Most Union County municipalities prohibit backyard chickens due to dense suburban development. Elizabeth Chapter 6.04 bans all fowl in residential zones. Westfield, Summit, Cranford, and Linden prohibit chickens by zoning. Scotch Plains and Berkeley Heights (larger lots) permit limited hens with permits. Roosters prohibited countywide. Livestock limited to agricultural-zoned parcels which are rare in Union County. Union County Board of Health enforces sanitary violations under N.J.S.A. 26:3-64.
Union County's density (9th most densely populated US county, over 5,600 per sq mi) drives widespread backyard chicken prohibitions. Elizabeth Revised Ordinances Chapter 6.04.030 prohibits keeping of 'fowl' in any residential zone without explicit permission of the Board of Health, which is rarely granted. Westfield, Summit, Cranford, Linden, Rahway, Roselle, Kenilworth, Garwood, Mountainside, Plainfield, and Union Township all either prohibit chickens outright or require unobtainable variances. The few municipalities permitting backyard poultry include Scotch Plains (Chapter 10) which allows up to 6 hens (no roosters) on lots 10,000 sq ft or larger with a 25-foot coop setback, and Berkeley Heights which permits hens under local Board of Health approval with 50-foot neighbor setback. Winfield, Fanwood, and New Providence have no explicit chicken allowances. Larger livestock (goats, sheep, cattle, horses) are restricted to agricultural zoning which exists only in small portions of Berkeley Heights and Scotch Plains, and are effectively nonexistent in urban Elizabeth, Linden, and Plainfield. Union County Board of Health enforces sanitary violations under N.J.S.A. 26:3-64, including coop cleanliness, rodent control, and nuisance odors. Urban farming advocates have petitioned Elizabeth and Plainfield without success.
Elizabeth unauthorized fowl: $100 to $500 plus removal order. Scotch Plains over 6 hens or without permit: $250 per occurrence. Board of Health nuisance violation: $50 to $1,000 per day under N.J.S.A. 26:3-64. Roosters countywide: removal order within 7 days.
Cranford, NJ
Cranford regulates noise through two chapters of its Code: Chapter 310 (Peace and Good Order) β which prohibits loud, unnecessary or unusual noise plainly au...
Union County, NJ
Union County municipalities restrict leaf blower operation by hour, with Westfield, Summit, and Maplewood-adjacent Cranford imposing seasonal gas-blower limi...
Union County, NJ
Elizabeth Code Ch. 7.24 prohibits abandoned vehicles on streets (72-hr limit) or visible on private property. NJ's Abandoned Vehicle Law (N.J.S.A. 39:10A-1) ...
Union County, NJ
Elizabeth and Union County municipalities require building permits for retaining walls over 4 ft (measured from bottom of footing to top of wall) per N.J.A.C...
Union County, NJ
NJ Uniform Construction Code (N.J.A.C. 5:23-3.14) mandates minimum 4-ft pool barriers. Elizabeth and most Union County towns require 5-ft fences with self-cl...
Union County, NJ
Union County is urban/suburban with low wildfire risk β not a designated NJ Forest Fire Service high-hazard zone. NJ Forest Fire Service (N.J.S.A. 13:9-1) re...
See how Cranford's chickens & livestock rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.