Bergen County does not regulate beekeeping countywide. New Jersey's Beekeeping Industry Act (N.J.S.A. 4:7-41 et seq.) governs hive registration with the state, while individual municipalities may impose lot-size and setback rules.
All beekeepers in Bergen County must register their colonies with the New Jersey Department of Agriculture under N.J.S.A. 4:7-41. The state mandates inspection access and disease reporting but does not cap hive numbers. Bergen County's 70 municipalities vary widely in local beekeeping rules: Ridgewood, Glen Rock, and Tenafly permit hobby beekeeping with setback requirements, while denser towns like Hackensack and Fort Lee may restrict or require special use permits. Best practice statewide includes maintaining water sources, six-foot flyway barriers near property lines, and gentle bee strains. Bergen County's Cooperative Extension office provides educational guidance through Rutgers.
State registration violations carry fines up to $500. Municipal nuisance citations vary, typically $100 to $1,000 per offense.
Englewood, NJ
Englewood limits residents to six hens per tract, prohibits roosters, and requires an annual license through the Board of Health.
Englewood, NJ
Englewood Chapter 129 prohibits accumulation of overgrown brush, grass, and weeds on any property within the City, with code enforcement empowered to compel ...
See how other cities in Bergen County handle beekeeping.
See how Englewood's beekeeping rules stack up against other locations.
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