Showing ordinances that apply to Springfield, NJ
Springfield is an unincorporated community (population 1,518) in Union County, New Jersey. Because Springfield is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Union County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The frequency limits rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Union County municipalities limit garage sales to 2-4 per household per year. Elizabeth Chapter 5.44 caps at 2 sales per year, 3 consecutive days each. Westfield, Cranford, and Summit each cap at 2 per year. Plainfield allows 3 per year. Limits prevent residential properties from operating as retail businesses. Estate sales following death or property sale typically exempt. Neighborhood-wide block sales often count as single event. Exceeding limits may trigger home business zoning violation.
Frequency limits on garage and yard sales across Union County prevent residential properties from operating as ongoing retail operations. Elizabeth Revised Ordinances Chapter 5.44 restricts households to 2 sales per calendar year with up to 3 consecutive days each. Westfield Code ยง11-14 caps at 2 sales per year with 3-day maximum. Summit similar 2 sales, 2-3 days each. Cranford Code ยง4-13 allows 2 sales of 2 consecutive days each per year. Scotch Plains and Mountainside similar 2/year limits. Plainfield more permissive at 3 sales per year. Union Township, Linden, Rahway limit 2-3 sales. Exceeding local frequency limits may trigger home business zoning violations (typically $100-$500 fines) and in serious cases zoning action under NJ MLUL for unauthorized commercial use in residential zones. Estate sales triggered by death, relocation, or property sale are typically exempt or handled under separate estate sale provisions. Neighborhood-wide block sales in Westfield, Summit, Cranford, and Scotch Plains are often permitted as single events with one coordinating permit, particularly for established neighborhood associations. Church rummage sales, school fundraisers, and charitable nonprofit sales operate under separate rules usually without count toward household limit. Repeat violators may receive zoning citation indicating home business without approved home occupation permit (requiring zoning board review).
Elizabeth exceeding 2/year: $100-$500 per occurrence plus cease-and-desist. Habitual violations may trigger zoning board investigation for illegal home business ($250-$1,000). Westfield: $100-$500 per sale over limit. Commercial purchasing-for-resale scheme: retail licensing violation up to $2,500.
See how Springfield's frequency limits rules stack up against other locations.
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