5 county-level rules, plus city-specific rules for 1 city in Middlesex County, New Jersey.
Verified from official government sources
Rules on where residents must store garbage and recycling containers are set by each Middlesex County municipality, not the county. Container storage, screening and curb-return requirements appear in local property-maintenance and solid-waste chapters adopted town by town.
Property-blight and exterior-maintenance standards in Middlesex County are set and enforced by each of the 25 municipalities, not the county. Towns like Edison and Borough of Middlesex adopt property-maintenance codes barring structural deterioration, unmaintained exteriors and blighting conditions on residential and nonresidential premises.
Maintenance of vacant lots and abandoned properties in Middlesex County is regulated by each municipality, not the county. Local property-maintenance codes require owners to control brush, debris, infestation and blight on vacant parcels, backed by New Jersey's Abandoned Properties Rehabilitation Act.
Garage and yard sale permits, frequency limits and signage rules in Middlesex County are set by each municipality, not the county. Many towns require a low-cost permit and cap the number of sales per household each year.
Weed and tall-grass limits in Middlesex County are set by each municipality, not the county. Local ordinances cap grass, weeds and brush at a set height, commonly around 10 inches, and let towns abate overgrowth at the owner's cost.
1 cities in Middlesex County have their own property maintenance rules. Each link goes to that city's dedicated page with code citations.
See every category we cover for Middlesex County β parking, noise, fences, fires, animals, pools, and more.
Middlesex County Ordinance Hub β