing can help you get the job done with fewer delays and less red tape.
Tell us some basic details about your project below and let us work on structuring the best loan for you. We value your time and will reach back out to you shortly!