Sarasota County sets no mandatory defensible-space clearance ordinance like fire-prone Western states. The Florida Forest Service recommends clearing dead vegetation within 30 feet of your home and reducing fuels out to 100 feet, but this is voluntary Firewise guidance, not a county mandate.
Unlike California-style wildland-urban-interface codes, Sarasota County does not impose a numeric defensible-space clearance requirement on private homeowners. Instead, the Florida Department of Agriculture (Florida Forest Service) and the county's Firewise program recommend, within 30 feet of the home, clearing all dead vegetation, leaves, and debris from roofs, gutters, decks, and ground, and reducing fuels out to 100 feet by thinning trees and pruning branches 6 to 10 feet up. Overgrown lots may still be cited under the county's general property-maintenance and nuisance provisions. Homeowners are encouraged to maintain defensible space, especially during dry season, but there is no county fine tied to a specific clearance distance.
No county wildfire-clearance fine exists. Severely overgrown or nuisance lots may be cited under Sarasota County's property-maintenance/nuisance code, with abatement and cost-recovery liens.
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