Texas code requires a barrier around every new residential pool. That's not a maybe โ it's a mandate with a deadline. We track every new-pool permit in the metro and hand you the homeowners who are about to need exactly what you sell.
Most home-service leads are guesses about intent. This one isn't: the homeowner is contractually required to install a barrier, and the pool builder won't pass final inspection without it. You're not selling โ you're arriving right on time.
Pulled live from City of Austin permit records. Several permits literally read "with required enclosure device" โ the city is telling you a fence is coming.
Tell us where you install. We filter the metro's permit feed to your service area.
Every new residential pool permit โ de-duplicated, with demolitions and commercial equipment rooms stripped out.
A clean weekly digest + CSV: address, zip, pool type, permit date. Mail it, door it, or call it.
A pool-code barrier install runs into the thousands. FenceFeed is the cheapest lead in that pipeline.
Yes. Pool permits are public record published by the City of Austin. We aggregate and clean them โ nothing private.
You get property address, zip, pool type, and permit date โ everything to mail or door-knock the home. Owner/phone append is a roadmap add-on.
Sometimes โ but pool builders routinely sub it out or leave it to the owner, who then shops. Reaching them at permit time puts you first in line.
Austin issues roughly 3โ4 new residential pool permits a week year-round, and more heading into summer. Pair it with deck and hardscape permits for steady flow.
We're onboarding a handful of Austin fence & outdoor-living companies at founding pricing. Drop your email and we'll send the latest pool permits โ no card, no catch.