Beaumont enforces quiet hours 10 PM to 6 AM in residential areas. Petrochemical refinery ambient noise is a factor in parts of the city. Beaumont PD responds to noise complaints.
Beaumont has no leaf blower-specific restrictions. General noise ordinance limits apply. DFW area is EPA ozone nonattainment but no equipment bans.
Beaumont hosts ExxonMobil's largest US refinery and other petrochemical facilities. Industrial operations create continuous ambient noise in nearby residential areas. TCEQ handles industrial complaints.
Beaumont restricts outdoor burning within city limits due to air quality concerns from nearby refineries. TCEQ 30 TAC Β§111.209 governs open burning. Jefferson County burn bans apply during drought conditions.
Most Texas cities ban all consumer fireworks within city limits. Unincorporated areas allow 1.4G consumer types during designated periods.
Beaumont requires property owners to maintain clearance around structures. Fire marshal may inspect during drought conditions. Vacant lots must be maintained.
Beaumont allows recreational fire pits with conditions. County burn bans apply during drought. Gas pits exempt from burn bans. TCEQ rules apply.
Beaumont may have wildfire hazard zones requiring defensible space around structures, fire-resistant building materials, and vegetation management.
Beaumont may require designated parking for STR guests. Parking plan may be part of STR permit. No statewide parking time limit in Texas.
Beaumont requires registration for short-term rental properties. Hotel occupancy tax applies to all stays under 30 days. The city monitors platforms like Airbnb for compliance. Safety requirements include smoke detectors.
Texas State Hotel Occupancy Tax is 6%. Beaumont levies additional local HOT. Platforms auto-collect both. Total rates typically 11 to 15%.
Beaumont limits the number of guests allowed in short-term rental properties. Occupancy caps are typically based on bedroom count or square footage to protect neighborhood quality of life.
Beaumont may require hosts to carry liability insurance for short-term rental properties. Minimum coverage amounts vary by jurisdiction.
Beaumont STRs must comply with general noise ordinance. Many cities impose stricter quiet hours for rentals. Complaints can trigger permit review.
Beaumont regulates RV, boat, and trailer storage on residential property. Front yard storage may be restricted. HOAs often have stricter rules.
Beaumont restricts commercial vehicle parking in residential zones. Weight, size, and signage limits apply. Overnight heavy truck storage prohibited.
Beaumont enforces street parking restrictions locally. Texas has no statewide 72-hour rule. Posted signs and city ordinance govern.
Beaumont regulates electric vehicle charging infrastructure for residential and commercial properties. Building codes may require EV-ready parking in new construction.
Beaumont regulates overnight parking on public streets. Many areas restrict parking between certain hours or require permits for overnight street parking.
Beaumont prohibits storing abandoned, inoperable, or unregistered vehicles on public streets or visible on private property. Vehicles may be tagged and towed after a notice period.
Beaumont requires vehicles to be parked on improved surfaces. Parking on front lawns typically prohibited. Driveway modifications require permits.
Beaumont limits residential fences: typically 6 feet in rear/side, 4 feet in front yard. Corner lots have visibility requirements.
Texas has no shared fence cost statute. Each property owner is responsible for their own fence. No equivalent to Californiaβs Good Neighbor Fence Act.
Standard fences under 6 to 8 feet typically donβt require permits in Beaumont. Taller and masonry fences may need building permits.
Beaumont requires permits for retaining walls above a certain height, typically 4 feet. Engineering review may be required for taller walls.
Beaumont requires pool barriers meeting safety codes to prevent drowning. Fences must be at least 4 to 5 feet tall with self-closing, self-latching gates.
Beaumont regulates fence materials by zone. Wood, vinyl, wrought iron, and chain-link common. HOAs often impose stricter material requirements.
Beaumont requires dogs on leash in public. Off-leash in designated parks only. License and rabies vaccination required. TX HSC Β§822.013 covers dogs at large.
Beaumont may allow backyard chickens with limits. Roosters typically banned in residential areas. Livestock requires agricultural zoning or minimum lot size.
Beaumont may allow residential beekeeping with hive limits and setbacks. Africanized bee concerns in Texas. Regulations vary by city.
Texas does not ban specific dog breeds. Lillianβs Law (HSC Ch. 822) is behavior-based. Dangerous dog designations based on individual dogβs actions.
Beaumont restricts or prohibits intentional feeding of wildlife including deer, coyotes, and bears. Feeding wildlife creates public safety hazards and nuisance conditions.
Beaumont restricts ownership of exotic and wild animals. Many species require special permits or are prohibited entirely for public safety.
Beaumont enforces maximum grass and weed height. Overgrown properties subject to code compliance action and city abatement at ownerβs expense.
Beaumont enforces weed abatement for fire prevention and neighborhood maintenance. Vacant lots receive annual notices before peak growing season.
Beaumont may protect certain tree species. Oak wilt prevention: avoid pruning oaks February to June. Street trees are city property.
Beaumont enforces water conservation under local water district rules. Watering days and times designated. Drought stages may impose additional limits.
Beaumont regulates tree removal on private property through permits and size thresholds. Street trees are city-managed and cannot be removed by residents.
Beaumont allows residential rainwater harvesting. Texas has no significant state-level restrictions on rainwater collection for personal use.
Beaumont generally permits artificial turf installation with some requirements for drainage, appearance, and base preparation.
Beaumont may encourage or require native and drought-tolerant landscaping. Some areas restrict traditional grass lawns in favor of water-efficient alternatives.
Beaumont allows home occupations as accessory use in residential zones. Business license and possibly home occupation permit required.
Beaumont limits customer visits to home businesses. Traffic must not exceed residential norms. Retail walk-ins prohibited.
Beaumont allows licensed home daycare operations with limits on the number of children. State licensing and local zoning approval typically required.
Beaumont permits certain homemade food products to be sold directly to consumers under cottage food laws. Products must be non-potentially hazardous and properly labeled.
Beaumont prohibits external business signage at home occupations. No commercial evidence visible from the street.
Beaumont enforces pool safety requirements including anti-entrapment drain covers (VGB Act), barriers, alarms, and depth markers.
Beaumont requires pool barriers to prevent unsupervised child access. Minimum 48-inch height per Texas standards. Self-closing, self-latching gates.
Beaumont regulates hot tub and spa installation including electrical permits, barrier requirements, and placement rules.
Beaumont regulates above-ground pools including permit requirements, setbacks, and barrier standards. Pools over a certain depth or capacity typically require permits.
Beaumont requires building permits for pools, spas, and hot tubs. Inspections required for electrical, plumbing, and barriers.
Beaumont may allow garage conversions with permits. Texas has no statewide garage conversion mandate. Replacement parking may be required.
Beaumont allows small sheds without permits (typically under 120 to 200 sq ft). Larger structures need building permits. Setback requirements apply.
Beaumont regulates accessory dwelling units through zoning. Texas has no statewide ADU mandate. Rules vary significantly by city.
Beaumont requires permits for carport construction. Setback requirements, height limits, and lot coverage maximums apply.
Beaumont regulates tiny homes differently based on whether they are on a permanent foundation or on wheels. Zoning and minimum square footage requirements apply.
Beaumont experienced catastrophic flooding during Hurricane Harvey in 2017. The city has extensive FEMA flood zones along the Neches River. Drainage improvements are ongoing. Flood insurance widely required.
Beaumont regulates development in coastal zones through setback requirements, habitat protections, and public access mandates. State coastal commission approval may be required for projects near the shoreline.
Beaumont requires stormwater management for new development and significant property modifications. Runoff must be controlled on-site through retention, detention, or infiltration systems.
Beaumont requires grading permits for significant earth-moving work. Drainage must not redirect water onto neighboring properties. Proper grading prevents erosion and flooding.
Beaumont requires erosion and sediment control measures during all land-disturbing activities. Silt fences, erosion blankets, and stabilized construction entrances are standard requirements.
Beaumont requires bins placed at the curb with lids closed on collection day. Bins must be removed from the curb within a set timeframe after pickup.
Beaumont requires residential recycling of accepted materials. Contamination with non-recyclables may cause entire bins to be rejected at the curb.
Beaumont offers scheduled bulk item pickup for large items like furniture and appliances. Advance scheduling typically required. Some items may need special handling.
Beaumont provides weekly curbside trash and recycling collection on designated days. Missed pickups can be reported to Texas waste haulers or municipal services.
Beaumont requires food trucks to obtain a mobile food vendor permit and health department approval. Annual licensing and vehicle inspections are typically required.
Beaumont designates approved vending zones for food trucks. Distance requirements from brick-and-mortar restaurants and schools typically apply.
Beaumont commercial drone operators must hold a Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate from the FAA. Additional local permits may be required for filming or surveying.
Beaumont recreational drone use is governed by FAA rules and local ordinances. Drones under 55 lbs must be registered with the FAA. No flying near airports.
Beaumont requires door-to-door solicitors and peddlers to obtain a permit. Background checks and identification badges are commonly required.
Beaumont maintains a no-knock or no-soliciting registry that residents can join. Solicitors who ignore posted signs or registry listings face fines.
Beaumont parks close at posted hours, typically dusk or 10 to 11 PM. After-hours presence is a trespassing violation enforced by police.
Beaumont enforces a juvenile curfew for minors under 17. Nighttime curfew hours typically run 11 PM to 6 AM on school nights with later weekend hours.
Beaumont zoning code sets maximum building heights by district. Residential zones typically limit structures to 35 feet or 2 to 3 stories.
Beaumont zoning code requires minimum setback distances from property lines for all structures. Setbacks vary by zoning district and structure type.
Beaumont limits the percentage of a lot that can be covered by impervious surfaces and structures. Residential lots typically allow 40 to 60% coverage.
Beaumont requires replacement planting when permitted trees are removed. Replacement ratios and species specifications ensure canopy preservation.
Beaumont requires permits to remove trees above a certain size on private property. Protected species and street trees have additional restrictions.
Beaumont designates heritage or landmark trees based on size, age, or species. Removal or damage to heritage trees carries significant penalties.
Beaumont restricts garage sale hours to daytime periods, typically 8 AM to 6 PM or sunrise to sunset. Weekend sales are most common.
Beaumont limits the number of garage or yard sales per household per year. Typical limits range from 2 to 4 sales annually to prevent commercial activity.
Beaumont may require a free or low-cost permit for garage and yard sales. Permit ensures compliance with time, signage, and frequency limits.
Beaumont requires garage and yard sales to maintain property appearance. Items must be displayed neatly and removed promptly after the sale ends.
Beaumont regulates where trash and recycling bins can be stored and placed for collection. Bins must typically be screened from street view between pickup days.
Beaumont requires vacant lot owners to maintain their property including regular mowing, weed control, trash removal, and securing the site against trespass.
Beaumont enforces property maintenance standards to prevent blight. Unmaintained properties with peeling paint, broken windows, or accumulated debris may face code violations.
Beaumont does not typically experience snow accumulation requiring formal clearing ordinances. General sidewalk maintenance and debris removal may still apply.
Beaumont prohibits home cannabis cultivation. State law does not permit recreational or medical marijuana growing. Possession of cannabis plants may result in criminal charges.
Beaumont does not permit cannabis dispensaries. State law prohibits the sale of recreational and medical marijuana. Any cannabis sales operations face criminal prosecution.
Beaumont prohibits outdoor lighting that causes unreasonable glare or illumination on neighboring properties. Light trespass complaints are handled through code enforcement.
Beaumont regulates outdoor lighting to reduce light pollution and glare. Fully shielded fixtures required for new installations. Lighting must be directed downward and not trespass onto neighboring properties.
Beaumont does not have rent control. State law preempts local rent control ordinances, meaning municipalities cannot cap rent increases. Market rates apply to all rental properties.
Beaumont follows state landlord-tenant law for evictions. Landlords must follow proper notice procedures but may not need to state cause for non-renewal of month-to-month tenancies in most cases.
Beaumont may require landlords to register rental properties with the city and maintain compliance with housing codes. Registration helps ensure rental units meet safety and habitability standards.
Beaumont requires building permits for solar panel installations. Permit processes vary but most jurisdictions have streamlined solar permitting. Roof-mounted systems must meet structural and electrical code requirements.
Beaumont residents in HOA communities benefit from state solar access laws that limit HOA ability to prohibit solar panels. HOAs may regulate placement but cannot effectively ban solar installations.
Beaumont allows temporary garage sale signs with restrictions on size, placement, and duration. Signs in public rights-of-way may be prohibited. Signs must be removed immediately after the sale.
Beaumont generally permits holiday decorations and displays on residential property with minimal restrictions. Displays should not create traffic hazards, excessive noise, or fire risks. HOA rules may add limits.
Beaumont allows political signs on private property with size limits. Signs in public rights-of-way are typically prohibited. First Amendment protections apply. Removal required within a set period after elections.
Texas Labor Code Section 62.0515 expressly preempts municipal and county minimum wage ordinances. The state minimum wage equals the federal floor of $7.25 per hour, and political subdivisions cannot require private employers to pay more, except for their own contracts.
Texas appellate courts have struck down municipal paid sick leave ordinances in Austin, Dallas, and San Antonio as preempted under the Texas Minimum Wage Act. HB 2127 (2023) further codifies preemption by barring local regulation of employment benefits and leave policies.
HB 2127 (2023), the Texas Regulatory Consistency Act, preempts municipal predictive or fair workweek scheduling ordinances. Texas cities cannot require employers to provide advance schedule notice, predictability pay, or rest periods between shifts beyond state law.
Texas authorizes License to Carry (LTC) holders to carry concealed handguns statewide under Government Code Chapter 411. Since 2021, permitless constitutional carry under HB 1927 also allows most adults 21 and older to carry without a license, with municipalities preempted from added restrictions.
Texas Local Government Code Section 229.001 broadly preempts municipal regulation of firearms, ammunition, knives, and related accessories. Cities cannot adopt or enforce ordinances regulating the transfer, ownership, possession, transport, or discharge of firearms beyond narrow exceptions for discharge in densely populated areas.
Texas authorizes open carry of holstered handguns statewide for adults 21 and older under Penal Code 46.02 and HB 910 (2015). Long guns may be openly carried subject to disorderly conduct limits. Municipalities cannot impose additional open carry restrictions.
Texas Penal Code 46.02(a-1) lets any non-prohibited adult lawfully carry a handgun inside a personally-owned or leased motor vehicle or watercraft without a License to Carry, provided the firearm is not in plain view and the person is not engaged in criminal activity or gang membership.
Texas Government Code Chapter 673 requires every state agency and any business that contracts with a state agency to register for and use the federal E-Verify system to confirm the work eligibility of new employees. Private-sector E-Verify use is generally voluntary statewide.
Texas Government Code Chapter 752, enacted by Senate Bill 4 in 2017, prohibits any local entity, campus police department, or jail from adopting sanctuary policies. Local officials must honor federal immigration detainer requests and may not bar officers from inquiring about immigration status.
Texas Local Government Code Chapter 212 and Agriculture Code Chapter 251 limit municipal authority to zone or regulate land qualified for agricultural use appraisal. Counties have no general zoning authority, and cities face restrictions on annexing or imposing land use rules on established farms.
The Texas Right to Farm Act, Agriculture Code Chapter 251, protects established agricultural operations from nuisance lawsuits and local regulations after one year of operation. SB 1421 (2023) significantly strengthened protections, preempting municipal ordinances that restrict generally accepted agricultural practices.
The Texas Supreme Court in City of Laredo v. Laredo Merchants Association (2018) held that Health and Safety Code Section 361.0961 preempts municipal plastic bag bans. Cities and counties cannot prohibit or restrict retail use of plastic checkout bags as containers or packages.
Health and Safety Code Section 361.0961 also preempts municipal bans on polystyrene foam containers used for food service. The same statute that struck down plastic bag bans prevents Texas cities from prohibiting expanded polystyrene cups, plates, and takeout packaging.
Plastic straw bans by Texas municipalities are preempted under Health and Safety Code Section 361.0961 and reinforced by HB 2127 (2023). Cities cannot prohibit or restrict food service businesses from offering single-use plastic straws to customers.