Local rules and regulations for Ocean County, New Jersey. Population: 637,229.
Verified from official government sources
Select a topic to see Ocean County's rules on that subject.
Ocean County municipalities regulate leaf blower use through local noise ordinances aligned with NJ Noise Control Code N.J.A.C. 7:29. Typical hours in Toms River, Brick, and Jackson are 8 AM to 6 PM weekdays with reduced Saturday windows and Sunday restrictions. No countywide…
Amplified music in Ocean County requires compliance with local noise ordinances and NJDEP N.J.A.C. 7:29 limits of 65 dBA day / 50 dBA night at the property line. Seaside Heights, Point Pleasant Beach, and LBI boardwalk venues operate under special entertainment district rules…
Construction noise hours in Ocean County are set by each individual municipality, not at the county level. Ocean County Soil Conservation District reviews erosion control plans for projects disturbing 5,000+ sq ft but does not regulate construction hours. Typical municipal…
Ocean County does not have a countywide residential noise ordinance. Noise quiet-hours are set by each of the county's 33 municipalities under their own local codes. The NJ DEP Noise Control Act (N.J.A.C. 7:29) provides the statewide framework with baseline limits of 65 dBA…
Barking dog enforcement in Ocean County is handled at the municipal level. Each of Ocean County's 33 municipalities enforces its own animal control ordinance. State law N.J.S.A. 4:19-15.1 requires each municipality to appoint a certified animal control officer. Ocean County does…
Ocean County Landfill accepts bulk disposal by appointment or drop-off. Municipalities offer scheduled bulk pickup — Toms River provides monthly bulk curbside, Brick operates by appointment. Appliances with refrigerant must be tagged per N.J.A.C. 7:30 (CFC removal). Post-Sandy…
Ocean County operates the Ocean County Landfill in Manchester and coordinates recycling through the Ocean County Recycling Department. Trash pickup varies by municipality — Toms River, Brick, and Jackson use contracted private haulers (Republic Services, Waste Management). LBI…
Mandatory recycling in Ocean County under the NJ Statewide Mandatory Source Separation and Recycling Act (N.J.S.A. 13:1E-99.11 et seq.). Single-stream accepts paper, cardboard, glass, metals, and plastics #1-#2 (some towns accept #1-#7). Contaminated bins are tagged and skipped…
Ocean County municipalities require bins at the curb no earlier than the evening before pickup and removed within 12 to 24 hours after collection. Toms River §327-11 sets specific curb-placement rules. LBI boroughs require bins stored out of public view when not in use to…
Ocean County garage sale hours are limited to daylight, typically 8 AM to 6 PM. Toms River §210-20 sets 9 AM to 5 PM. Lakewood §143 prohibits Shabbat (Friday sunset to Saturday sunset) and major Jewish holidays. LBI and shore towns prefer weekend daytime sales to avoid summer…
Ocean County municipalities limit garage sales to 2-3 per household per year. Toms River §210-20 sets 2 sales maximum; Brick §128 allows 2; Jackson §116 limits 3. Each sale typically 2-3 consecutive days. Lakewood tightens with Shabbat exclusions. Neighborhood or church sales…
Most Ocean County municipalities require free or low-cost garage sale permits. Toms River §210-20 requires a permit ($5), limited to 2 sales per year per household. Brick §128 similar. Lakewood requires permit with Shabbat restrictions. Permits ensure signage and frequency…
Most Ocean County municipalities maintain No Knock or No Soliciting registries. Toms River, Brick, Jackson, and Lakewood offer free enrollment. Solicitors must receive the updated list before canvassing. Ignoring posted no-soliciting signs or registered addresses triggers…
Door-to-door solicitors in Ocean County must obtain municipal peddler/solicitor permits with background checks and ID badges. Toms River §210 and Brick §246 require permits; Lakewood has tightened rules around Sabbath restrictions. Religious canvassing is exempt under First…
Ocean County erosion and sediment control is governed by the NJ Soil Erosion and Sediment Control Act (N.J.S.A. 4:24-39) administered by the Ocean County Soil Conservation District. Grading over 5,000 sq ft triggers Soil Conservation District certification. Dune vegetation…
Ocean County grading and drainage regulation applies through municipal engineering codes and Ocean County Soil Conservation District certification (5,000+ sq ft). Barnegat Bay watershed drainage must protect nonpoint-source quality. Post-Sandy rebuild projects in flood zones…
Ocean County stormwater management is governed by NJDEP Stormwater Rule N.J.A.C. 7:8, with enhanced Barnegat Bay watershed protections. New major development must meet groundwater recharge, water quality, and quantity standards. Municipal MS4 permits require Stormwater Pollution…
Ocean County has extensive coastal regulation through the Coastal Area Facility Review Act (CAFRA, N.J.S.A. 13:19-1) covering all LBI boroughs, the barrier peninsula (Seaside/Ortley/Lavallette/Mantoloking), and bayfront communities. NJDEP Coastal Permits required for most…
Ocean County is one of the most flood-prone counties in New Jersey, with extensive FEMA-mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas along the Atlantic coast, Barnegat Bay, Toms River, and inland waterways. Each of Ocean County's 33 municipalities participates in the NFIP individually (NJ…
Ocean County parks close at dusk or 10 PM per Ocean County Park Rules. Municipal parks vary: Toms River Huddy Park closes at 10 PM, Bey Lea closes at dusk. Island Beach State Park closes at 10 PM (entrance gates close earlier). LBI beach curfews vary by borough — typically 10 PM…
Ocean County juvenile curfew ordinances vary by municipality. Seaside Heights, Point Pleasant Beach, and LBI boroughs enforce strict summer curfews targeting rowdy teen gatherings on beaches and boardwalks — typically 10 PM to 6 AM for under 18. Toms River, Brick, and Lakewood…
Food trucks in Ocean County require Ocean County Board of Health mobile retail food establishment permits under N.J.A.C. 8:24 plus municipal mobile vendor licenses. Annual health inspections mandatory. Commissary agreements required. Seaside Heights, Point Pleasant Beach, and…
Ocean County food truck vending zones are set municipality-by-municipality. Toms River permits food trucks at approved commercial locations with 100 ft restaurant buffers. Boardwalk towns (Seaside Heights, Point Pleasant Beach) strictly limit mobile vending to protect…
Ocean County residential height limits typically 35 ft / 2.5 stories per municipal zoning. FEMA V-Zone and AE-Zone elevation requirements on LBI, Mantoloking, Ortley, and other flood-prone areas can push measurement baselines higher, so effective building heights above grade may…
Ocean County building setbacks are set by municipal zoning codes under NJ MLUL. Typical R-1 residential: 25-30 ft front, 10 ft side, 25 ft rear. LBI oceanfront lots face additional CAFRA and Coastal AE/VE zone setbacks from mean high water. Pinelands municipalities (Manchester…
Ocean County lot coverage limits typically 25-40% in residential zones per municipal zoning. LBI lots face stricter impervious coverage caps (30-35%) due to Barnegat Bay stormwater regulation. NJDEP Stormwater Rule N.J.A.C. 7:8 requires best management practices for major…
Ocean County tree removal permit requirements vary by municipality. Toms River (§363) and Brick (§245) require permits for trees 6 inches DBH or greater on developed lots. Pinelands municipalities (Manchester, Jackson, Barnegat) apply CMP vegetation management rules. NJ…
Ocean County municipalities require replacement planting when permitted trees are removed. Toms River §363 sets 1:1 replacement ratio with 2-inch caliper minimum. Brick and Jackson require 1:1 to 2:1 depending on size of removed tree. Pinelands CMP areas require species-specific…
Ocean County heritage tree designations exist through municipal Shade Tree Commissions and the Pinelands Commission's specimen tree protection. Toms River and Brick maintain significant tree registries. Atlantic white cedar (state protected under NJ Forest Practices Act) is…
Ocean County sits largely within the NJ Pinelands National Reserve, one of the highest wildfire-risk regions on the East Coast. The NJ Forest Fire Service (Division B) enforces brush clearance in Manchester, Jackson, Berkeley, Lacey, and Barnegat where pine-oak forest meets…
Ocean County sits in NJ's highest-risk wildfire region (Pine Barrens). NJ Forest Fire Service Wildfire Hazardous Area designation drives defensible space rules. Firewise NJ programs active in Manchester, Lacey, Barnegat, Little Egg Harbor.
Recreational fire pit rules in Ocean County are set by individual municipalities under the NJ Uniform Fire Code framework. The NJ UFC (N.J.A.C. 5:70) allows recreational fires in approved containers with conditions: fire must be attended, located away from structures, and…
Consumer fireworks are illegal throughout New Jersey under N.J.S.A. 21:2-2 and N.J.S.A. 21:3-1. This applies uniformly across all 33 Ocean County municipalities. Only sparklers and novelty items (snakes, smoke devices, party poppers) are legal for consumer purchase. Professional…
Outdoor burning in Ocean County is regulated by the NJ Uniform Fire Code (N.J.A.C. 5:70) enforced by the Ocean County Bureau of Fire Safety and local fire officials, the NJ DEP Air Quality regulations (N.J.A.C. 7:27-2), and individual municipal ordinances. Open burning of refuse…
Ocean County municipalities set fence material standards through local zoning. Toms River (§348), Brick (§245), and Jackson (§244) allow wood, vinyl, aluminum, wrought iron, and composite in residential zones. Chain-link is generally prohibited in front yards but allowed in rear…
Ocean County retaining walls over 4 ft require NJ UCC building permit (N.J.A.C. 5:23-2.17A). Walls in CAFRA/Pinelands or flood zones need additional review. Setbacks and drainage per local zoning.
Ocean County pools must comply with NJ Uniform Construction Code / ISPSC 2018: minimum 48-inch barrier, self-closing self-latching gate, 4-inch gap rule. Toms River (Ord. 4422) and local towns enforce via construction official.
Fence neighbor notification and boundary rules in Ocean County are governed by NJ state law and municipal ordinances. NJ does not have a statutory 'spite fence' provision like some states, but municipalities may address fence disputes through their zoning boards. Property owners…
Fence height limits in Ocean County are set by each municipality's zoning ordinance under the NJ Municipal Land Use Law (MLUL). There is no countywide fence height regulation. Typical municipal limits across Ocean County: 4 feet in front yards, 6 feet in side and rear yards…
Fence permit requirements in Ocean County are set at the municipal level. Most Ocean County municipalities require a zoning permit for new fences, which verifies compliance with height limits, setback requirements, and material restrictions. The NJ Uniform Construction Code does…
Recreational drone use in Ocean County follows FAA rules (49 USC §44809) plus NJ statutes and local park rules. NJ Forest Fire Service prohibits drones over active wildfires. Ocean County Parks and Recreation generally prohibits drone takeoff and landing in county parks without…
Commercial drone operations in Ocean County require FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certification. LAANC authorization needed near Ocean County Airport (KMJX) and for overlap with Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst restricted airspace. Real estate and beach photography are major…
Hot tubs over 24 inches deep need NJ UCC building + electrical permits (N.J.A.C. 5:23). Lockable safety cover meeting ASTM F1346 may substitute for barrier. GFCI protection and 5 ft conductor setback required.
All pools in Ocean County require permits under NJ Uniform Construction Code (N.J.A.C. 5:23). Building, electrical, and plumbing subcode permits apply. Above-ground pools over 24 inches and all in-ground pools require permits plus NJ Barrier Subcode compliance. Coastal flood…
Above-ground pool regulations in Ocean County are governed by the NJ Uniform Construction Code and municipal zoning. Under the NJ UCC, above-ground pools over 24 inches deep require a building permit and must meet barrier requirements (48-inch barrier from grade to top, or pool…
Swimming pool barrier requirements in Ocean County are governed by the NJ Uniform Construction Code (N.J.A.C. 5:23), which adopts the International Residential Code barrier standards. The NJ UCC requires a 48-inch minimum barrier around all residential pools. Self-closing…
Swimming pool safety rules in Ocean County are governed by the NJ State Sanitary Code Chapter IX (N.J.A.C. 8:26) for public and semi-public pools, and the NJ UCC for residential pools. The Ocean County Health Department licenses and inspects public bathing facilities. NJ…
Ocean County municipalities generally prohibit backyard chickens in residential zones due to suburban density. Jackson and Manchester permit limited poultry on larger agricultural-zoned lots (5+ acres) with setbacks. Lakewood prohibits poultry in most residential districts. Toms…
Ocean County prohibits intentional feeding of deer (N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.24) and bears. Coastal towns restrict feeding of gulls/waterfowl. Most Pinelands-adjacent towns have local deer feeding bans to reduce tick/Lyme and vehicle strikes.
Exotic animal ownership in New Jersey is regulated by the NJ Division of Fish & Wildlife under N.J.A.C. 7:25-4 (Exotic and Nongame Species). The state maintains a list of potentially dangerous species that require permits. Ocean County does not have additional countywide exotic…
Dog leash laws in Ocean County are enforced at the municipal level. NJ state law (N.J.S.A. 4:19-15.2) requires that dogs be leashed or confined on the owner's property. Each municipality enforces leash requirements through its appointed certified animal control officer. Ocean…
New Jersey does not have breed-specific legislation (BSL) at the state level, and Ocean County does not impose countywide breed restrictions. NJ's dangerous dog law (N.J.S.A. 4:19-17 et seq.) is behavior-based, not breed-based: any dog that attacks a person or domestic animal…
Beekeeping regulation in Ocean County falls under the NJ Department of Agriculture (NJDA) and individual municipal zoning ordinances. NJ requires all beekeepers to register hives with the State Apiarist (N.J.A.C. 2:24-2.1). The State Apiarist inspects hives for disease…
Ocean County municipalities enforce weed and overgrowth abatement through local property maintenance codes. Most towns set 10-inch maximum grass/weed heights (Toms River §327, Brick §176). Vacant lots on LBI and post-Sandy unbuilt parcels face heightened enforcement. Japanese…
Rainwater harvesting is permitted throughout Ocean County for residential non-potable use. New Jersey imposes no state-level restrictions. NJDEP Water Supply Management Act does not apply to residential rain barrels. Some Ocean County municipalities offer rain barrel rebate…
Artificial turf allowed on Ocean County residential lots but regulated locally for drainage and heat. Shore towns (Lavallette, Point Pleasant Beach) restrict front-yard turf. Stormwater rules apply under NJDEP N.J.A.C. 7:8.
Ocean County encourages Jersey-Friendly native plants for Barnegat Bay water quality. No ordinance mandates them but Pinelands Commission requires native species in preservation areas. Barnegat Bay Partnership rebates support lawn conversion.
Tree removal regulations in Ocean County are set at the municipal level and by the Pinelands Commission in designated Pinelands areas. Municipalities enact their own tree preservation ordinances with varying permit requirements. The Pinelands Comprehensive Management Plan…
Tree trimming regulations in Ocean County depend on jurisdiction. Ocean County maintains and trims trees along county roads. Municipal shade tree commissions (authorized by N.J.S.A. 40:64-1 et seq.) govern tree care on municipal rights-of-way and public lands. Private tree…
Grass and weed height requirements in Ocean County are set by each municipality's property maintenance ordinance. There is no countywide grass height regulation. Typical municipal limits range from 8 to 12 inches before a violation notice is issued. Municipalities generally…
Water use restrictions in Ocean County are imposed by the NJ DEP during drought conditions and by individual water purveyors. NJ Water Supply Authority and NJ American Water serve portions of Ocean County. The NJ DEP Drought Management Plan has four stages: Watch, Warning…
Cannabis dispensary zoning in Ocean County varies sharply — the CREAMM Act allowed municipalities to opt out of any or all six license classes by August 2021 deadline. Many Ocean County towns opted out of retail sales. Toms River, Point Pleasant Beach, Seaside Heights, Lakewood…
Home cannabis cultivation is PROHIBITED in New Jersey under the Cannabis Regulatory, Enforcement Assistance, and Marketplace Modernization Act (N.J.S.A. 24:6I-31 et seq.). Adults 21+ may possess up to 6 oz but may not grow any plants at home. This applies in Ocean County…
Ocean County property maintenance codes require garage sale cleanup to prevent blight. Items must be removed from yard each evening and all signs pulled within 24 hours of sale end. Lakewood's dense residential neighborhoods enforce strict cleanup. Toms River §327 treats…
Ocean County property owners must clear snow and ice from adjacent sidewalks within 24 to 48 hours of snowfall ending. Toms River §327, Brick §176, and other municipal codes impose this duty under N.J.S.A. 40:65-12. Failure creates slip-and-fall liability and triggers municipal…
Vacant lot owners in Ocean County must mow (grass max 10 inches typical), remove trash, control invasive vegetation, and secure lot against dumping. Municipal abatement liens costs to property under N.J.S.A. 40:48-2.14.
Ocean County trash and recycling collected municipally. Bins must be stored out of street view between pickups and curb-placed night before/morning of collection. Toms River and shore towns enforce under property maintenance chapters.
Ocean County blight enforced municipally under NJ Abandoned Properties Rehabilitation Act (N.J.S.A. 55:19-78) and local property maintenance codes. Toms River Ch. 368 and vacant-property registration in Lakewood, Brick, Seaside Heights.
Ocean County outdoor lighting is regulated by municipal zoning codes requiring full-cutoff fixtures and light trespass limits. LBI and coastal municipalities enforce sea turtle-friendly lighting during nesting season (May-October) under NJDEP Endangered Species guidelines…
Ocean County municipalities regulate light trespass through local zoning. Toms River Land Use Ch. 348 and coastal towns limit illumination at property lines; shielded fixtures required near dark-sky coastal and Pinelands areas.
Ocean County family child care homes licensed by NJ DCF Office of Licensing under Family Child Care Registration Act (N.J.S.A. 30:5B-16). Up to 5 children. Local zoning cannot prohibit registered home daycare.
NJ legalized cottage food in 2021 (N.J.A.C. 8:24-11). Ocean County home bakers can sell up to $50,000/year of non-TCS foods with a permit. Direct-to-consumer sales only. Farm markets at Ocean County Parks permitted.
Customer traffic restrictions for home businesses in Ocean County are set by individual municipalities. Common restrictions include limits on customer visits (typically no more than 2–4 clients at a time), prohibition on regular customer traffic, and requirements that the home…
Home business zoning rules in Ocean County are determined by each municipality's zoning ordinance under the NJ Municipal Land Use Law (MLUL, N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 et seq.). There is no countywide home occupation ordinance. Typical municipal home occupation standards require the…
Home business signage in Ocean County is regulated by each municipality's sign ordinance under the MLUL. Most municipalities either prohibit home business signs entirely or allow a single small identification sign (typically 1–2 sq ft). Illuminated signs are generally prohibited…
NJ Anti-Eviction Act (N.J.S.A. 2A:18-61.1) requires good cause for all Ocean County residential evictions. Owner-occupied 1-2 unit homes and transient/seasonal guests are exempt. 18 statutory grounds apply.
All NJ landlords must file a Landlord Identity Registration (N.J.S.A. 46:8-28). Ocean County municipalities add local rental certificate-of-occupancy requirements — Lakewood Ch. 15 requires pre-rental CO; Seaside Heights requires STR license.
Ocean County has no county rent control, but several municipalities cap annual increases. Lakewood (Ch. 14) caps increases at 5% if tenant pays heat, 6.5% if landlord pays. Seaside Heights, Point Pleasant Beach, Lakehurst also regulate.
Political signs allowed on private property in Ocean County with First Amendment protection. Toms River (Ch. 348) allows from 30 days before to 7 days after election. Right-of-way and utility pole placement prohibited.
Ocean County municipalities permit garage sale signs on private property only. Toms River Ch. 348 bans signs on utility poles, street signs, and public ROW. Signs must come down within 24 hours after sale ends.
Holiday decorations permitted on Ocean County private property without permit. Must not block sight triangles, obstruct sidewalks, or create fire/traffic hazards. Electric displays must comply with NJ UCC electrical requirements.
Abandoned/junk vehicles on Ocean County streets and yards prohibited under N.J.S.A. 39:4-56.5 and Toms River Ch. 368 Nuisances. 48-72 hour notice then tow. Inoperable vehicles on private property must be garaged or screened.
NJ Model Stormwater + EV Ready laws (P.L. 2021 c.171) require EV-capable parking in Ocean County new construction. UCC electrical permit required for home Level 2 chargers. HOAs cannot prohibit owner-installed chargers.
Ocean County shore towns restrict overnight on-street parking during summer peak (Seaside Heights, Point Pleasant Beach meter enforcement overnight). Residential neighborhoods typically allow with some 2 AM to 6 AM sweeps.
Driveway regulations in Ocean County are set at the municipal level through local zoning and land use ordinances. The Ocean County Planning Board reviews driveway access onto county roads per the County Road Access Management Code. Driveway permits are required for any new or…
RV and recreational vehicle parking rules in Ocean County are determined by each municipality's zoning ordinance. There is no countywide RV parking ordinance. Common municipal restrictions include prohibitions on street parking of RVs over a certain length, requirements that RVs…
Commercial vehicle parking in residential areas is regulated by individual Ocean County municipalities through zoning ordinances. There is no countywide commercial vehicle parking ban. Common municipal restrictions include weight limits (typically 10,000–26,000 lbs GVW…
Street parking regulations in Ocean County are set by each municipality and the NJ Department of Transportation for state highways. Ocean County maintains county roads (CR series) and may restrict parking on county road shoulders. Municipal parking ordinances vary significantly…
Ocean County carports require NJ UCC building permit (N.J.A.C. 5:23). Toms River, Brick, Lakewood, Jackson apply accessory-structure setbacks (typically 5 ft side, 10 ft rear). Count toward lot coverage in flood zones.
Tiny homes on foundations allowed in Ocean County under NJ UCC (IRC Appendix AQ). Tiny homes on wheels typically classified as RVs — banned as permanent residences. New NJ ADU law (2024) opens secondary-dwelling pathway.
Accessory dwelling unit rules in Ocean County are set by each municipality's zoning ordinance. New Jersey does not have a statewide ADU mandate like California. Most Ocean County municipalities do not specifically address ADUs in their zoning codes, though some allow accessory…
Garage conversion regulations in Ocean County are governed by the NJ Uniform Construction Code and municipal zoning ordinances. Converting a garage to living space requires a UCC building permit and must meet IRC habitability standards (egress windows, insulation, ceiling…
Shed and detached accessory structure regulations in Ocean County are governed by the NJ Uniform Construction Code and individual municipal zoning ordinances. Under the NJ UCC, detached structures under 200 sq ft do not require a building permit but still must comply with zoning…
Solar installations in Ocean County require NJ UCC building and electrical permits (N.J.A.C. 5:23). Subcode fees capped by state. PSE&G or JCP&L interconnection required. Net metering available under N.J.S.A. 48:3-87.
NJ Solar Rights Act (N.J.S.A. 45:22A-48.2) bars Ocean County HOAs from banning rooftop solar on individually-owned single-family homes. Reasonable aesthetic rules allowed but cannot materially reduce efficiency or inflate cost.
Seaside Heights requires $500,000 minimum liability insurance per occurrence for STR permits. Most Ocean County STR municipalities require proof at registration. Standard homeowner policies often exclude commercial rental.
Ocean County shore STR occupancy capped locally. Seaside Heights: max 10 occupants, 1 vehicle per 4 occupants. Point Pleasant Beach: 7-day minimum stays. Toms River, Brick, and LBI towns set per-bedroom limits.
Short-term rental noise rules in Ocean County are governed by each municipality's noise ordinance, not by the county. Barrier island municipalities frequently adopt specific STR noise provisions due to seasonal rental impacts. Standard NJ DEP noise limits (65/50 dBA) provide the…
NJ imposes state Sales and Use Tax (6.625%) on transient accommodations of less than 90 consecutive days. Some Ocean County municipalities in Urban Enterprise Zones qualify for reduced sales tax rates. Individual municipalities may adopt occupancy taxes in addition to state tax…
STR parking requirements in Ocean County are set at the municipal level. Barrier island communities with limited parking typically impose strict off-street parking requirements for rental properties (usually 1–2 spaces per bedroom). Mainland municipalities may be less…
Ocean County does not have a countywide short-term rental ordinance. STR registration and licensing requirements are set by individual municipalities. Barrier island communities (Seaside Heights, Lavallette, Ortley Beach/Toms River, Long Beach Island boroughs) typically have the…
These cities are located within Ocean County and may have their own ordinances.
These communities are in unincorporated Ocean County. County ordinances apply directly to these areas.
Ordinance data for Ocean County is sourced from the following official government references. Click any topic above for detailed citations.