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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Rainwater Harvesting

Dunedin vs Pinellas Park

How do rainwater harvesting rules compare between Dunedin, FL and Pinellas Park, FL?

Dunedin and Pinellas Park have similar restriction levels.

Dunedin, FL

Pinellas County

Few Restrictions

Rainwater harvesting is legal and encouraged in Dunedin. The city and SWFWMD promote rain barrels as a conservation tool, and there are no Dunedin-specific prohibitions, though structural cisterns may require building permits.

View full Dunedin rules →

Pinellas Park, FL

Pinellas County

Few Restrictions

Rainwater harvesting is legal across Florida, and Pinellas Park residents may use rain barrels and small cisterns for landscape irrigation. Larger plumbed cisterns or potable systems trigger building and plumbing permits.

View full Pinellas Park rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactDunedinPinellas Park
Permit neededPlumbed or large cisterns-
Small barrelsGenerally no permit-
Inlet ruleDebris screen required-
OverflowMust be properly sized-
HOA protectionFFL statute applies-
Rain barrels-Allowed without permit
Cisterns-Building permit required
Plumbing code-FBC Chapter 13
Mosquito rule-Must be screened

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Dunedin FAQ

Do I need a permit for a rain barrel in Dunedin?

A standard 50- to 60-gallon rain barrel under a downspout does not require a permit. Permits apply if you plumb the system into household irrigation or install large above-ground cisterns.

Can my HOA ban rain barrels in Dunedin?

Florida-Friendly Landscaping statute Sec. 373.185 limits HOAs from prohibiting reasonable conservation features including rain barrels, though they may impose neutral aesthetic standards on placement.

Pinellas Park FAQ

Can I install a rain barrel without a permit?

Yes. A standard residential rain barrel that captures roof runoff for outdoor irrigation does not need a city permit in Pinellas Park, as long as it is not tied into the home's plumbing and is screened against mosquitoes.

What about a larger cistern for whole-house irrigation?

Larger cisterns and any plumbed reuse system must meet Florida Plumbing Code Chapter 13 and require a building permit through Pinellas Park's Building Development Division. Backflow prevention is required if there is any potable cross-connection.

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