7 county-level rules, plus city-specific rules for 1 city in Williamson County, Tennessee.
Verified from official government sources
Williamson County zoning limits where RVs, boats, and trailers may be stored on residential lots, but the tightest rules come from HOAs. Most of this affluent county's subdivisions ban visible RV and boat storage outright.
Williamson County expects residential vehicles to be parked on improved surfaces, not front lawns, with inoperable vehicles kept out of view. New driveways and widenings need permits meeting zoning setbacks, and HOA rules often go further.
Williamson County restricts parking large commercial vehicles, semi-trailers, and heavy equipment in residential zones. Overnight storage of big trucks is prohibited, though a contractor's pickup or van for active work is generally fine. HOAs add limits.
Tennessee sets no statewide time limit for street parking, so Williamson County and its cities set their own. Vehicles must stay clear of fire hydrants, crosswalks, and intersections, and mild winters mean no snow-emergency bans.
Tenn. Code Ann. Β§55-8-160(a)
Within seven and one-half feet (7 1/2 β²) to fifteen feet (15β²) of a fire hydrant
Williamson County has no countywide overnight street-parking ban, and its warm winters mean no snow-removal restrictions. Individual city rules and HOAs, not the county, drive most overnight limits, and long-parked cars can be tagged abandoned.
Home EV charger installs in Williamson County need an electrical permit for the 240-volt circuit, fitting this affluent, high-EV-adoption county. Public stations are growing around Franklin and Cool Springs, and building codes push EV-ready parking.
Williamson County treats unregistered, inoperable, or long-idle vehicles on streets or in open view as abandoned nuisances. After a notice period they can be tagged and towed. Cities and HOAs enforce their own stricter versions.
1 cities in Williamson 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 Williamson County β parking, noise, fences, fires, animals, pools, and more.
Williamson County Ordinance Hub β