Loud Party Ordinance: Auburn vs Seattle
How do loud party ordinance rules compare between Auburn, WA and Seattle, WA?
Auburn and Seattle have similar restriction levels.
Auburn, WA
King County
King County and its cities respond to loud parties under noise ordinances and state disorderly conduct law (RCW 9A.84.030); a second response within a defined window can trigger costs charged to property owners.
View full Auburn rules βSeattle, WA
King County
Seattle's noise code SMC 25.08 sets nighttime residential quiet hours of 10pm-7am weekdays (10pm-9am weekends) and authorizes officers to cite or shut down loud parties as public disturbance noise, with escalating fines and possible response-cost reimbursement.
View full Seattle rules βKey Facts Comparison
| Fact | Auburn | Seattle |
|---|---|---|
| State law | RCW 9A.84.030 | - |
| First response | Usually warning | - |
| Second response | Citations, costs | - |
| Quiet hours | 10pm to 7am | - |
| Code section | - | SMC 25.08 |
| Weekday quiet hours | - | 10pm to 7am |
| Weekend quiet hours | - | 10pm to 9am |
| Base fine | - | $250 |
| Response billing | - | Second call within 90 days |
Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.
Auburn FAQ
Will police always cite the host on the first call?
Usually no. The Sheriff or city police typically issue a verbal warning first; subsequent responses within a defined window can trigger citations and cost recovery.
Can the property owner be billed?
Yes. Several King County cities have unruly gathering ordinances that allow officer response costs to be billed to the host and the property owner after a second response.
Seattle FAQ
Can I be cited without a decibel reading?
Yes. SPD may cite under the public-disturbance subsection when noise is plainly audible at a distance and disturbs reasonable people, with no instrument reading required.
What is the cost-recovery rule for parties?
If officers must return for a second loud-party call at the same address within 90 days, the host can be billed for the actual cost of the police response in addition to any fines.
Compare other topics
See how Auburn and Seattle compare on other ordinance categories.
Want to add a third city?
Use our full comparison tool to compare up to three cities.
Open Comparison Tool