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🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas/Fencing Requirements

Fencing Requirements: Bay Hill vs Orlando

How do fencing requirements rules compare between Bay Hill, FL and Orlando, FL?

Bay Hill and Orlando have similar restriction levels.

Bay Hill, FL

Orange County

Heavy Restrictions

Orange County enforces FL Β§515 Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act. Pool barriers must be minimum 48 inches high, non-climbable, with self-closing self-latching gates opening outward. At least one additional safety layer required.

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Orlando, FL

Orange County

Heavy Restrictions

Orlando enforces the Florida Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act (FL Stat 515.27), which requires every new residential pool, spa, or hot tub built since October 1, 2000 to have at least one of four approved safety features: a 4-foot non-climbable barrier with self-closing/self-latching gates, an approved safety pool cover, an exit-alarm system on every door and window opening to the pool area, or all doors providing direct access from the home equipped with self-closing, self-latching devices at least 54 inches above the floor.

View full Orlando rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactBay HillOrlando
Height48 inches min-
GateSelf-close self-latch-
Latch54 inches up-
OpeningsNo 4-inch passage-
State LawFL Β§515.27-
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Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Bay Hill FAQ

Who enforces this in Orange County?

Orange County code enforcement at (407) 836-3111 handles complaints.

Who enforces this in Orange County?

Orange County code enforcement at (407) 836-3111 handles complaints.

Orlando FAQ

Does my pool fence have to fully surround the pool, or can my house be one side?

FL Stat 515.27 allows the home wall to serve as one side of the barrier if the doors and windows opening to the pool area meet the alarm or self-closing/self-latching requirements. A four-sided isolation fence is safer and recommended but not legally required.

Do hot tubs and spas need barriers in Orlando?

Yes. The Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act applies to spas and hot tubs, though a locking, ASTM-rated rigid safety cover is the most common compliance option for spas.

Can I have a screen enclosure act as my pool barrier?

Yes, if the screen enclosure meets the height (48 inches), opening size (no 4-inch passes), and gate self-closing/self-latching requirements. Standard pool cages typically do meet these criteria.

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