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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Native Plants

Native Plants: Irvington vs Newark

How do native plants rules compare between Irvington, NJ and Newark, NJ?

Irvington and Newark have similar restriction levels.

Irvington, NJ

Essex County

Few Restrictions

Essex County does not mandate or restrict native-plant landscaping on private property. New Jersey encourages native plantings through NJDEP stormwater and forestry guidance, but any landscaping requirements come from municipal ordinances, not the county.

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Newark, NJ

Essex County

Few Restrictions

Newark has no ordinance restricting native plant landscaping. NJ encourages native plantings for pollinator habitat. Property must still meet height and maintenance standards under Ch. 18:7-5 (vegetation under 8 inches in maintained areas).

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Key Facts Comparison

FactIrvingtonNewark
County mandateNone-
State stanceEncourages natives-
Any requirementsMunicipal-
Street-tree speciesN.J.S.A. 40:64-
Local Restriction-None on native plants
State Support-NJ DEP promotes native/pollinator plantings
Height Rule-Maintained areas under 8 inches (Ch. 18:7-5)
Nuisance Law-N.J.S.A. 40:48-2.27 still applies

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Irvington FAQ

Does Essex County require native plants?

No. The county does not mandate or ban native-plant landscaping. New Jersey encourages natives through stormwater and forestry guidance, and any specific rules come from your municipality.

Can I replace my lawn with a native meadow?

Generally yes, but check your town's property-maintenance ordinance so a naturalized planting is not cited as overgrowth, and confirm any homeowners-association restrictions before converting.

Newark FAQ

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