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🪧 Sign Regulations/Holiday Displays

Holiday Displays: Lakewood vs South Gate

How do holiday displays rules compare between Lakewood, CA and South Gate, CA?

Lakewood and South Gate have similar restriction levels.

Lakewood, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

Lakewood generally permits holiday decorations and displays on residential property with minimal restrictions. Displays should not create traffic hazards, excessive noise, or fire risks. HOA rules may add limits.

View full Lakewood rules →

South Gate, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

South Gate does not require a permit for customary residential holiday decorations and displays — string lights, inflatables, wreaths, lighted Santas, menorahs, jack-o-lanterns, and similar seasonal items. The Title 11 zoning code treats them as exempt temporary decorations, not regulated signs. Religious and secular holiday displays receive identical treatment under content-neutrality. The only enforcement risks are duration (displays left up year-round), traffic-safety obstructions, light trespass onto neighbors, and encroachment into the public right-of-way.

View full South Gate rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactLakewoodSouth Gate
PermitsNot required-
Duration30 to 45 days typical-
SafetyOutdoor-rated electrical-
TopicHoliday Displays-
Permit required-No — for customary seasonal displays on private property
Religious vs. secular displays-Treated the same (content-neutral)
Public right-of-way / sidewalk-No encroachment, sidewalks must stay clear
Extension cords across public sidewalks-Prohibited (trip hazard)
Amplified holiday music-Subject to Chapter 11.34 Noise Control limits
Year-round 'holiday' displays-Can lose exemption and be cited
Light trespass into neighbor windows-Can trigger nuisance enforcement

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lakewood FAQ

How early can I put up holiday decorations?

Most jurisdictions don't restrict timing for private property displays. Some HOAs allow decorations starting 30 to 45 days before the holiday. Check your HOA rules if applicable.

Can my HOA tell me to take down decorations?

HOAs can enforce reasonable rules about display duration, size, and type. However, they generally cannot prohibit holiday displays entirely. Check your CC&Rs and state HOA laws.

South Gate FAQ

Do I need a permit for Christmas lights or a holiday display in South Gate?

No. Customary residential holiday decorations — Christmas lights, inflatables, wreaths, lighted figures, menorahs, jack-o-lanterns — are exempt from the Title 11 sign rules and do not require a building, electrical, or sign permit when they are temporary, seasonal, and on private property.

How long can I leave my holiday lights up?

There is no fixed numeric cap in the code, but the displays must be 'seasonal.' A Christmas display put up in late November and taken down by late January is well within the customary window. A display left up all year loses its seasonal justification and can be cited under general property-maintenance rules.

Can the City make me take down a nativity or menorah?

No — not because of its religious content. South Gate's sign rules are applied content-neutrally under Reed v. Town of Gilbert, so religious and secular holiday displays receive identical treatment. The City can act only on neutral grounds: right-of-way encroachment, sidewalk obstruction, trip-hazard extension cords, light trespass, noise from amplified music, or a display that is no longer seasonal.

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