Showing ordinances that apply to Woodbourne, PA
Woodbourne is an unincorporated community (population 3,710) in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Because Woodbourne is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Bucks County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The frequency limits rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Bucks County municipalities typically limit residential garage sales to 2-4 per household per calendar year. Each sale usually 2-3 consecutive days (Thursday-Sunday most common). Exceeding limits may trigger home business zoning review. Neighborhood/community sales count as one event. HOAs commonly add their own limits.
Garage sale frequency is regulated at the municipal level across Bucks County. Standard limits across most Bucks townships and boroughs allow 2-4 garage sales per household per calendar year, with each sale lasting 2-3 consecutive days. Common patterns: Doylestown Township and Newtown Township allow 2 sales per calendar year of up to 3 days each; Bensalem Township, Middletown Township and most lower Bucks municipalities allow 3-4 sales per year; borough codes in Doylestown, Bristol, Newtown, New Hope, Yardley, Perkasie, and Quakertown typically cap at 2-3 sales per year. These limits aim to prevent residential properties from operating as ongoing commercial activity, which would require home business zoning approval, PA sales tax license, and business privilege license. Multi-family community or neighborhood-wide sales (sometimes called 'citywide' or 'development-wide' sales) are typically treated as a single event for each participating household — popular examples include the annual Yardley Borough community-wide yard sale, Newtown Grant community sale, and Village Shires development sales, which are coordinated through HOAs or borough governments. Church, school, and nonprofit sales are typically exempt from household limits but may require separate special event permits. Exceeding frequency limits may result in: initial warning; citation $50-$200; escalation to home business zoning investigation; potential requirement to obtain home occupation permit with customer traffic and signage restrictions; and PA Department of Revenue contact regarding unreported sales tax.
Exceeding annual frequency: $50-$200 first offense citation. Escalation: home business zoning investigation and potential cease-and-desist. Operating unlicensed retail from home: home business zoning violation $100-$500 plus PA sales tax enforcement for unreported revenue. Continuing violations: escalating fines and potential injunction.
See how Woodbourne's frequency limits rules stack up against other locations.
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