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🚷 Public Conduct/Aggressive Panhandling

Aggressive Panhandling: Miami vs North Miami

How do aggressive panhandling rules compare between Miami, FL and North Miami, FL?

Miami and North Miami have similar restriction levels.

Miami, FL

Miami-Dade County

Some Restrictions

Miami Code Sec. 37 prohibits aggressive panhandling — soliciting with threatening conduct, blocking pedestrians, or repeating requests after refusal. Florida Statute Sec. 856.022 also restricts loitering. Passive sign-holding remains First Amendment-protected speech.

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North Miami, FL

Miami-Dade County

Some Restrictions

Miami-Dade Chapter 21 bans aggressive solicitation, including blocking pedestrians, touching strangers, soliciting near ATMs, and approaching occupied vehicles in traffic. Passive panhandling remains protected speech under Florida and federal case law.

View full North Miami rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactMiamiNorth Miami
City codeSec. 37-
State lawFL Sec. 856.022-
Passive beggingProtected speechProtected speech
Typical penaltyUp to $500 or 60 days-
Median ruleRoadway solicitation barred-
County code-M-D Chapter 21
State roadway law-FL §316.2045
ATM buffer-15 feet

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Miami FAQ

Is panhandling illegal in Miami?

Passive panhandling with a sign is protected by the First Amendment. Aggressive solicitation — touching, blocking, repeating after refusal, or near ATMs — is prohibited under Miami Code Sec. 37.

Can Miami police arrest people for sitting with signs?

Generally no. Sitting peacefully with a sign in a public forum is protected speech. Officers may intervene only when conduct becomes threatening, blocks pedestrians, or violates content-neutral time-and-place rules.

North Miami FAQ

Can deputies arrest someone just for asking for money?

No. Federal courts protect peaceful panhandling as speech. Arrests require aggressive conduct, blocking, or violation of distance buffers around ATMs and cafes.

Why is roadway solicitation different?

Florida Statute 316.2045 treats walking into stopped traffic as a public-safety hazard, not a speech issue. It applies regardless of what the person is requesting.

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