Urban Egg permit filed for North Austin
- Urban Egg could open its first Austin-area restaurant after a Texas permit filing dated April 6, 2026 listed a North Austin renovation project. - The filing names 7600 Burnet Road, Suite 250, with a $400,000 budget and projected work dates from June 8 to December 8. - Next signals will come from construction activity, company confirmation, or updated Texas licensing records tied to the Burnet Road site.
Urban Egg’s possible entry into Austin is still at the paperwork stage, but the filing offers a fairly specific look at what is being planned. A Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation project record shows an “Urban Egg - Austin” renovation at 7600 Burnet Road, Suite 250, in Travis County. The filing was registered April 6, 2026 and lists work beginning June 8 and ending Dec. 8, with an estimated cost of $400,000. Community Impact first reported the filing on May 20 and said a representative for the company did not immediately confirm the location or an opening date. ### What exactly was filed in Texas? The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation record lists the project as a privately funded renovation or alteration at 7600 Burnet Road, Suite 250, Austin, TX 78757. The state record identifies the facility name as “Urban Egg” and gives the project number as TABS2026016876. The filing also says the project is on private land for private use. (tdlr.texas.gov) April 6 is the registration date attached to the state record, and June 8 through Dec. 8 are the projected construction dates. Those dates are planning milestones in the filing, not a public opening announcement. Community Impact described the development as permit-stage and reported that the business had not confirmed an expected opening date. (tdlr.texas.gov) ### Where in North Austin would this be? The address in the filing is 7600 Burnet Road, Suite 250, a North Austin site Community Impact identified in its May 20 report. That places the proposed restaurant in the Burnet Road corridor, one of the city’s busier retail and dining stretches. (tdlr.texas.gov) A separate local report from What Now also tied the project to a 4,430-square-foot space at the same address and described the filing as a tenant improvement. That report matched the state filing’s budget and timeline. ### Is this Urban Egg’s first Austin location, or first Texas location? Community Impact reported the project would be Urban Egg’s first Austin-area location. (communityimpact.com) Urban Egg’s own locations page shows existing restaurants in Colorado, Kansas, Missouri and Texas, including Fort Worth and Plano, indicating Austin would not be its first Texas restaurant if the project moves forward. (whatnow.com) Urban Egg’s website says the chain offers “crafted breakfast and brunch” and lists multiple stores across those states. That gives the Austin filing broader context: the company is already operating in Texas and appears to be extending that footprint into Central Texas. ### What kind of restaurant is Urban Egg planning to bring? Community Impact said Urban Egg is known for a large brunch menu that includes omelets, eggs Benedicts, pancakes, breakfast burritos, burgers, sandwiches and cinnamon rolls with cream cheese frosting and bacon jam. (communityimpact.com) The publication framed the concept as a brunch eatery rather than a full-day or dinner-focused restaurant. (urbanegg.com) Urban Egg’s website similarly markets the brand around breakfast and brunch service. The company’s online ordering and locations pages do not provide details on the Austin site, which underscores that the Burnet Road project has not yet been added as an operating restaurant. ### Does a permit filing mean the restaurant is definitely opening? The TDLR filing shows a project has been registered, but it does not by itself guarantee that the restaurant will open. (beta2.communityimpact.com) The state’s project page records the planned renovation, estimated cost and dates, while Community Impact reported that company representatives did not immediately confirm the location or opening timeline. (urbanegg.com) The next concrete markers will be whether construction begins around the June 8 start date in the filing, whether Urban Egg publicly confirms the site, and whether later state or local records show the project advancing toward completion by Dec. 8. (tdlr.texas.gov)