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Permitting & Compliance

Pallet Racking Permits in the DFW Metroplex: A Step-by-Step Guide

9 min read  ·  March 2026  ·  DFW Pallet Racking Team

Most permanent pallet racking installations in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex require a building permit — and skipping that step can mean stop-work orders, fines, mandatory removal, and insurance complications. This guide breaks down the permitting process for DFW municipalities so you know what to expect before you start.

Do You Need a Permit for Pallet Racking?

The short answer: almost certainly yes, if your racking is permanent, over a certain height, or being installed in a commercial/industrial occupancy. The specific thresholds vary by city, but here are the general rules for the DFW metroplex:

Dallas

Permits required for most rack installations over 5'9" in commercial/industrial buildings. The City of Dallas Development Services Department enforces IBC-based requirements.

Fort Worth

Fort Worth and Tarrant County jurisdictions require permits for rack over 8' in commercial occupancies. The city enforces the IBC with local amendments.

Suburbs (Plano, Irving, etc.)

Collin, Denton, and other surrounding counties require permits based on IBC thresholds. Each municipality has its own review process and timeline.

When in doubt, apply for the permit. The cost of a permit is trivial compared to the cost of a stop-work order, removal, and re-installation after the fact.

What Triggers a Permit Requirement?

Under the International Building Code (IBC), which DFW municipalities use as their base code, pallet racking typically requires a permit when:

  • Rack height exceeds 5'9" (the general storage height threshold in many jurisdictions)
  • The installation changes the building's occupancy classification
  • The installation affects fire sprinkler coverage (common with high racks)
  • Rack is being installed in a building that requires a certificate of occupancy
  • The installation involves structural attachment to the building (anchor bolts, seismic bracing)

In practice, most commercial pallet racking installations exceed the 5'9" threshold. If you're putting up anything more than a few low-profile shelving units, plan for a permit.

What's Required for a Racking Permit Application

The specific requirements vary by city, but a typical pallet racking permit application in the DFW metroplex includes:

1. Engineered Rack Drawings

Stamped drawings from a licensed Professional Engineer (PE) registered in Texas. These drawings must show:

  • Rack plan layout with dimensions and aisle widths
  • Elevation views showing beam levels and heights
  • Connection details (beam-to-upright, upright-to-floor)
  • Load calculations for each rack configuration
  • Seismic calculations per Texas building code requirements
  • Anchor bolt specifications

2. Manufacturer Load Certifications

Documentation from the rack manufacturer certifying the rated load capacity for the specific components being installed. For used racking, this may require an engineering evaluation if original documentation is unavailable.

3. Site Plan / Warehouse Layout

A drawing showing where the rack will be installed within the building, including distances to walls, columns, dock doors, and egress paths. This is used to verify aisle widths and egress compliance.

4. Fire Protection Review

In many cases, high-pile storage (over 12 feet in many Texas jurisdictions) triggers a fire protection review. This may require documentation that existing sprinkler systems meet NFPA 13 requirements for the commodity class and storage height, or engineering of in-rack sprinklers if required.

The DFW Metroplex Permitting Process: Step by Step

1

Pre-Application Research

Contact the building department in your city to confirm specific requirements. Requirements can vary even within the metroplex depending on municipality, building age, occupancy class, and local amendments to the IBC.

2

Racking Layout and Engineering

Work with your racking contractor and engineer to develop a layout and have PE-stamped drawings prepared. DFW Pallet Racking coordinates engineering for all permitted installations we handle.

3

Permit Application Submission

Submit the application package to the local building department. In Dallas, this goes through the Development Services Department. In Fort Worth, through the Development Services Division. Suburban cities have their own building permit offices.

4

Plan Review

A building official reviews the drawings for code compliance. Review times vary: Dallas typically 2–4 weeks for commercial projects; Fort Worth and surrounding cities 1–3 weeks. Expedited review is sometimes available for a fee.

5

Permit Issuance

Once approved, the permit is issued. Keep it on-site during installation.

6

Installation

Install the racking per the approved drawings. Any deviation from approved drawings requires a revised submittal.

7

Inspection

Schedule a building inspection after installation. The inspector will verify anchor bolts, rack configuration, load placards, and compliance with approved drawings.

8

Certificate of Completion

After passing inspection, the permit is closed out. Keep your permit documentation — you may need it for insurance, future renovations, or if you ever sell the building.

Seismic and Wind Requirements in the DFW Area

Texas building codes incorporate seismic and wind load requirements that directly affect pallet racking design. While North Texas has lower seismic risk than coastal regions, anchor bolt sizing, cross-aisle bracing, and down-aisle bracing patterns must still account for applicable loads under the IBC and ASCE 7.

These requirements affect:

  • Anchor bolt size and embedment depth
  • Cross-aisle bracing requirements
  • Column base plate dimensions
  • Down-aisle bracing patterns

A qualified Texas PE will handle these calculations as part of the permit package — but it's worth knowing upfront so you're not surprised by the requirements.

What Happens If You Skip the Permit

Building without a permit is a gamble that rarely pays off:

  • Stop-work orders from the building department if unpermitted work is discovered
  • Mandatory removal of non-permitted racking in some jurisdictions
  • Fines that often exceed the cost of the permit itself
  • Insurance complications — many commercial property and liability policies exclude coverage for unpermitted structures
  • Lease complications — most commercial leases require tenant work to be properly permitted
  • OSHA exposure — if a rack collapse occurs and there's no engineering documentation, liability increases significantly

Working With a Contractor Who Handles Permitting

The easiest way to navigate the DFW metroplex permitting process is to work with a racking contractor who handles it for you. DFW Pallet Racking manages the complete permitting process for installations throughout Dallas, Fort Worth, and surrounding DFW cities — coordinating engineering, submitting applications, and scheduling inspections.

Need Help With Racking Permits?

We handle permitting for racking installations throughout Dallas, Fort Worth, and the surrounding DFW metroplex. Get a free estimate that includes permit costs.

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