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We currently have 1 ordinance verified for Albertville, AL. Our research team is actively working to add more categories including noise rules, parking restrictions, fence regulations, building permits, and other local ordinances that affect daily life.
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Albertville does not publish a stand-alone decibel-based quiet-hours ordinance. The city follows the general nuisance and disorderly conduct provisions in its Code of Ordinances (administered by Municode) and Alabama state law, enforced by the Albertville Police Department and Code Enforcement. Loud, unreasonable sounds that disturb neighbors at any hour can be cited as a nuisance.
Aircraft noise regulation in Alabama is preempted by federal law under the Federal Aviation Act and FAA regulations. Cities and counties cannot impose binding restrictions on aircraft operations, flight paths, or in-flight noise levels statewide.
Alabama state law treats persistent barking dogs as a private nuisance actionable under Alabama Code Section 6-5-120. Cities adopt specific decibel and duration rules, but the underlying nuisance cause of action is statewide.
Alabama Code Sections 13A-11-14 and 13A-11-241 criminalize animal cruelty and neglect statewide, capturing hoarding conduct that deprives animals of food, water, shelter, or veterinary care.
Alabama Code Title 2, Chapter 14 requires all beekeepers to register colonies with the Department of Agriculture and Industries and complies with state apiary inspection and disease control standards.
Alabama's Right to Farm Act protects agricultural operations from nuisance suits and limits municipal restrictions on bona fide farms, while statewide livestock laws govern fence-out and stock-running rules.
Alabama law requires dogs over three months to be vaccinated against rabies and prohibits dogs from running at large in certain circumstances, while leash specifics remain local.
Alabama prohibits possession, sale, and importation of many nonindigenous and venomous species under Department of Conservation regulation 220-2-.26, applying uniformly statewide regardless of municipal preference.
Alabama Department of Conservation regulations restrict baiting and feeding of deer and other game animals statewide during hunting seasons, with separate rules on bear feeding and migratory bird baiting under federal law.
Alabama partition fence law under Code Title 3 Chapter 4 governs livestock fencing duties between adjoining landowners. Boundary line disputes follow common law principles applied uniformly statewide through Alabama courts.
Alabama enforces residential swimming pool barrier rules through the statewide adopted International Residential Code, requiring four-foot fences, self-closing gates, and self-latching mechanisms around private pools to prevent child drownings statewide.
Alabama regulates the manufacture, sale, storage, and use of consumer fireworks statewide through the State Fire Marshal under Title 8, Chapter 17, requiring permits for sellers and limiting municipal authority to ban consumer fireworks outright.
Alabama requires a state burn permit from the Alabama Forestry Commission for most outdoor burning of forest, grass, woods, and brush during fire season, applying universally across counties and unincorporated areas regardless of local rules.
The Alabama Liquefied Petroleum Gas Board regulates the storage, handling, transportation, and installation of propane and LP-gas systems statewide under Title 9, Chapter 17, with uniform requirements that preempt conflicting local ordinances on tank installation and licensing.
Alabama state law authorizes the Governor and Forestry Commission to declare drought emergencies and statewide or regional burn bans that preempt local rules, prohibiting outdoor burning during high wildfire danger periods across affected counties.
Alabama's Cottage Food Law allows home producers to sell certain non-potentially hazardous foods directly to consumers without inspection, subject to a statewide $20,000 annual sales cap, mandatory training, and specific labeling requirements.
Alabama requires statewide Department of Human Resources licensing for family day care homes serving seven to twelve children, with mandatory background checks, fire inspections, and minimum standards that municipalities cannot relax through local ordinances.
Alabama's Forest Resources Act and Right-to-Farm Act limit local regulation of timber harvesting and silvicultural tree cutting on land classified as forest or agricultural. Municipalities cannot prohibit bona fide forestry operations conducted under accepted best management practices.
The Alabama Water Resources Act (Ala. Code Title 9, Chapter 10B) gives the Office of Water Resources authority to declare drought stages and trigger conservation measures. Local water restrictions must operate within this statewide drought management framework administered by ADECA.
Alabama has adopted the International Residential Code, which mandates four-foot barriers around residential swimming pools statewide, providing a uniform baseline for pool fencing enforced by local building officials.
Alabama Administrative Code 420-3-23, enforced by the Department of Public Health, sets statewide standards for water chemistry, lifeguards, signage, and depth markers at all public and semi-public swimming pools.
Alabama medical cannabis dispensaries operate only under Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission licenses with statewide siting standards including 1,000-foot school buffers; cities may add zoning restrictions or opt out entirely but cannot loosen state requirements.
Alabama prohibits all home cultivation of cannabis statewide. Even patients enrolled in the medical cannabis program cannot grow plants at home; only licensed cultivators authorized by the Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission may produce cannabis lawfully.
Alabama preempts local UAS regulation, leaving commercial drone operations governed by FAA Part 107 and state privacy statutes. Operators must hold a Remote Pilot Certificate and follow uniform statewide rules for surveys, photography, and inspections.
Alabama law preempts municipal regulation of unmanned aircraft systems, reserving drone rules to the state and FAA. Recreational pilots must follow FAA Part 107 hobbyist standards and avoid harassment, but cities cannot impose their own flight bans.
Alabama Code Section 11-43-26 preempts cities and counties from setting local minimum wage rates, leaving the federal minimum wage as the floor statewide.
Alabama Code Section 11-43-26 preempts cities and counties from mandating paid sick leave, paid family leave, or other employment benefits beyond state and federal law.
Alabama Code Section 11-43-26 prevents local governments from imposing predictive scheduling, fair workweek, or shift notification mandates on private employers.
Alabama's Coastal Area Management Program, administered by ADEM under Code Β§9-7, regulates development in Mobile and Baldwin counties' coastal zones, requiring permits for construction near beaches, dunes, and tidal waters that local cities cannot waive.
Alabama law and ADEM regulations require erosion and sediment control on construction sites statewide, mandating Best Management Practices, certified personnel, and routine inspections for any earth disturbance under NPDES permit coverage.
Alabama participates in the National Flood Insurance Program through ADECA's Office of Water Resources, requiring local floodplain ordinances meeting FEMA minimums; municipalities cannot opt out without losing federal flood insurance availability.
Alabama enforces stormwater management statewide through ADEM's NPDES permits, requiring construction sites over one acre and MS4 communities to implement erosion controls, sediment basins, and post-construction best management practices regardless of city location.
Alabama allows permitless concealed carry of handguns for lawful adults, while still issuing optional permits for reciprocity, with state preemption blocking local restrictions.
Alabama law preempts most local firearm regulations, reserving authority over guns, ammunition, and accessories exclusively to the state legislature under Code Section 13A-11-61.3.
Alabama generally permits open carry of firearms for lawful adults, with local governments preempted from imposing stricter regulations under Code Section 13A-11-61.3.
Alabama Code Section 13A-11-73 allows lawful adults aged 19 and over to carry a handgun in a vehicle without a permit, subject to state preemption.
Under the Alabama Homeowners' Association Act, an association has a lien on each lot for unpaid assessments, plus interest and costs the declaration allows. The lien is recorded in probate within 12 months and may be foreclosed by judicial sale after 30 days' notice. Late-fee and interest amounts come from the declaration, not the statute.
The Alabama HOA Act requires associations to give members and prospective buyers key records within 30 days of a written request (Ala. Code Β§ 35-20-13) and to send notice of the first board-election meeting within 120 days of the members' right to elect (Β§ 35-20-9). Meetings follow nonprofit-corporation law; there is no statutory open-meeting mandate.
The Alabama HOA Act makes the recorded declaration the controlling document and lets the board enforce covenants by assessing reasonable penalties after a hearing under Ala. Code Β§ 35-20-11. The Act itself sets no architectural-review or violation-notice procedure, so those steps come from the declaration and the board's adopted rules.
Under Ala. Code Β§ 35-20-11, an Alabama HOA board may assess "reasonable penalties" for violations of the declaration or board rules, but only after the member is given an opportunity to be heard and to be represented by counsel before the board. The Act sets no dollar cap; fines must merely be reasonable.
Alabama places few statutory limits on HOA authority. Ala. Code Β§ 35-1-5 voids any covenant that bars flying a U.S. flag up to 40 square feet. But Alabama has no solar-access, clothesline, EV-charging, or political-sign statute overriding HOAs, so for those issues the recorded declaration controls.
Alabama Code Title 31 Chapter 13 requires every employer in the state to enroll in and use the federal E-Verify program to confirm employee work authorization.
Alabama Code Title 31 Chapter 13, the Beason-Hammon Act, prohibits municipalities and counties from adopting sanctuary policies that limit immigration enforcement cooperation.
Under Ala. Code Β§ 35-9A-421 an Alabama landlord must give 7 business days' written notice for unpaid rent (pay or quit) and 7 business days to cure a material lease violation. After the notice expires, the landlord files an unlawful-detainer action; a contested case typically takes several weeks.
Ala. Code Β§ 35-9A-204 requires Alabama landlords to keep rentals habitable, comply with health-and-safety codes, and maintain essential systems. If a landlord fails to fix a material defect, Β§ 35-9A-421 lets the tenant give written notice and terminate the lease if it is not cured within 14 days.
Alabama's Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (Ala. Code Title 35, Chapter 9A) provides the exclusive statutory framework for residential evictions. The act sets uniform notice requirements and grounds, and Alabama courts have consistently treated landlord-tenant law as a matter of statewide concern.
Under Ala. Code Β§ 35-9A-303 an Alabama landlord must give the tenant at least two days' notice and enter only at reasonable times for legitimate purposes such as repairs, inspection, or showings. No notice is required in a genuine emergency or by court order.
Alabama's Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act sets no maximum late fee and no mandatory grace period. Late fees are governed entirely by the lease; rent is late the day after it is due unless the lease says otherwise, though courts may refuse to enforce an unreasonable penalty.
Under Ala. Code Β§ 35-9A-441 either party ends a month-to-month tenancy with 30 days' written notice and a week-to-week tenancy with 7 days' notice. Breaking a fixed lease early generally requires landlord agreement or a statutory ground; federal SCRA protects servicemembers.
Rent control is illegal at the local level in Alabama. Ala. Code Β§ 11-80-8.1 preempts the field, barring any county, city, town, or municipality from enacting, maintaining, or enforcing an ordinance that controls the rent charged for private property. There is no statewide rent cap, and no Alabama city has rent control.
Alabama's Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act sets no specific notice period or dollar limit for raising rent. A landlord generally cannot raise rent mid-lease, but for month-to-month tenancies the lease terms govern, and there is no rent control anywhere in the state.
Alabama caps a residential security deposit at one month's rent under Ala. Code Β§ 35-9A-201, with exceptions for pets, alterations, and added liability risk. Landlords must return the deposit and provide an itemized accounting within 60 days of termination and delivery of possession, or owe double the deposit.
Alabama recognizes two adverse-possession paths: 20 years of open, continuous possession by prescription, or 10 years under Ala. Code Β§ 6-5-200 with color of title recorded, annual tax listing, or title by descent/devise. A mere trespasser holds no rights and can be removed through ordinary eviction or ejectment.
Alabama agricultural zoning interacts with Code Section 6-5-127 Right to Farm, limiting how local zoning changes can be used to declare established farms a nuisance.
Alabama Code Section 6-5-127 protects established farms from nuisance lawsuits when surrounding non-agricultural land use changes, supporting long-term agricultural operations.
Alabama Code Section 11-89C-10, enacted in 2019, preempts cities and counties from regulating, banning, or taxing auxiliary containers including plastic bags.
Polystyrene foam containers fall under Alabama Code Section 11-89C-10 auxiliary container preemption, blocking local bans on foam cups, plates, and takeout containers.
Plastic straws are preempted under Alabama Code Section 11-89C-10, prohibiting local governments from banning, restricting, or taxing single-use plastic straws.
Alabama prohibits the sale of tobacco, vapor, and alternative nicotine products to anyone under 21 under Code Section 28-11-13, aligning with federal Tobacco 21 law.
Alabama does not impose a statewide flavored tobacco or vape flavor ban, instead focusing regulation on age limits and retail permits under Code Section 28-11-13.
Alabama regulates the retail sale of vapor products and electronic nicotine devices through Code Section 28-11-13, requiring permits, age verification, and restricted youth marketing.