Bucks County does not regulate fence materials countywide. Each of the 54 municipalities sets materials rules in its zoning code. Wood, vinyl, aluminum, and wrought iron are standard across suburban Bucks. Historic districts in Doylestown, New Hope, Bristol, and Newtown impose stricter material standards. Barbed wire is banned in residential zones.
Fence material regulation in Bucks County is a municipal zoning matter. Typical residential zoning districts (R-1, R-2, R-3) in Bucks townships permit wood (cedar, pressure-treated pine, spruce), vinyl/PVC, composite, aluminum, wrought iron, and tubular steel. Chain-link is generally permitted but often restricted in front yards of residential districts or required to be vinyl-coated in historic areas. Barbed wire and razor wire are prohibited in all residential zones under standard Bucks municipal zoning codes; agricultural zones (AG, RA) often permit barbed wire for livestock containment consistent with PA Right to Farm Act (3 P.S. Β§951-957). The finished/smooth side of fences must generally face the neighboring property. Several Bucks municipalities maintain nationally registered historic districts with dedicated review: Doylestown Borough Historic District, New Hope Borough, Bristol Borough, and Newtown Borough all require Historic Architectural Review Board (HARB) approval or certificate of appropriateness for fencing in historic areas, typically limiting materials to painted wood picket, wrought iron, or period-appropriate masonry. Planned communities under homeowners association control (Heritage Creek in Richboro, Newtown Grant, Village Shires, Buckingham Greens) commonly require specific colors and materials β often limiting fencing to black aluminum or white vinyl. Electric fencing is restricted to agricultural use and must comply with 34 Pa. Code for livestock containment.
Non-compliant materials result in a zoning enforcement notice with 15-30 day correction window. Failure to remove: $100-$1,000 under PA summary offense schedule. Historic district violations: additional HARB enforcement action. Unauthorized barbed wire in residential zone: removal order.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough regulates construction noise through general excessive noise ordinance (Ch. 10). No separate construction hour limits found; general prohibit...
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough Ch. 10 (Excessive Noise) prohibits unnecessary or excessive noise detrimental to health, safety, or public peace. Truck idling restricted 10 ...
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough Ch. 2, Part 3 (Noisy Animals, Ord. 1005, 7/14/1986) regulates excessive animal noise. Borough Council declared excessive sound detrimental to...
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough Ch. 27 requires unlicensed vehicles/trailers in commercial/industrial zones to be stored in enclosed buildings. Off-street loading requiremen...
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough Ch. 27 limits RVs to one per residential lot in R-1, R-1A, and R-2 districts, max 9% of lot area. RVs may not be used for living or sleeping....
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough Ch. 27 requires off-street parking per Table 27-7-A by use type. All parking areas must be separated from roads by raised curbs or barriers. ...
See how Bristol's material restrictions rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.