100 local rules on file Β· Pop. 23,447 Β· Escambia County
Showing ordinances that apply to Brent, FL
Brent is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 23,447 in Escambia County, Florida. Because Brent is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Escambia County ordinances apply directly to residential and commercial properties here. The rules below are the county-level regulations that govern your area. Nearby incorporated cities in Escambia County may have different rules.
Sounding a vehicle horn or signaling device for more than ten consecutive seconds (except as a danger warning) is a per se violation in unincorporated Escambia County. Pensacola also bars unmuffled exhaust and defective vehicles that create loud grinding or rattling noise.
Unreasonably loud noise from any animal or bird is a per se violation of the County Noise Abatement Ordinance. A person is responsible if they own, control or care for the animal. Pensacola separately bars animals whose frequent or long-continued noise disturbs neighbors.
Unincorporated Escambia County has no blanket decibel curfew; the County Noise Abatement Ordinance (Code Ch. 42) bars unreasonably loud amplified sound at night. Loudspeakers and PA systems are restricted 10:00 p.m.-7:00 a.m. weekdays and 10:00 p.m.-10:00 a.m. weekends and holidays.
Neither Escambia County nor Pensacola has a dedicated leaf-blower ordinance or a gas-blower ban. Leaf-blower noise is governed by the general prohibition on unreasonably loud sound in the County Noise Abatement Ordinance (Sec. 42-64), judged by volume, time and proximity to homes.
Outdoor concerts, festivals and public events that will exceed noise limits need a permit (a limited waiver) from the Escambia County Board of County Commissioners. Without stated times, a permit cannot allow excessive noise before 12:00 noon, past 10:30 p.m., or for more than four hours.
In the City of Pensacola, building erection, excavation, demolition, alteration or repair is limited to 6:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Loud construction equipment (pile drivers, pneumatic hammers, hoists) may not run 6:00 p.m.-7:00 a.m. or at any time on Sundays.
Playing a radio, stereo, boombox or instrument that is plainly audible 100 feet away in a commercial, industrial or public space is a per se violation in unincorporated Escambia County. Sound that unreasonably disturbs neighbors in residential areas is also prohibited under Sec. 42-65(e).
Most of unincorporated Escambia County uses a reasonableness standard, not fixed decibels. But Santa Rosa Island (Pensacola Beach) and Perdido Key have objective caps: 70 dbA in the Pensacola Beach core; 65 dbA (day) and 55 dbA (10 p.m.-7 a.m.) elsewhere on the island; 70 dbA average on Perdido Key.
Escambia County has no separate industrial decibel table for most areas; industrial and commercial noise is judged under the general unreasonableness standard, which expressly weighs the zoning of the area. Loud loading and unloading of vehicles or vessels at a business or residence is a per se violation.
Escambia County does not regulate aircraft noise. Aircraft operations, including from Naval Air Station Pensacola and Pensacola International Airport, are governed by federal law; the FAA controls navigable airspace, and local noise ordinances (Code Ch. 42) do not apply to aircraft in flight.
Escambia charges a 5% Tourist Development ("bed") tax on stays of six months or less, on top of Florida's 7.5% sales and discretionary surtaxβcollected from the guest and remitted to the Clerk.
Escambia County sets no vacation-rental-specific occupancy cap in unincorporated areas. Limits follow the property's DBPR license, building and fire code, and any condo or HOA rules, which are common on the beach.
Florida requires a DBPR vacation-rental license before renting a whole home short-term. Escambia County (unincorporated Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key) adds no operating permit but requires Tourist Development Tax registration.
Escambia County has no vacation-rental-specific parking ordinance for unincorporated areas. Guests use on-site or driveway parking and follow general traffic, fire-lane, and right-of-way rules; beach lots are separately managed.
Florida preempts local licensing and inspection of lodging to the state, so Escambia "registration" is limited to a Tourist Development Tax account with the Clerk plus a DBPR licenseβnot a discretionary local approval to operate.
Vacation-rental guests must follow the same Escambia County noise ordinance as residents. Noise is not preempted like rental duration, so the county can enforce itβstrictest during overnight hours.
Escambia County imposes no short-term-rental insurance mandate, and Florida's vacation-rental statutes require none either. But coastal lenders, condo associations, and platforms commonly require coverage.
Escambia County cannot require a vacation rental to be the owner's primary residence. State law bars local rules that prohibit rentals, so whole-home, non-owner-occupied beach rentals are lawful.
Escambia County does not require a host to be on-site during a stay. State preemption bars local host-presence mandates, though owners should provide a reachable responsible party for their licensed rental.
Escambia County and Pensacola cannot set minimum-night stays, annual night caps, or limits on how often a home is rented. Florida law expressly bars local rules on rental duration or frequency.
Escambia County allows burning of dry yard debris only, between 8 a.m. and one hour before sunset, in a pile no larger than 8 feet across, with strict setbacks from structures and roads. Garbage burning is illegal, and all open burning stops during a burn ban or when the Drought
Florida imposes no statewide defensible-space or brush-clearance mandate like California's, and Escambia County does not require homeowners to clear vegetation around houses. Clearing is strongly encouraged through the voluntary Firewise USA and Florida Forest Service programs, especially in Panhandle wildfire-prone neighborhoods.
Backyard campfires and bonfires are 'open burning' under Escambia County Code Sec. 50-1 and are prohibited whenever the Florida Forest Service Drought Index reaches 700 or a burn ban is declared. Outdoor cooking in grills and smokers is exempt. Keep any legal fire attended and clear of structures.
Florida Statute 553.883 governs smoke alarms in Escambia County homes. Homes and townhomes undergoing a repair or Level 1 alteration may use 10-year sealed-battery smoke alarms instead of rewiring. The Florida Building and Fire codes require alarms in each bedroom, outside each sleeping area, and on every level.
Florida does not map mandatory Fire Hazard Severity Zones the way California does, so Escambia County homeowners face no zone-based building or clearance mandate. The Panhandle is genuine wildland-urban-interface (WUI) territory, and the Florida Forest Service and Firewise USA manage risk through voluntary programs.
Consumer fireworks are legal in Escambia County only on three designated holidays under Florida law: New Year's Eve (Dec 31), New Year's Day (Jan 1), and Independence Day (July 4). County Code Sec. 50-1 otherwise prohibits fireworks, and even sparklers are banned during a declared burn ban.
Recreational fires such as campfires and fire pits count as 'open burning' under Escambia County Code Sec. 50-1. They are prohibited whenever the Florida Forest Service Drought Index reaches 700 or the Fire Chief declares a burn ban. Outdoor cooking in barbecue grills and smokers is expressly exempt.
Propane storage in Escambia County follows the statewide Florida Fire Prevention Code (NFPA 1 and NFPA 58). Standard 20-lb barbecue cylinders are fine at single-family homes, but in apartments and condos LP-gas cylinders and grills may not be stored or used on balconies or within 10 feet of a building.
In the City of Pensacola you may not park on a street in a way that leaves less than ten feet of roadway open for traffic. On unincorporated county roads, parking is governed by Florida's Uniform Traffic Control Law and posted tow-away zones.
In unincorporated Escambia County, one or more inoperable vehicles on a lot is a code-enforceable nuisance. The owner must remove the vehicle or move it to a rear yard behind a six-foot opaque fence. Statewide, F.S. ch. 705 governs abandoned-vehicle removal.
In the City of Pensacola, RVs, campers and boats (major recreational equipment) may be stored on residential premises in a garage, the driveway, or a rear yard kept three feet off the property lines. In the unincorporated county, an inoperable RV or boat parked in view becomes a code-enforceable nuisance.
The City of Pensacola makes it unlawful to park a vehicle on residential property without proper curb-cut driveway access, to protect sidewalks and traffic flow. Residents may not simply park across a lawn or curb. Escambia County's Land Development Code sets driveway and access standards for the unincorporated county.
The City of Pensacola bars small commercial vehicles from residential rights-of-way from 6:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. and limits large commercial vehicles to loading only. In unincorporated Escambia County, no vehicle over 10,500 pounds may park on a county road right-of-way except for pickups or deliveries.
In public parking areas across Escambia County, oversized vehicles like motor homes and single-unit trucks may use up to two spaces, and rigs pulling trailers may use the minimum spaces needed, so long as traffic and vision are not blocked. Vehicles over 10,500 pounds are barred from county road rights-of-way.
The City of Pensacola has no general overnight ban on passenger cars but treats a vehicle left in one spot over 72 hours as prohibited storage (24 hours downtown). In unincorporated Escambia County, overnight camper, boat and trailer parking on public property is banned midnight to 6:00 a.m.
In the City of Pensacola, passenger curb loading zones may be used only for loading or unloading passengers, up to five minutes. Freight curb loading zones are for delivery and pickup of materials, up to 30 minutes. Business-district alleys allow loading up to 20 minutes.
Neither Escambia County nor the City of Pensacola has a parking ordinance requiring, regulating or restricting residential electric-vehicle charging. Home chargers are installed under the Florida-adopted building and electrical codes with a permit; home charging is generally allowed.
Curb and pavement markings that control parking are official traffic-control devices installed only by the government. In Pensacola the public works director plans and maintains them; in Escambia County fire and emergency lanes must carry official red or yellow markings. Residents may not paint curbs to reserve parking.
Escambia County LDC Β§ 5-9.4(a) measures fence height by averaging readings taken at 8-foot intervals along the property line, including any berm or sloping ground. Barbed-wire and electrified fences are limited to rural (A, RR, RMU) districts; below-ground electric fences are allowed in all residential districts.
The City of Pensacola bans electrical fences and fences with cutting edges such as razor, ribbon or concertina wire (Code Β§ 12-3-63). In unincorporated Escambia County, barbed wire and above-ground electric fences are allowed only in rural (A, RR, RMU) districts, not standard residential neighborhoods.
In unincorporated Escambia County, residential fences may reach 3 feet in the front yard (4 feet if transparent) and 8 feet in side and rear yards. In the City of Pensacola the limits are 4 feet 6 inches front and 6 feet 6 inches side and rear.
Escambia County LDC Β§ 5-9.4(b) lets fences go to the street right-of-way and to common (shared) property lines, but no fence may block visual clearance along a right-of-way or interfere with site drainage. The county does not set cost-sharing between neighbors; that is a private civil matter.
A standard residential fence in unincorporated Escambia County does not need a building permit, but it still needs land-use (zoning) approval from Development Services. County Code Β§ 14-89(3) exempts light-frame fences under 10 feet from a building permit while keeping the land-use review requirement.
In Escambia County a retaining wall over 4 feet tall (measured from the bottom of the footing to the top) needs a building permit, and any wall supporting a surcharge or impounding liquids needs one at any height. Walls 4 feet or under are permit-exempt under County Code Β§ 14-89(5).
Escambia County LDC Β§ 5-9.4(c) lists the fence materials suitable for use in unincorporated areas: masonry, chain link, chain link with slatting, wood, cast iron, aluminum, plastic, and precast concrete. Barbed and electrified fencing is restricted to rural districts under the same section.
Whether you may keep chickens depends on your zoning district under the Escambia County Land Development Code; agricultural and low-density parcels generally allow them. Florida's Right to Farm Act shields bona fide farm operations on agricultural land from most local restrictions.
Escambia County cannot ban or restrict registered honeybee colonies. Florida Statute 586.10 preempts beekeeping regulation to the state; keepers register with the Department of Agriculture and follow its best-management practices for hive placement.
Livestock β horses, cattle, goats, swine and other farm animals β is allowed on agricultural and larger rural residential parcels under Escambia County's Land Development Code, not in dense residential districts. Florida's Right to Farm Act protects established agricultural operations.
In unincorporated Escambia County, dogs may not roam free on public or private property without the owner's consent and must be under direct physical control off your property. Declared dangerous dogs must be muzzled and leashed whenever outside their enclosure.
Escambia County cannot ban or restrict any dog by breed. Florida Statute 767.14 prohibits local governments from adopting breed-, weight-, or size-specific dog regulations, so pit bulls and other breeds are treated the same as any other dog.
Escambia County Code defines 'wild animal' broadly and excludes ordinary domestic pets. Keeping true exotic or wild species is governed statewide by Florida FWC captive-wildlife permitting, which classifies animals into Class I, II, and III and requires permits.
Escambia County's animal code sets no fixed numeric limit on how many dogs or cats a household may keep. Instead, all animals must be licensed and vaccinated, and any that create a nuisance can be enforced against regardless of count.
Feeding wild animals is restricted statewide by Florida FWC rules. It is illegal to intentionally feed bears, alligators, crocodiles, and several other species; violations escalate from civil penalties to criminal misdemeanors under F.S. Β§ 379.412.
Cats are 'animals' under Escambia County Code and are subject to the same at-large and nuisance rules as dogs, though there is no cat leash mandate. Registered community (feral) cats in the county's TNR program are exempt from the roaming-at-large rule.
Escambia County has no separate 'hoarding' ordinance, but keeping animals without adequate food, water, air, and shelter is unlawful animal cruelty under Code Β§ 10-16, which adopts Florida's cruelty statute F.S. Β§ 828.13. Neglected or confined animals can be seized.
Escambia County sets no fixed grass-height number. Overgrown vegetation on residential or commercial lots in the unincorporated county is a code-enforceable nuisance that must be cleared. Agricultural land and qualifying natural-state parcels are exempt.
On single-family residential lots, Florida Statute 163.045 lets you remove a tree without county permit, fee, or mitigation when an ISA-certified arborist documents it poses an unacceptable risk, and the county cannot force you to replant.
For a single-family home, if a certified arborist documents that a tree is a danger, Escambia County cannot require a permit or fee to trim or remove it. Routine trimming of your own trees needs no county permit.
Escambia County's Nuisance Abatement Ordinance (Code ch. 42, art. VI) treats overgrown weeds, grass, and shrubbery as a nuisance in the unincorporated county. Property owners must remove the growth; there is no set height number.
Escambia County lies in the Northwest Florida Water Management District, which imposes no year-round day-of-week irrigation schedule. The county sets no mandatory watering days; restrictions apply only during a declared water shortage. Follow ECUA guidance.
Florida law protects Florida-Friendly Landscaping. Neither Escambia County nor an HOA may prohibit a homeowner from installing native, drought-tolerant landscaping. Genuine overgrowth still cannot become a nuisance, but water-wise native plantings are expressly allowed.
Backyard composting is allowed in Escambia County; no ordinance bans home compost piles. A pile must be maintained so it does not become a nuisance that harbors rats, vermin, or flies under the county's nuisance code.
Escambia County has no ordinance restricting residential rainwater harvesting. Homeowners may install rain barrels and cisterns for landscape irrigation without a county permit, and Florida promotes rainwater capture for conservation.
Escambia County's code does not specifically permit or ban artificial turf on residential lots; there is no county-wide synthetic-turf ordinance. Its use is governed by general zoning, drainage, and landscaping standards, plus any HOA rules.
A new residential pool in Escambia County must have at least one safety feature: a 4-foot barrier, an approved safety cover, exit alarms on doors/windows, self-closing self-latching door devices, or an in-pool alarm.
Above-ground pools holding water over 24 inches deep are 'residential swimming pools' under Florida law, so the same barrier and safety-feature rules apply. A county building permit is still required.
Residential pools in unincorporated Escambia County need a county building permit under the Florida Building Code. Before final inspection and a certificate of completion, the pool must have at least one state-required safety feature.
Under Florida's Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act, a pool barrier must be at least 4 feet high on the outside, have no gaps a child could pass through, and gates must be self-closing and self-latching.
Hot tubs and nonportable spas holding water over 24 inches deep are 'residential swimming pools' under Florida law. An approved safety pool cover satisfies the safety-feature requirement for a hot tub.
In unincorporated Escambia County, home occupations are allowed as accessory uses wherever the dwelling is allowed, but must be unnoticeable to neighbors. Larger home-based businesses are limited to rural districts (Agr, RR, RMU).
Florida cottage food operations selling up to $250,000 a year need no state food permit and can operate from a home kitchen. Products must be labeled and sold directly to consumers, not wholesale.
A home occupation may show no exterior evidence of the business, so on-premise signs are effectively barred. Signs are limited by the outdoor sign provisions in Article 8 of Chapter 5 of the Land Development Code.
Florida law prohibits local governments from requiring a special home-based-business license beyond what other businesses need. Escambia County requires you to hold all applicable business, professional, or occupational licenses before you start.
A Florida family day care home may care for up to 10 children depending on ages. It is a residential use, so Escambia County cannot zone it out of residential areas, but it must be registered or licensed with the state.
In unincorporated Escambia County, sheds and other accessory structures are limited to side and rear yards and are capped by size relative to the main house: on lots under two acres, no accessory structure may exceed 50 percent of the home's floor area.
Escambia County's Land Development Code allows accessory dwelling units on single-family lots in most mainland zoning districts, so long as the principal home and the ADU are the only two dwellings on the lot and the lot meets the district's minimum area.
Escambia County has no standalone garage-conversion ordinance. Turning a garage into a second living unit is treated as an accessory dwelling unit under LDC 4-7.3(b)(1), which requires the lot area and zoning to allow the extra dwelling, plus a Florida Building Code permit.
Escambia County has no separate tiny-home ordinance. A tiny house on a permanent foundation is a dwelling under the Florida Building Code; as a second unit it must meet the ADU conditions in LDC 4-7.3(b)(1). A tiny house on wheels is treated as an RV.
Escambia County's Land Development Code allows attached or detached carports of any material, but they must meet zoning setbacks, may encroach into the front yard only if at least 10 feet from the front property line, and generally need a building permit.
Backyard grilling is allowed and is exempt from Escambia County's open-burning rules. But under the Florida Fire Prevention Code (NFPA 1), charcoal and propane grills cannot be used on balconies, under overhangs, or within 10 feet of any multifamily building. Single-family homes may grill freely with fire-safe placement.
Backyard smokers are allowed and are expressly exempt from Escambia County's open-burning rules, even during a burn ban. But like grills, under the Florida Fire Prevention Code (NFPA 1) a smoker cannot be used on a balcony, under an overhang, or within 10 feet of a multifamily building.
In the Medium Density Residential (MDR) district, principal structures need a 20-foot front and rear setback and a 5-foot side setback (10 feet for attached townhouses). Low Density Residential (LDR) requires 25 feet front and rear. Setbacks vary by zoning district, so verify yours with Development Services.
Escambia County's residential districts require at least 30 percent of a lot to stay pervious, meaning no more than 70 percent may be covered by semi-impervious or impervious surfaces such as buildings, driveways and patios. The MDR and LDR districts also allow a maximum floor area ratio of 1.0.
Escambia County's Low Density and Medium Density Residential districts both cap structure height at 45 feet under the Land Development Code. Coastal areas such as Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key use separate height schedules, so beachfront and high-density lots should verify their district limits.
In unincorporated Escambia County, accumulated garbage, inoperable vehicles, and rat- or mosquito-harboring conditions are prohibited nuisances. Owners become liable once a condition persists 48 hours, whether or not they caused it, and Code Enforcement can abate it and lien the property.
Owners of vacant lots in unincorporated Escambia County must keep them clear of litter and overgrowth. An unauthorized accumulation of litter on any property, vacant or occupied, is a violation subject to county abatement and liens.
Escambia County bans permanent garbage-can racks or enclosures visible from the street; only a roll-out cart to the curb is allowed. Containers must be stored so they don't harbor rats or create a sanitary nuisance, and must be watertight and covered.
In unincorporated Escambia County, overgrowth on residentially or commercially classified land is a prohibited nuisance. The code sets no specific grass-height inch limit; owners must remove overgrowth or the county abates it and bills the cost as a lien.
Escambia County's code contains no specific ordinance regulating residential garage or yard sales in unincorporated areas, so no county permit is required. General litter and sign rules still apply, and City of Pensacola residents should check the city code separately.
Escambia County residents may not put garbage containers at the curb before 5:00 p.m. the day before collection, and must remove them by 7:30 p.m. on collection day. Waste goes within four feet of the road right-of-way, never in the street.
Recycling is a lawful disposal method in Escambia County, but the county code does not mandate that residents separate recyclables. Curbside recycling is offered through the franchised collection program; participation is encouraged, not required by ordinance.
In the county's mandatory-collection area, household waste is collected at least twice a week. County-franchised haulers must collect residential garbage at least twice weekly and rubbish at least once weekly, and holidays do not reduce the number of pickups.
Bulky waste, meaning large items that don't fit normal collection, isn't part of routine curbside pickup. Any Escambia County resident may haul their own bulky waste to a county-designated disposal site and pay the required fee.
Dumping or littering on public or private property in unincorporated Escambia County is prohibited. Refuse may not be placed in streets, ditches, lakes, or waterways, and owners are liable for litter left on their property more than 48 hours.
On Pensacola Beach, any light directly or indirectly visible from the marine beach must use wildlife-friendly lighting under Escambia County's Barrier Island Lighting Ordinance. Bulbs must be long-wavelength (under 580nm), shielded in full-cutoff fixtures, to protect nesting sea turtles.
On Perdido Key south of Semmes Road, all exterior lighting must be wildlife-friendly and no light may be visible outside the property's development footprint. Elsewhere in the county, light spilling onto a neighbor is handled through nuisance law or local standards.
Florida law lets you post campaign signs on your own property, but candidates must remove their signs within 30 days of the election under Fla. Stat. 106.1435. Signs may not be placed in the public road right-of-way, and county LDC sign standards apply.
Escambia County has no separate garage-sale-sign ordinance. Yard-sale signs are temporary signs under the county Land Development Code (Chapter 5, Article 8); they may not be placed in the public road right-of-way and should be removed promptly after the sale.
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Escambia County ordinances.