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πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door/No-Knock Registry

No-Knock Registry: Seminole vs St. Petersburg

How do no-knock registry rules compare between Seminole, FL and St. Petersburg, FL?

St. Petersburg has fewer restrictions than Seminole.

Seminole, FL

Pinellas County

Heavy Restrictions

Seminole residents may post no-solicitation signs at their property, and registered solicitors must honor them. Violations are enforced as trespass under Florida law and city Chapter 6 business regulations.

View full Seminole rules β†’

St. Petersburg, FL

Pinellas County

Some Restrictions

St. Petersburg honors posted no-soliciting and no-trespass signs, and ignoring them can lead to trespass charges under Florida Statute 810.09 and city code enforcement.

View full St. Petersburg rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactSeminoleSt. Petersburg
Sign placementVisible at entry-
EffectMandatory honor-
Trespass statuteFlorida 810.09-
EnforcementPinellas Sheriff-
PenaltyCitations and trespass-
Sign respected-Yes
State trespass-FS 810.09
Leave when asked-Required
Report to-SPPD non-emergency

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Seminole FAQ

Where should I post my no-solicitation sign?

Post the sign near your front door, mailbox, or gate where it is plainly visible from the public right-of-way before someone reaches your home.

What if a solicitor ignores my sign?

Call the Pinellas County Sheriff's non-emergency line. Provide a description of the person, vehicle, time, and direction of travel for response.

Does the no-knock rule apply to political canvassers?

Yes. Posted no-solicitation and no-trespass signs apply broadly under Florida trespass law, including to political and religious canvassers entering private property.

St. Petersburg FAQ

Does a no-soliciting sign work in St. Petersburg?

Yes, a clearly posted no-soliciting sign provides notice and ignoring it can lead to trespass charges under Florida Statute 810.09 and city code violations.

What should I do if a solicitor refuses to leave?

Ask them to leave once and document the encounter. If they remain, call the St. Petersburg Police non-emergency line; staying after warning is criminal trespass under FS 810.09.

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