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πŸš— Parking Rules/RV & Boat Parking

RV & Boat Parking: Boulder vs Longmont

How do rv & boat parking rules compare between Boulder, CO and Longmont, CO?

Boulder has fewer restrictions than Longmont.

Boulder, CO

Boulder County

Some Restrictions

Boulder regulates RV, boat, and trailer storage on residential property. Front yard storage commonly restricted. HOAs often have stricter rules.

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Longmont, CO

Boulder County

Heavy Restrictions

Longmont prohibits parking a sleeper vehicle (camper coach, camper trailer, motor home, multi-purpose trailer, trailer coach, or recreational vehicle) on any public street, alley, or right-of-way without a temporary permit. The ban was adopted by the City Council in November 2020 and took effect January 1, 2021, codified in Longmont Municipal Code (LMC) Chapter 11.12. A 7-day permit is available from Code Enforcement for $25, capped at four per vehicle per calendar year, with no back-to-back issuance.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactBoulderLongmont
Front YardOften restricted-
Side/RearWith screening-
HOALikely stricter-
RegistrationMust be current-
Street RV Ban-Effective Jan 1, 2021 (LMC Ch. 11.12)
Permit Cost-$25 for 7 days
Annual Permit Cap-4 per vehicle, no back-to-back
Post-Permit Cooldown-7 days off the public way
Code Enforcement-303-651-8695

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Boulder FAQ

Can I park my RV in the driveway?

Check Boulder zoning. Many cities restrict visible RV storage. HOAs often prohibit it entirely.

What about on the street?

No statewide limit. Check Boulder street parking ordinance and posted signs.

Longmont FAQ

Can I park my RV on the street in front of my Longmont house?

Not without a permit. Longmont's RV/sleeper-vehicle ordinance, which took effect January 1, 2021 under LMC Chapter 11.12, prohibits parking a camper coach, camper trailer, motor home, multi-purpose trailer, trailer coach, or recreational vehicle on any public street, alley, or right-of-way. A resident may purchase a 7-day permit from Code Enforcement for $25, limited to four permits per vehicle per calendar year and not issued back-to-back. After a permit expires, the RV must stay off the public way for the next seven days.

Can I live in my RV on my own property in Longmont?

No. The Longmont Municipal Code prohibits using a sleeper vehicle as an accessory dwelling unit on a residential zoned lot. Even on your own driveway, you may not occupy an RV, camper, or converted van as a residence. Owner-occupied ADUs must be permitted, permanent structures meeting the Land Development Code. Questions about on-property RV storage and occupancy should go to Code Enforcement at 303-651-8695.

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