7 rules for unincorporated Coweta County, Georgia.
Verified from official government sources
RV and boat storage in unincorporated Coweta County is governed by the county zoning ordinance, and in many subdivisions by HOA covenants. Front-yard and street storage are commonly restricted; screened side or rear storage is the norm.
Driveway parking in unincorporated Coweta County follows the county zoning and development regulations. Vehicles must sit on an approved surface, cannot block a sidewalk or right-of-way, and front-lawn parking is generally prohibited in residential subdivisions.
Coweta County's zoning ordinance restricts commercial-vehicle parking in residential districts. Heavy trucks, semis, and trailers are barred; a single light work van or pickup used by the resident is generally allowed.
On public county and state roads in Coweta County, Georgia's Uniform Rules of the Road apply: no parking on a crosswalk, in front of a driveway, or within 15 feet of a fire hydrant. Many subdivisions add their own HOA parking rules.
O.C.G.A. Β§ 40-6-203 (Stopping, standing, or parking prohibited in specified places)
Within 15 feet of a fire hydrant
Coweta County has no countywide overnight street-parking ban or permit program. In subdivisions, overnight parking is instead controlled by HOA covenants, which frequently prohibit it.
Installing a home EV charger in unincorporated Coweta County requires an electrical permit from the county. Level 2 chargers are treated as routine residential electrical work, and public charging is expanding along the I-85 corridor.
Coweta County treats junk, wrecked, or inoperable vehicles left in public view as a nuisance under its code. Such vehicles on unincorporated property must be enclosed or screened, or removed after notice.
See every category we cover for Coweta County β parking, noise, fences, fires, animals, pools, and more.
Coweta County Ordinance Hub β