100 local rules on file Β· Pop. 1,155 Β· Lorain County
Showing ordinances that apply to Eaton Estates, OH
Eaton Estates is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 1,155 in Lorain County, Ohio. Because Eaton Estates is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Lorain County ordinances apply directly to residential and commercial properties here. The rules below are the county-level regulations that govern your area. Nearby incorporated cities in Lorain County may have different rules.
In the City of Lorain, idling a motor vehicle over 8,000 pounds for more than two minutes between 9:30 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. (or on Sundays/holidays) that raises neighborhood noise by more than six decibels is unlawful. Elyria bars racing engines and 'peeling.'
The City of Lorain bars performing any hand organ, musical instrument or device for pay in a public way or outdoor public place before 9:00 a.m. or after 11:00 p.m. Elyria requires a city permit for amplified sound at organized outdoor events.
Ohio has no statewide numeric quiet-hours limit, so your city or township sets the rule. In Elyria, amplified sound plainly audible beyond 50 feet is prohibited from midnight to 8:00 a.m.; Lorain uses similar nighttime limits.
In the City of Lorain, powered construction equipment such as pile drivers, hammers and rollers may not operate between 7:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. or on Sundays and holidays without a special permit. Elyria restricts construction tools between 8:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.
Elyria bars keeping any bird or animal that, by frequent or long-continued noise, disturbs neighbors when the noise can be distinctly heard more than 50 feet from its source. Complaints go to your city police or the Lorain County Dog Warden.
In the City of Lorain, powered saws, lawn and garden tools, mowers and similar outdoor devices may not run between 9:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m., or before 9:00 a.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. Elyria bars such tools between 8:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m.
Elyria prohibits playing any radio, boom box, stereo or musical instrument at a volume that disturbs neighbors or is plainly audible to involuntary listeners. Lorain imposes escalating fines and device seizure for loud sound systems, including in vehicles.
Ohio sets no statewide residential decibel cap. The City of Lorain uses measured decibel standards: heavy-vehicle idling may not exceed ambient by more than six decibels, and manufacturing districts have octave-band sound-pressure limits at their boundaries. Elyria relies on a 'plainly audible at 50 feet' test.
The City of Lorain limits industrial noise: manufacturing-district operations may not exceed set octave-band decibel levels at the boundary of any residence, retail or commercial district, and no premises may be used in a boisterous way that substantially raises the neighborhood's ambient noise.
Neither Lorain County nor its cities set enforceable aircraft-noise limits. Aircraft operations and flight-noise standards are regulated by the FAA under federal law, which preempts local rules. Complaints go to the airport operator or the FAA, not city police.
Lorain County does not zone incorporated cities, so short-term-rental permits are set by your city. In the City of Lorain, an STR operator must hold a rental Housing License AND obtain a Conditional Use Permit before renting.
Lorain County sets no short-term-rental parking rule for incorporated areas. Off-street parking is a city zoning matter, imposed on Lorain STRs through the Conditional Use Permit and the general off-street parking standards of the zoning code.
Lorain County has no host-presence rule. The City of Lorain does not require an on-site host, but it does require a designated agent who resides in the City and can accept notices and handle problems.
Lorain County imposes no STR insurance rule, but the City of Lorain does: an applicant for a short-term-rental Housing License must submit proof of property insurance as part of the application.
Lorain County does not run an STR registry for incorporated areas. In the City of Lorain no dwelling may be occupied as a rental without a Housing License. Elyria requires all rental units registered every two years.
Lorain County sets no STR headcount limit for incorporated cities. Lorain's code caps a 'transient guest' stay at 29 days and defines 'family' so that a group of four or more unrelated people cannot occupy a dwelling as one household.
The City of Lorain levies a 3% transient guest (lodging) tax on short-term rentals, collected from guests and remitted quarterly. Lorain's rental Housing License fee is $100 for a single-family unit, plus $25 per additional unit.
Lorain County sets no STR-specific noise rule for cities. A short-term rental must follow the same city noise and nuisance ordinance that applies to any residence, enforced by local police and code officials.
Lorain County sets no annual cap on rental nights. Lorain's code limits each short-term stay to 29 days per guest but places no ceiling on how many nights per year a property may be rented.
No. Lorain County imposes no owner-occupancy rule, and the City of Lorain expressly allows non-resident owners to run rentals, provided they name a designated local agent responsible for the property.
On-street parking is governed by each city plus Ohio law. Ohio Revised Code 4511.68 bars stopping or parking on sidewalks, in front of driveways, within 10 feet of a hydrant, and within 20 feet of a crosswalk.
Ohio cities set overnight parking rules. In Lorain, overnight parking or storage of commercial vehicles is prohibited, and RVs, boats, and trailers may not sit on residential lots outside the driveway more than 48 hours.
In Lorain, keeping an inoperable vehicle outside an enclosed building for more than 48 hours is unlawful. Statewide, Ohio law defines and authorizes removal of abandoned junk motor vehicles.
In the City of Lorain, RVs and boats may be kept on a residential lot but not in the front yard, except up to 48 hours on a driveway for cleaning or prep. Elyria and other cities set their own rules.
Lorain County has no dedicated ordinance for home EV charging. Installing a residential charger follows the Ohio Residential Code and requires an electrical permit from your city's building department.
No Lorain County ordinance lets residents paint their own curbs. Curb colors and markings are official traffic-control devices placed by the city, and parking where curb markings prohibit it is illegal under Ohio law.
In the City of Lorain, parking or storing tractor-trailers, semi-trailers, and trucks over one ton is prohibited on private property in any residential or business district. Terminals and construction sites are exceptions.
In Lorain, buildings that receive or distribute goods must provide off-street loading space. Loading spaces must be paved and at least 12 feet wide by 35 feet long for buildings up to 20,000 square feet.
In Lorain, residential vehicles, trailers, and boats must be parked on a designated driveway, and the parking area may not exceed 30 feet wide or half the lot width, whichever is less.
In Lorain, oversized vehicles like tractor-trailers, trucks over one ton, semi-trailers, and moving vans are banned from private property in any residential or business district, except at terminals or job sites.
Since HB 172 (2022), Ohioans may discharge consumer 1.4G fireworks on private property on listed holidays like July 3-5 and December 31 β UNLESS your city or township has passed an opt-out banning or restricting them. Check Lorain, Elyria, or your township first.
Recreational fire pits are allowed statewide but the Ohio Fire Code requires gas-fired recreational pits to stay at least 15 feet from any structure or combustible material. Recreational fires must burn clean wood only, with a fuel area no larger than three feet across and two feet high.
Ohio has no county-specific propane rule. LP-gas storage and use follow the Ohio Fire Code (OAC 1301:7-7), which adopts NFPA 58. Small grill-size cylinders are permitted at homes, but larger tanks have separation-distance and container limits enforced by the local fire code official.
In cities like Lorain and Elyria (population over 10,000), Ohio EPA rules make them 'restricted areas' where burning residential trash, leaves, and yard waste is prohibited. Rural unincorporated land also faces a state ban on open fires from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. during March-May and October-November.
Ohio law (ORC 3781.104) requires every dwelling unit to have approved smoke detectors installed just outside all sleeping rooms. New construction follows the Residential Code of Ohio, which requires alarms in each bedroom, outside sleeping areas, and on every story including basements.
Lorain County is not in a designated wildfire hazard zone β Ohio does not map fire-severity zones the way western states do. The relevant statewide rule is ORC 1503.18, which bans open fires near woodland from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. during the peak wildfire months of March-May and October-November.
Ohio has no California-style defensible-space law. Instead, ORC 5579.04 directs township road superintendents, county commissioners, and municipal officials to destroy brush, briers, vines, and noxious weeds growing along roads. Property owners who let noxious weeds spread can be ordered to cut them or be charged the cost.
Backyard recreational and cooking fires are legal in Lorain County if they meet Ohio EPA limits: fueled only with clean seasoned firewood or natural gas, never used to dispose of waste, and kept to a total fuel area no larger than three feet across and two feet high. Local fire
Lorain County does not zone incorporated cities, so height limits come from your city or township. In the City of Lorain (the county's largest city), residential fences may not exceed six feet, and no fence taller than three feet may stand in a front yard in any district.
Neither Lorain County nor the City of Lorain's zoning code sets a specific residential retaining-wall height standard. Structural retaining walls are regulated instead through building permits under the Ohio Residential Code, and a wall that also functions as a fence must meet the applicable fence-height limit.
The City of Lorain defines fences broadly to include walls, hedges, prefabricated and wood fences, picket, wire, and grape-stake fences, and ornamental decoration. Solid fences must allow water drainage. These material standards are city code, not a Lorain County rule.
Fence permits are issued by your city or township, not by Lorain County. In the City of Lorain, erecting any fence requires a fence permit, submitted with a plot plan and the fee set by city council. Elyria similarly requires a zoning permit before a fence goes up.
In the City of Lorain, fence height is measured from natural grade to the highest point, solid fences must allow drainage, and every fenced enclosure must have a gate at least three feet wide for safety personnel. These construction standards are city code, not a county rule.
Ohio's distinctive partition-fence law (ORC Chapter 971) governs line fences between adjoining rural owners, letting an aggrieved neighbor act when the other fails to maintain their share. In the City of Lorain, a boundary fence needs the adjoining owner's consent, or it must sit at least one foot off the
In the City of Lorain, fences may not be built of barbed wire or razor wire, electrified, or topped with broken glass, spikes, or sharp materials. Barbed wire is allowed only in Industrial Districts, angled inward, above seven feet. This is city code, not a county rule.
Livestock keeping is governed by local zoning and Ohio's right-to-farm law, not a county animal code. Cities like Lorain prohibit farm animals; unincorporated townships allow agricultural use on qualifying land under ORC Chapter 929.
Ohio has no breed-specific ban. Since 2012, pit bulls and other breeds are no longer automatically labeled vicious. A dog is classified 'dangerous' or 'vicious' only by its behavior, so no Lorain County breed is banned by name.
Lorain County sets no countywide pet-number limit; cities do. The City of Lorain caps most single households at five domestic animals, excluding caged small pets like hamsters. Check your own city or township for its limit.
Whether you may keep chickens or livestock depends on your city or township, not the county. Lorain County does not zone incorporated cities. Inside the City of Lorain, farm animals are prohibited under Chapter 505; unincorporated townships allow agricultural use under Ohio's right-to-farm law.
Lorain County sets no beekeeping ordinance. Ohio law requires every beekeeper to register colonies annually with the Ohio Department of Agriculture. Local hive placement and setbacks are governed by your city or township zoning, not the county.
Ohio law requires every dog to be physically confined to the owner's property or kept under reasonable control at all times. The Lorain County Dog Warden enforces this countywide, in both urban and rural areas. A leashed dog on a walk counts as reasonable control.
Ohio has no statewide cat license or leash law, and Lorain County sets none. Cats are not covered by the dog-warden confinement statute. Some cities have limited cat nuisance or at-large rules, but most treat free-roaming cats as unregulated.
Ohio bans private possession of dangerous wild animals such as big cats, bears, large primates, and many venomous snakes. The ban applies statewide, including all of Lorain County. Existing owners had to register and meet strict caging standards.
Lorain County has no general wildlife-feeding ban. Feeding deer and most wildlife is governed by Ohio Division of Wildlife rules, and cities may prohibit feeding that creates a nuisance. Intentionally feeding is discouraged and can be restricted locally.
Ohio's companion-animal cruelty law makes it illegal to keep animals without adequate food, water, or shelter, or to commit cruelty against them. The Lorain County Dog Warden and humane agents enforce these state protections, and hoarding cases are prosecuted as cruelty.
Ohio law and local codes both target noxious weeds. City codes (Elyria, Lorain) treat weeds over 8 inches as a nuisance. Ohio Revised Code 5579.04 orders townships to destroy roadside noxious weeds, and 971.33 makes landowners clear a 4-foot strip along partition fences.
Lorain County has no standing lawn-watering ban. Ohio, on Lake Erie, does not impose statewide residential drought restrictions. Your water provider (City of Lorain/Elyria utilities or the Rural Lorain County Water Authority) may issue temporary conservation notices during main breaks or droughts.
Lorain County has no ordinance banning or permitting artificial turf; that is a city zoning matter. Synthetic lawns are generally allowed in residential yards in Lorain-area municipalities, though some cities regulate front-yard coverage, drainage, and setbacks. Check your city's zoning code before installing.
In Lorain County's cities, grass and weeds over 8 inches are a declared nuisance. Elyria and Lorain both set an 8-inch limit and mow non-compliant lots at the owner's cost. There is no county-wide height rule; your city or township sets it.
Removing a tree on your own land needs no Lorain County permit. Removing a street tree or a tree in the public right-of-way does. Elyria requires a City Urban Forester permit before cutting any tree in a public way, tree lawn, or on City property.
Trees on your own private property can generally be trimmed without a permit. But street trees, tree lawns, and trees in the public right-of-way are city-regulated. In Elyria, a City Urban Forester permit is required before trimming any tree in the public way.
Collecting rainwater in barrels for outdoor use is legal in Lorain County and across Ohio, with no county permit required. If a cistern will supply water for drinking or household use, Ohio's private-water-systems rules (Ohio Department of Health) apply and Lorain County Public Health permits it.
Lorain County does not restrict planting native or pollinator species. But a naturalized or 'no-mow' yard is still subject to your city's weed-nuisance rule: in Elyria and Lorain, ground cover over 8 inches is a nuisance regardless of species unless it qualifies as a managed landscape.
Backyard composting is allowed in Lorain County and supported by the Lorain County Solid Waste Management District. Yard waste is banned from Ohio landfills, so residents use curbside yard-waste collection or free drop-off sites like the Elyria Regional Compost Facility rather than the trash.
Ohio's incorporated cities (Lorain, Elyria) permit private pools as an accessory use by zoning/building permit; unincorporated townships zone under ORC 519. A building permit for the pool structure is required statewide under the Ohio Residential Code.
Ohio's residential/building code (Section 3109) requires a 48-inch barrier around residential pools, self-closing and self-latching gates opening away from the pool, and openings too small to pass a 4-inch sphere.
In the City of Lorain, an above-ground pool must be fenced like an in-ground pool or have a side wall/fence at least six feet high with a tilt-up lockable or removable ladder. State barrier rules also apply.
In the City of Lorain, an in-ground pool must be enclosed by a fence or wall 4 to 6 feet high with a latched, lockable gate. Statewide, the Ohio residential/building code sets a 48-inch minimum barrier.
Ohio treats spas and hot tubs as pools subject to the same barrier code, but a spa or hot tub with an approved safety cover complying with ASTM F1346 is exempt from the fence requirement. Lorain's zoning code sets no separate hot-tub rule.
In the City of Lorain a home occupation must stay within the dwelling, use no more than 25% of floor area, employ only resident family members, and generate no excess traffic. In business/mixed districts it is a conditional use requiring approval.
The City of Lorain allows one non-illuminated home-occupation sign no larger than two square feet, attached to the wall of the dwelling. No other change to the exterior of the home is permitted.
Home occupations are a permitted accessory use in the City of Lorain's residential districts, provided the activity is clearly incidental to the home and meets the standards in Zoning Code Section 11.06(E). Townships zone home businesses under ORC 519.
Ohio's Cottage Food Law lets you make non-hazardous foods like baked goods, jams, and candy in your home kitchen with no license, registration, fee, or inspection. Products must be properly labeled and made in your primary residence.
Ohio law licenses in-home child care by size. A Type B family child care home cares for one to seven children at a time (no more than three under age two) in the provider's residence and must be licensed/certified by the state.
Ohio has no statewide ADU mandate, and Lorain County does not zone incorporated cities. In Elyria's low-density residential district only single-household detached dwellings are permitted, and accessory uses must be customary and incidental, so a separate second dwelling (ADU) is not a permitted use. Check your city or township.
Shed rules come from your city or township, not the county. In Elyria, an accessory structure must sit in the rear yard, no closer than 3 feet from any lot line and 6 feet from an alley, and cover no more than 40% of the required rear yard. A building
Converting a garage into living space is regulated by your city or township building and zoning code, not the county. In Elyria you need a building permit, the new space must meet the Ohio Residential Code, and off-street parking removed by the conversion may still have to be replaced. The
A carport is an accessory structure regulated by your city or township. In Elyria it must be located in the rear yard, no closer than 3 feet from any lot line and 6 feet from an alley, and cover no more than 40% of the required rear yard. Attached carports
Ohio and Lorain County have no separate 'tiny home' category. A tiny house on a permanent foundation is a dwelling that must meet the Ohio Residential Code and the local zoning district's minimum-dwelling and single-household standards. A tiny house on wheels is treated as an RV and cannot be a
Backyard smokers are legal for cooking and are exempt from Ohio's open-burning ban when used to prepare food with clean fuel. At apartments and condos, though, the Ohio Fire Code's open-flame device rules keep charcoal and gas smokers off combustible balconies and within 10 feet of the building.
Single-family and two-family homes can grill freely. But under the Ohio Fire Code (Sec. 308), charcoal and LP-gas grills may not be operated on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction at multi-family buildings β a rule that affects apartments and condos in Lorain and Elyria.
Lorain County does not zone incorporated cities, so setbacks come from your city or township. In the City of Lorain's low-density R-1A district, buildings need a 45-foot front, 35-foot rear, 10-foot interior side, and 25-foot street-side setback. Denser residential districts require less.
In the City of Lorain, single-family lot building coverage is capped at 35% (R-1A), 40% (R-1B), or 45% (R-1C). Accessory buildings may not cover more than 35% of the rear yard. These maximums are city zoning standards, not a Lorain County rule.
In the City of Lorain's single-family residential districts, buildings are limited to 35 feet or two stories. Accessory buildings such as sheds and detached garages may not exceed 14 feet, measured at the midpoint between the roof eave and ridge. These are city standards, not county rules.
Lorain County runs no countywide blight or property-maintenance code; incorporated cities do. Elyria, the county seat, adopted the International Property Maintenance Code as Chapter 1305, and its Building Department investigates blight, junk and deteriorated-exterior complaints.
Elyria's weed ordinance applies to every parcel whether improved, unimproved, vacant, or occupied. Ground cover over eight inches on a vacant lot is a declared nuisance, and the owner must keep it cut during the growing season.
Lorain County does not supply trash cans; each city does. In Elyria every residence gets one black garbage cart and one green recycling cart, and residents must keep three feet of clearance around each cart with wheels facing away from the street.
In Elyria, weeds, grasses, vines, or any ground cover growing to eight inches or higher is declared a nuisance. Owners and occupants must cut vegetation during the growing season or the city will mow and charge them.
Lorain County requires no garage-sale license. The City of Elyria asks residents to get a free signed permit and post it on the property during the sale; permits come from the Safety Service Director's office at City Hall.
Elyria issues every residence a green recycling cart for recyclables only, collected weekly. The Lorain County Solid Waste Management District runs the countywide plan, drop-off recycling, and programs for electronics, appliances, tires, and household hazardous waste.
Dumping litter or garbage on public land or on property you do not own is illegal statewide under Ohio Revised Code 3767.32. Report dumping in Lorain County to the Sheriff's Office; cities also enforce their own littering ordinances.
Lorain County does not collect household trash; each city or a private hauler does. Elyria's Sanitation Department picks up garbage and recycling weekly. Set carts out no sooner than 5:00 p.m. the day before and no later than 7:00 a.m. on collection day.
Elyria collects bulk items curbside with regular pickup; large items should be disassembled as much as possible. Refrigerator and freezer doors must be removed, and appliances with refrigerant must be discharged and tagged by a certified technician first.
Elyria residents set carts on the curb-lawn between 5:00 p.m. the day before and 7:00 a.m. on collection day, keep three feet of clearance with wheels facing away from the street, and must remove carts the same day collection is made.
Sign rules are set by your city, not the county. In Elyria's residential districts, non-commercial signs (including political and yard signs) need no permit, so long as they do not advertise or promote goods or services. Content-based limits on political signs are unenforceable after Reed v. Town of Gilbert, so
Garage-sale sign rules are set by your city. In Elyria, temporary non-commercial signs in residential districts need no permit under Section 1174.06, but signs may not sit in the public right-of-way or block traffic sightlines, and off-premises signs on utility poles, trees, or fences (snipe signs) are prohibited. Remove signs
Neither Lorain County nor the City of Elyria has adopted a dark-sky or comprehensive outdoor-lighting ordinance for residential property, and Ohio sets no statewide residential lighting limit. Elyria's sign code does bar illuminated signs that flash or lack constant intensity. Your township or city may add site-plan lighting standards for
Lorain County and the City of Elyria have no specific residential light-trespass ordinance setting numeric limits on light spilling onto a neighbor's property. Glare from a neighbor is typically addressed as a private nuisance, or through commercial site-plan conditions, rather than a dedicated code. Check your city or township for
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Lorain County ordinances.