7 county-level rules, plus city-specific rules for 1 city in Duval County, Florida.
Verified from official government sources
RVs, boats, and trailers may be parked on residential property in Duval but must be stored in a side or rear yard, or on a paved driveway behind the front building line. Street storage is limited to 48 hours per Β§656.404 Jax-Duval Code.
Residential driveways in Duval must be paved or stabilized (concrete, asphalt, pavers, or compacted stabilized material). Max driveway width at the right-of-way is typically 20 ft for single-family, 24 ft for circular. Curb cuts require a Public Works permit.
Commercial vehicles over 1 ton or with lettering may not be parked overnight in Duval residential zones per Β§656.404(d) Jax-Duval Code. Tractor-trailers, buses, and heavy equipment are prohibited. Pickups and vans used for business are exempt.
Jacksonville-Duval Ordinance Code Β§804 governs street parking. Vehicles may not park against the direction of traffic, within 15 ft of a hydrant, or block a driveway. Abandoned vehicle threshold is 72 hours per FL Β§316.1945 and Β§804.612 Jax-Duval Code.
Duval County does not impose a general countywide overnight parking ban on public streets. Vehicles may remain overnight as long as they are legally registered, moved within 72 hours, and not in a posted no-parking zone. Residential permit zones in Riverside/Springfield restrict overnight non-resident parking.
Duval County follows Florida Building Code for EV charging installations. Level 2 residential chargers require a standard electrical permit; public/commercial chargers follow FBC Chapter 27 and NEC Article 625. Jacksonville has no minimum EV-ready requirement for new construction.
Florida Statute Β§ 553.5141 β Certifications of conformity and remediation plans
553.5141 Certifications of conformity and remediation plans. β (1) For purposes of this section: (c) "Facility" means all or any portion of buildings, structures, sites, complexes, equipment, rolling stock or other conveyances, roads, walks, passageways, parking lots, or other real or personal property, including the site where the building, property, structure, or equipment is located. (d) "Qu...
FL 715.07 and Ch. 614 govern abandoned vehicles. Cars left 48+ hours on public streets face towing. Inoperable or unregistered vehicles on residential lots violate Ch. 518.
Florida Statute Β§ 715.07 β Vehicles or vessels parked on private property; towing
715.07 Vehicles or vessels parked on private property; towing. β (2) The owner or lessee of real property, or any person authorized by the owner or lessee, which person may be the designated representative of the condominium association if the real property is a condominium, may cause any vehicle or vessel parked on such property without her or his permission to be removed by a person regularly...
1 cities in Duval 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 Duval County β parking, noise, fences, fires, animals, pools, and more.
Duval County Ordinance Hub β