Photo by Gabriel C. Pérez/KUT News. Air conditioning units sit atop a roof of a building in West Campus near the University of Texas at Austin.
Austin requires all homes to have working air conditioning
Friday, April 11, 2025 by
Audrey McGlinchy, KUT
Ahead of Austin’s scorching summer months, City Council members adopted a property maintenance code Thursday that requires all homes in the city to have functioning air conditioning.
The new rule does not require property owners to have central air conditioning. But owners are required to have some form of air conditioning equipment, such as window units, capable of cooling homes to a temperature 15 degrees Fahrenheit lower than outside – as long as the temperature inside the home stays at or below 85 degrees.
The change requires that air conditioning be able to cool any “habitable” room in a home, which typically includes rooms where people relax, sleep, eat or cook. This likely would not include attic space, for example.
“Knowing that we had Austinites who were experiencing extreme heating conditions … I’m very pleased to see this move forward, “ said Mayor Pro Tem Vanessa Fuentes, who represents parts of Southeast Austin and whose office pushed for the change.
Several other cities in Texas require rental homes to have air conditioning, including Dallas and Denton. Austin already required that existing air conditioners work. But if a home did not have any form of air conditioning, the city had no regulation to force owners to install equipment.
Austin residents have battled record-breaking summers in recent years. 2023 was the city’s hottest summer on record, as temperatures eclipsed triple digits for more than 40 consecutive days.
It’s unclear how many people in Austin currently live without some form of air conditioning. According to a census data sample of nearly 11,500 Texas homes, about 1 percent did not have air conditioning.
There have been attempts at the state level to mandate air conditioning in homes. Last year, state Rep. Sheryl Cole – also a former Austin City Council member – filed a bill requiring landlords to provide some form of air conditioning, but it has yet to be considered by lawmakers.
This story was produced as part of the Austin Monitor’s reporting partnership with KUT.
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