Fort Worth impact fee increase June 1, 2026; MTP adopted June 9
Fort Worth’s residential transportation impact fees increase June 1, 2026. City Council also adopted a new Master Transportation Plan June 9.
Starting June 1, 2026, Fort Worth will increase transportation impact fees for residential development. Just days later, on June 9, 2026, the City Council adopted a new Master Transportation Plan (MTP)—a planning update meant to better connect where growth happens with how transportation projects get prioritized and funded.
Transportation impact fees: what they are (and who they apply to)
Fort Worth describes transportation impact fees as charges assessed on new development to help fund transportation improvements needed as new projects add demand for roadway capacity.
The City says these fee-funded projects could include new roadways, adding lanes to existing roadways, and improving intersections—and that impact fees may not be used to fund roadway maintenance.
When the June 1, 2026 increase shows up in the permit timeline
Fort Worth’s fee page says transportation impact fees for residential developments will increase as of June 1, 2026.
Just as important is how the City ties the fee to the development process:
- Assessed at the time of final plat approval.
- Collected when the building permit application is accepted.
For residents watching new housing approvals, the practical takeaway is straightforward: the June 1 change is meant to apply through the City’s normal permitting sequence tied to plat approval and the accepted building permit application stage.
June 9, 2026: what the Master Transportation Plan changes
Fort Worth’s MTP page says the Master Transportation Plan was adopted by City Council on June 9, 2026 and it replaces the prior Master Thoroughfare and Active Transportation plan (referenced on the City’s MTP page via the earlier M&C item).
The City describes the MTP as linking land use and other infrastructure decisions with transportation investment, including:
- a clear, data-driven capital program that translates policy direction into prioritized projects
- more strategic funding decisions to support timely delivery
- focus on safety, reliability, and economic competitiveness
The MTP also describes a Transportation Investment Program (TIP) that identifies and prioritizes roadway, freight, and active transportation improvements and aligns them with bond programs, grants, and developer contributions.
And in the June 9 Council action, Fort Worth says ordinances were adopted to amend the city code and the Access Management Policy to align with the MTP.
How this connects: fees, planning, and “what to watch”
These are related—but they don’t create instant construction timelines. The impact fee increase is a cost/input that can affect whether and when residential projects move forward through the permitting process. The Master Transportation Plan is the City’s framework for prioritizing transportation investment over time.
For people buying, renting, or investing near new housing: the June 1, 2026 fee increase is a signal that new residential permitting starting after that date may include higher upfront public infrastructure-related charges, which can feed into project budgeting decisions. Whether that changes rents or home prices in any specific neighborhood depends on many factors—so treat this as a cost and feasibility signal, not a guaranteed price outcome.
For commuters watching roadway improvements: the June 9 adoption is a planning and prioritization milestone, not a construction announcement by itself. To track actual changes, watch for follow-on implementation steps that translate the adopted plan into corridor-level decisions, project lists, and funding/budget updates.
One practical way to stay informed: keep an eye on Transportation & Public Works updates and City budget/capital project items that indicate what parts of the adopted MTP are moving from planning into delivery.
Sources
- City of Fort Worth — Transportation Impact Fees (official guidance page)
- Fort Worth Legistar — City Council Meeting detail (June 9, 2026; adoption item / M&C 26-0506)
- The Business Press — City Council adopts Master Transportation Plan (local secondary reporting)
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