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🍖 Outdoor Cooking/BBQ & Propane Rules

BBQ & Propane Rules: Kentwood vs Wyoming

How do bbq & propane rules rules compare between Kentwood, MI and Wyoming, MI?

Kentwood and Wyoming have similar restriction levels.

Kentwood, MI

Kent County

Some Restrictions

Under Michigan's adopted fire code, charcoal and open-flame grills may not be used on combustible apartment balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction. One- and two-family homes and small 1-pound propane cylinders are exempt. Kent County sets no separate rule.

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Wyoming, MI

Kent County

Some Restrictions

Michigan has adopted the International Fire Code through the Michigan Fire Prevention Code (MCL 29.1 et seq.) and Bureau of Fire Services administrative rules. IFC §308.1.4 prohibits open-flame cooking devices (including charcoal grills and most propane grills) on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction in buildings other than one- and two-family dwellings (i.e., apartments and multi-family). A narrow exception allows LP-gas devices with limited cylinder size on balconies where the building is fully sprinklered, and electric grills are not restricted. For single-family Wyoming homes, the IFC restriction does not directly apply, but local property-maintenance and fire-prevention rules still govern safe storage of LP-gas cylinders.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactKentwoodWyoming
Governing codeMI IFC Section 308.1.4-
County ruleNone — fire code applies-
Balcony banWithin 10 ft of combustibles-
Home exemption1- and 2-family dwellings-
Small-cylinder exemptionNominal 1-lb LP-gas-
Multi-Family Rule-IFC §308.1.4 (no open-flame on combustible balcony)
Adopted via-MI Fire Prevention Code (MCL 29.1+)
Sprinklered Exception-LP-gas under 1 lb container
Single-Family (R-3)-Restriction does not apply
Cylinder Storage-Outdoors only (NFPA 58)
Enforcement-Wyoming Department of Public Safety (Fire)

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Kentwood FAQ

Can I grill on my apartment balcony?

Usually no. The fire code bans charcoal and open-flame grills on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction unless the building is sprinklered or you use a tiny 1-pound propane device.

Does this apply to my single-family home?

No. One- and two-family dwellings are exempt from the balcony grill restriction, so backyard grilling at a house is unaffected.

Wyoming FAQ

Can I grill on my Wyoming apartment balcony?

Generally no for propane or charcoal grills under IFC §308.1.4 (adopted through the Michigan Fire Prevention Code, MCL 29.1 et seq.), which prohibits open-flame cooking devices on combustible balconies in multi-family buildings or within 10 feet of combustible construction. Limited exceptions exist for fully sprinklered buildings with small (1-pound or less) LP-gas containers. Electric grills are not restricted. Check your lease and contact the Wyoming Fire Division if you are unsure.

Can I grill in my Wyoming single-family yard?

Yes. IFC §308.1.4 does not apply to one- and two-family dwellings (Group R-3 occupancies), so propane and charcoal grills are permitted on patios, decks, and yards in single-family Wyoming homes. Standard precautions apply: store propane cylinders outdoors per NFPA 58, do not grill inside a garage or other enclosed space, and respect neighbor smoke-nuisance complaints under Wyoming City Code property-maintenance provisions.

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