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πŸ”Š Noise Ordinances/Decibel Limits

Decibel Limits: Somerville vs Wakefield

How do decibel limits rules compare between Somerville, MA and Wakefield, MA?

Somerville and Wakefield have similar restriction levels.

Somerville, MA

Middlesex County

Some Restrictions

Somerville uses both plainly-audible standards and numeric decibel caps for specific sources, typically 65 to 75 dBA during day and 55 to 65 dBA at night measured at residential property lines.

View full Somerville rules β†’

Wakefield, MA

Middlesex County

Some Restrictions

Middlesex County follows Massachusetts 310 CMR 7.10 which caps sound at 10 dBA over ambient at property lines. Many cities add hard numeric limits of 65 dBA day / 55 dBA night in residential zones.

View full Wakefield rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactSomervilleWakefield
Residential day limitApproximately 65 dBA-
Residential night limitApproximately 55 dBA-
Commercial day limit70 to 75 dBA-
Leaf blower cap65 dBA at 50 feet-
Measurement byISD and Somerville Police-
State floor-10 dBA over ambient
Residential day-60-65 dBA typical
Residential night-50-55 dBA typical
Commercial-70 dBA typical
Measurement-At property line, Type 2 meter

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Somerville FAQ

Do the limits apply to HVAC units?

Yes. Fixed mechanical equipment is among the most-measured sources and often requires acoustic enclosures to meet nighttime limits.

Is the plainly-audible test subjective?

Somewhat, but it is legally valid and often used as the first enforcement step before a formal dBA measurement.

Wakefield FAQ

What is the quietest limit in Middlesex County?

Cambridge applies 50 dBA nighttime in residential zones, among the strictest in the county.

Does the state rule trump my town?

No, but it is the minimum. Cities can set stricter limits but cannot exceed the state 10-dBA-over-ambient cap.

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