Backyard recreational fires are allowed in Pierce County without a permit, but only small fires burning clean wood or charcoal. Puget Sound Clean Air Agency caps them at three feet across, and all fires stop during seasonal burn bans.
A backyard recreational fire in Pierce County is legal without a burn permit as long as it stays within Puget Sound Clean Air Agency and fire district limits. PSCAA defines recreational fires as cooking fires, charcoal barbecues, campfires, and bonfires using charcoal or bare untreated wood, and caps them at three feet in diameter and two feet in height. Only charcoal, dry firewood, or manufactured firelogs may be burned; burning yard debris or trash is illegal. Fires must be attended at all times by someone able to extinguish them and fully put out before leaving. Pierce County fire districts add a 25-foot setback from structures and 10-foot clearance around the fire. During Stage 1 or Stage 2 burn bans issued
Oversized fires, burning prohibited materials, leaving a fire unattended, or burning during a ban can bring PSCAA and fire district penalties and orders to extinguish.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Backyard residential composting is allowed and encouraged in Pierce County with no permit, but a compost pile that creates odor, attracts vermin, or otherwis...
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Pierce County has no ordinance specifically prohibiting or permitting synthetic/artificial turf on residential lots. Installation must still meet general zon...
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Pierce County encourages native and drought-tolerant plantings and requires native-vegetation retention on many development sites, but homeowners are free to...
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Rooftop rainwater collection is broadly allowed in Washington, and Pierce County has no ordinance prohibiting residential rain barrels or cisterns; larger sy...
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Pierce County government sets no county-wide residential watering schedule; outdoor watering rules are set by your water provider — mainly Tacoma Water and l...
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Every Pierce County landowner has an enforceable duty under RCW 17.10.140 to eradicate class A noxious weeds and control listed class B and C weeds. The Pier...
See how Pierce County's backyard fires rules stack up against other locations.
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