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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Native Plants

Native Plants: Lexington vs Somerville

How do native plants rules compare between Lexington, MA and Somerville, MA?

Lexington and Somerville have similar restriction levels.

Lexington, MA

Middlesex County

Few Restrictions

Native plantings are encouraged in Middlesex County. Massachusetts promotes native landscaping through DCR, DEP, and local Conservation Commissions. Invasive species are restricted under 333 CMR 9.00.

View full Lexington rules β†’

Somerville, MA

Middlesex County

Few Restrictions

Somerville encourages native plantings and pollinator gardens. The Urban Forestry Division prioritizes native species for street trees, and the city has adopted pollinator-friendly practices.

View full Somerville rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLexingtonSomerville
PromotionEncouraged statewide-
Prohibited Plants333 CMR 9.00 (140 species)-
Wetlands BufferNatives required 100 ft-
Regional ResourceGarden in the Woods, Framingham-
Pollinator ProgramsCambridge, Arlington, etc.-
Native requirement-Encouraged, not required
Street trees-Native preference by city
Pollinator program-Mayor Monarch Pledge
Prohibited list-MA invasive plant rules apply
Education-Somerville Growing Center

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lexington FAQ

Can I replace my lawn with native plants?

Yes. Most Middlesex towns encourage it. Register with the town as a pollinator garden to avoid nuisance weed enforcement.

Are any plants banned?

Yes. The Prohibited Plant List (333 CMR 9.00) bans about 140 invasive species including Japanese knotweed and burning bush.

Somerville FAQ

Can I plant a wildflower meadow?

Yes. Intentional pollinator and native gardens are allowed and encouraged in Somerville.

What plants are banned?

Massachusetts prohibits sale of listed invasives like burning bush and Japanese barberry statewide.

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