10 county-level rules, plus city-specific rules for 1 city in Camden County, New Jersey.
Verified from official government sources
Camden County does not regulate where you park an RV, camper, or boat trailer at a home. In New Jersey, land use and residential parking are set by your municipality under the Municipal Land Use Law, not the county.
Camden County does not regulate driveway parking, aprons, or curb cuts at homes. Those are governed by your municipality's zoning and site-plan ordinances under New Jersey's Municipal Land Use Law.
Camden County does not set rules for parking commercial trucks or work vehicles at a residence. New Jersey municipalities zone and regulate that under the Municipal Land Use Law. County parks cap parked vehicles at 6,000 pounds.
Camden County Park Regulations, Article 4 Section 10(E)
No motor vehicles with a registered gross vehicle weight of more than 6,000 pounds shall be permitted to park on any paved parking lot on Camden County park lands.
Camden County does not run on-street parking on residential streets; your municipality and its police set and enforce those rules. The county's own parking authority applies only to Camden County park roads and lots.
Camden County Park Regulations, Article 4 Section 10(A)
The Director may designate one-way streets or designate parking areas as being restricted for the use of particular persons or officials and/or restricted as to use during limited designated hours, and shall post signs designating such parking restrictions.
On Camden County park land, no vehicle may be parked between 10 PM and 6 AM. On residential streets, overnight parking rules are set by your municipality, not the county.
Camden County Park Regulations, Article 4 Section 9
No person shall use and/or occupy any park bench or seat, or be found loitering on park lands, nor shall any vehicle be parked on park lands, between the hours of 10 PM and 6 AM with the exception of North Park Drive from Route 130 to Cuthbert Boulevard, which has a curfew of 12 midnight until 6 AM.
Camden County has no separate EV-charging parking ordinance. New Jersey's statewide EV law standardizes charging-station zoning and parking, and permitting happens through your municipality.
New Jersey law, not a Camden County ordinance, makes it illegal to abandon a vehicle. A car left more than 48 hours on public property, or any time without current plates, is presumed abandoned and may be towed.
N.J.S.A. 39:4-56.5
A vehicle which has remained on or along any highway or other public property or on private property without such consent for a period of more than 48 hours or for any period without current license plates shall be presumed to be an abandoned motor vehicle.
Camden County does not set curb-painting or curb-color parking rules for residential streets. Curb markings and no-parking zones come from your municipality under New Jersey's Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices.
Camden County does not designate loading zones on residential or commercial streets; your municipality does. The county controls loading and parking only on county roads and within county park land.
Camden County Park Regulations, Article 4 Section 10(B)
No person shall park or store any motor vehicles, wagon, cart, or trailer on county park land except in areas designated and posted for such purposes. Such parking areas are for the use of park patrons only.
Camden County does not restrict where oversized vehicles park at a residence; your municipality does. The one county rule is that no vehicle over 6,000 pounds may park on a paved county park lot.
Camden County Park Regulations, Article 4 Section 10(E)
No person shall drive or operate any off-road vehicle or snowmobile anywhere within the Camden County Park System except at such times and places as may be designated by the Director and/or authorized by permit.
1 cities in Camden County have their own parking rules rules. Each link goes to that city's dedicated page with code citations.
See every category we cover for Camden County β parking, noise, fences, fires, animals, pools, and more.
Camden County Ordinance Hub β