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🪧 Sign Regulations/Political Signs

Political Signs: Inglewood vs Los Angeles

How do political signs rules compare between Inglewood, CA and Los Angeles, CA?

Inglewood has fewer restrictions than Los Angeles.

Inglewood, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

Political signs are protected by the First Amendment and CA Elections Code 18310. Cities cannot prohibit political signs on private residential property. Inglewood's sign code (IMC Article 23) may regulate size and placement but not content.

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Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Los Angeles regulates political signs as part of its content-neutral temporary sign rules under LAMC 91.6217. Residential properties may display temporary signs up to 12 square feet without a permit. Signs cannot be placed in the public right-of-way, on utility poles, or illuminated. After Reed v Gilbert, the city rewrote restrictions to apply equally to all temporary signs regardless of message.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactInglewoodLos Angeles
StatusProtected speech-
State LawCA Elections Code 18310-
Private PropertyCannot be prohibited-
Sign CodeIMC Article 23-
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Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Inglewood FAQ

Can I put a political sign in my yard?

Yes. Political signs on private property are protected by the First Amendment. Size limits apply, typically 6 to 32 square feet depending on your zone.

Can my HOA ban political signs?

Many states have laws limiting HOA ability to ban political signs. Check state law — most allow reasonable political signage during election seasons even in HOA communities.

Los Angeles FAQ

When can I put up a political sign in LA?

Any time. After Reed v Gilbert, LA removed its 60-day election-window rule. Temporary signs follow the same content-neutral standards year-round.

How big can my political sign be?

Up to 12 square feet in aggregate on a residential property without a permit. Larger or commercial-zone signs may require permits under LAMC 14.4.

Can I post a sign on a utility pole or parkway?

No. Placement in the public right-of-way, on utility poles, street trees, or parkways is prohibited and the sign will be removed without notice.

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