Your Petition Faces a Hidden Gatekeeper
Filing a petition to remove your property from a city’s ETJ under Senate Bill 2038 seems simple—until it lands on a city official’s desk.
Behind the scenes, most Texas cities rely on a uniform tool to validate your request: a legal checklist created by the Texas Municipal League (TML).
If you haven’t heard of it, you’re not alone. But city administrators use it as a roadmap—and your petition’s success can rise or fall based on how closely you follow it.
This blog pulls back the curtain on what the TML is, how their checklist actually works, and how you can use this insider knowledge when filing your petition to break free from a city’s jurisdiction.
What Is the Texas Municipal League (TML)?
The Texas Municipal League is a statewide nonprofit that advises and supports more than 1,100 local governments across Texas. When a new law like SB 2038 goes into effect, TML provides practical tools—checklists, guidance memos, sample ordinances—to help city staff understand and apply the law correctly.
Think of TML as the “legal how-to guide” for municipalities. It doesn’t create law, but its materials often become the default way cities interpret new requirements—especially when processing ETJ release petitions.
Inside the TML ETJ Petition Review Checklist: What Cities Verify
The TML checklist is divided into three phases:
Step 1: Confirm Eligibility
City staff verify:
- The property is located in the city’s ETJ.
- No legal exemptions apply, such as:
- Proximity to military bases (within 5 miles).
- Participation in a strategic partnership or industrial district.
- Voluntary annexation (especially in Hays County).
If any disqualifiers apply, the city may reject the petition without further review.
Step 2: Petition Requirements
The city checks:
- If the petitioner is eligible (resident or majority-value landowner).
- If the legal description is accurate (metes and bounds or lot/block).
- If a clear map of the land is included.
Signature Compliance (per Chapter 277):
- Signatures must be handwritten.
- Must include printed name, date of birth or voter registration number, residential address, and signing date.
- All signatures must be collected within 180 days.
- Petition must meet one of two thresholds:
- More than 50% of registered voters in the area.
- Title holders with majority land value (verified via Central Appraisal District).
Step 3: City Action
- Notify landowners of the outcome.
- If valid:
- Place on the council’s next meeting agenda after 30 days.
- Or automatically release the area after 45 days under § 42.105(c).
- Update city ETJ maps to reflect the change.
Simplified TML Checklist for Property Owners
Use this summary to double-check your readiness before submitting your petition:
| Checklist Stage | Key Questions Cities Ask |
| 1. Confirm Applicability | Is the land inside the ETJ? Are there disqualifying exemptions like military zones or industrial districts? |
| 2. Petition Requirements | Is the landowner eligible? Is the legal description accurate? Is a map included? Are the signatures complete and valid under Chapter 277? |
| 3. Action by City | Did the city notify petitioners? Has it scheduled a review or defaulted to auto-release in 45 days? Has the ETJ map been updated? |
Why the TML Checklist Matters to Texas Property Owners
Knowing how your petition will be judged can help you avoid unnecessary setbacks.
When you submit a petition that’s missing required fields—or worse, signatures that don’t comply with Chapter 277—the city can send it back. That costs you time, effort, and sometimes opportunity.
Here’s how the TML checklist helps you:
- Prevents rejections for technical errors
- Saves time communicating with city staff
- Strengthens your petition’s credibility
How Free My Property Goes Beyond the TML Checklist
We don’t just know about the TML checklist. We’ve mastered it.
Here’s our approach:
- Pre-screen every property to ensure no disqualifications apply.
- Prepare legally formatted, city-specific petitions.
- Perform signature audits that meet Chapter 277.
- Submit via city-preferred methods (email, mail, online).
- Track city council agendas to ensure timely action.
This isn’t just paperwork to us. It’s your property freedom. That’s why our Comprehensive Package comes with our 100-day guarantee.
✍️ Want to avoid petition delays?
Free My Property uses the same checklist cities rely on—plus advanced tools to verify eligibility, prepare maps, audit signatures, and track council deadlines.
Start your ETJ removal today →
Start Your TML-Compliant ETJ Removal Today
The TML checklist may be written for bureaucrats, but it’s one of the smartest tools a landowner can use. It’s not about jumping through hoops—it’s about knowing the steps ahead of time.
When you know what the city will verify, you can file a stronger petition, cut out delays, and take full control of your land’s future.
Free My Property doesn’t just prepare paperwork—we lead landowners to real results.
📞 Call us today at (512) 842-9112 or visit freemyproperty.com to get started.
Dig Deeper: ETJ Removal Resources
Essential Reading:
- How to File an ETJ Removal Petition in Texas: City-by-City Process Guide – See how different cities apply these checklists differently
- Understanding the Legal Framework of ETJ in Texas – The big picture behind the checklist requirements
- DIY ETJ Removal in Texas: Pros, Cons, and Expert Guidance – When knowing the checklist still isn’t enough
Official Sources:
About Free My Property
Free My Property is the only Texas-based service solely focused on helping landowners remove their property from a municipality’s ETJ. We combine legal understanding, planning experience, and collaborative relationships with local governments to deliver fast, affordable results.
Our team has guided everyone from individual landowners to investors through the ETJ removal process, making it simple and stress-free. Want to know more? Visit freemyproperty.com or call (512) 842-9112 to speak with our team.

