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Moving to Anchorage, AK?

Here are the local rules you need to know before you unpack.

Every city has its own set of local ordinances that go beyond state and federal law. From when you can mow your lawn to whether you can park your RV in the driveway, these rules affect daily life in ways most people do not expect. This guide covers the key ordinances in Anchorage across 41 categories and 204 specific rules we track.

65 Permissive102 Moderate37 Strict

πŸ”Š Noise Ordinances

Noise rules affect everything from weekend parties to lawn care schedules. Quiet hours, construction restrictions, and barking dog limits vary widely between cities.

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Persistent barking for 10 minutes continuous or 30 minutes intermittent can trigger an AMC Title 17 citation. Animal Care and Control investigates complaints and chronic barking can be declared a nuisance.

Threshold: 10 min continuous or 30 min intermittentCode: AMC Title 17

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Construction noise in Anchorage is generally allowed 7 AM to 10 PM Monday through Saturday, with limited Sunday activity. Projects near residential zones must follow AMC Title 15.

Weekday Hours: 7 AM to 10 PMSunday: Limited, interior only

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Aircraft noise from Ted Stevens International (ANC), Merrill Field, Lake Hood, and JBER is federally preempted under 49 USC 41713. Anchorage cannot regulate flight operations but joins FAA Part 150 planning.

Preemption: 49 USC 41713Major Facilities: ANC, Lake Hood, Merrill, JBER

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Amplified music audible beyond the property line after 10 PM violates AMC Title 15. Daytime amplified music must be reasonable. Outdoor commercial venues need a special events permit from the Clerk.

Nighttime Rule: Not audible past property lineCode: AMC Title 15

Vehicle Noise

Some Restrictions

Modified exhaust, revving engines, and loud stereos violate AMC Title 15 and AS 28.35 vehicle equipment standards. APD targets Minnesota Drive, the Seward Highway, and downtown. Muffler bypass is a state infraction.

Code: AMC Title 15 plus AS 28.35Stereo Limit: 50 ft audibility rule

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Anchorage quiet hours run 10 PM to 7 AM under AMC Title 15. Amplified sound audible beyond property lines during these hours is prohibited. AS 11.61.110 disorderly conduct also applies.

Quiet Hours: 10 PM to 7 AMCode: AMC Title 15

Leaf Blower Rules

Few Restrictions

Anchorage has no leaf-blower-specific ordinance. Use falls under AMC Title 15 general noise rules, so daytime use is allowed and quiet hours (10 PM to 7 AM) apply. Most yard work runs May through October.

Specific Ban: NoneGoverning Code: AMC Title 15 general

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Commercial operations must keep noise below reasonable levels at adjacent residential property lines. AMC Title 15 and Title 21 zoning apply. Loading docks and HVAC equipment must meet buffer requirements.

Codes: AMC Title 15 and Title 21Measurement Point: Receiving property line

🏠 Short-Term Rentals

If you plan to rent out your home on Airbnb or VRBO - even occasionally - you need to know the local STR rules before listing.

Registration Rules

Heavy Restrictions

The 2023 Anchorage Assembly ordinance AO 2023-66 created mandatory annual registration for all short-term rentals. Each unit must display its registration number in listings and designate a local responsible party.

Ordinance: AO 2023-66 (2023)Annual Renewal: Required

Night Caps

Few Restrictions

Anchorage does not impose a per-year night cap on short-term rentals. Rentals of 30 or more consecutive days fall outside the STR and room tax definition and are treated as standard residential leases.

Municipal Cap: NoneSTR Threshold: Under 30 days

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

Anchorage STR guests are subject to the same Title 15 noise rules as all residents. Quiet hours of 10 PM to 7 AM apply. Repeat noise complaints can jeopardize STR registration under AO 2023-66.

Quiet Hours: 10 PM to 7 AMLocal Code: AMC Title 15

Occupancy Limits

Some Restrictions

Anchorage does not set a specific STR occupancy cap but applies the Alaska Housing Code two-persons-per-bedroom plus two standard, and building code egress and life safety limits. Hosts should list maximum occupancy on registration materials.

Fixed Cap: None in STR ordinanceGuideline: 2 per bedroom + 2

Insurance Requirements

Some Restrictions

Under AO 2023-66 Anchorage STR operators must show proof of liability insurance as part of registration. Platform host protections may satisfy the requirement; standalone commercial policies are recommended for larger operations.

Requirement: Proof of liability insuranceTypical Limit: $500K-$1M recommended

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Few Restrictions

Anchorage does not limit short-term rentals to a host's primary residence. Investor-owned second homes, duplex units, and rented-out cabins all qualify. The Municipality regulates STRs through AMC Title 21 zoning rather than ownership-status caps.

Primary-residence rule: NoneInvestor STRs: Allowed

Host Presence Rule

Few Restrictions

Anchorage does not require hosts to remain on-site or in town when renting an STR. Whole-home rentals, absentee hosts, and remote management are all permitted under AMC Title 21 land-use rules so long as the dwelling is properly registered.

Host on-site required: NoWhole-home rentals: Allowed

Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Anchorage allows extended home-share stays that bridge the gap between traditional STRs and long-term rentals, including multi-week summer-tourist and winter oil-rotation lodging arrangements. Stays beyond 30 days typically convert to AK URLTA tenancy protections.

30-day cutoff: Tenancy beginsTenancy law: AK URLTA AS Β§34.03

Repeat Violator Strikes

Some Restrictions

Anchorage handles repeat STR violators through AMC Title 21 land-use enforcement and AMC Title 13 health-code citations rather than a formal strikes ladder. Persistent noise, occupancy, or sanitation violations can trigger registration revocation and use-permit loss.

Formal strikes ladder: NoEnforcement code: AMC Title 21 + 13

Host Platform Liability

Some Restrictions

Airbnb, Vrbo, and other STR platforms operating in Anchorage are required to collect and remit the Municipality's room tax on bookings. Hosts remain liable for zoning compliance, but platforms shoulder tax-collection duties and may be required to delist non-compliant listings.

Room tax rate: 12 percentTax code section: AMC Title 12

Taxes & Fees

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage levies a 12% room tax on all lodging under 30 days, including short-term rentals. Operators must register with the Treasury Division, file monthly returns, and remit tax. Platforms like Airbnb collect on behalf of hosts in many cases.

Room Tax: 12%Local Code: AMC 12.20

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Anchorage requires short-term rental operators to register with the Municipality under the 2023 STR ordinance. Registration is separate from business licensing and bed tax remittance. Enforcement is handled by the Treasury Division.

Ordinance: AO 2023-66Registration: Annual, with Municipality

Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

Anchorage STRs must provide off-street parking consistent with the underlying residential zoning under AMC Title 21. Guest parking may not block snow removal routes or violate winter parking bans.

Off-Street: Required per zoningFront Lawn: Prohibited

πŸ”₯ Fire Regulations

Fire pit rules, fireworks restrictions, and brush clearance requirements are especially important if you are coming from a state with different fire risk profiles.

Smoke Detectors

Some Restrictions

Anchorage requires working smoke alarms in every bedroom, outside sleeping areas, and on each floor. Rentals must have alarms tested at turnover. CO alarms required with fuel-burning appliances.

Locations: Every bedroom and floorNew Build: Hardwired interconnected

Backyard Fires

Some Restrictions

Backyard recreational fires in Anchorage follow the same rules as fire pits: under 3 feet diameter, 25 feet from structures, clean wood only, adult attended. No yard waste burning. Subject to summer burn bans.

Max Size: 3 feet diameterFuel: Seasoned wood or charcoal

Wildfire Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage designates WUI zones covering Hillside, Eagle River, Chugiak, Girdwood, and Stuckagain Heights. These zones face high wildfire risk and trigger stricter roofing, vent, and defensible-space guidance.

WUI Areas: Hillside, Eagle River, GirdwoodRoof: Class A recommended

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Open burning in Anchorage requires an Alaska DEC permit May 1 through August 31. AFD prohibits burning during red-flag days. Yard debris burning is heavily restricted in the Bowl air-quality nonattainment area.

Permit Season: May 1 - Aug 31Authority: Alaska DEC and AFD

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Anchorage allows recreational fire pits under AMC 23 and the Alaska Fire Code. Pit must be 25 feet from structures, under 3 feet diameter, burning clean dry wood only. No burning during red-flag or DEC burn-ban periods.

Max Size: 3 feet diameterSetback: 25 feet from structures

Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage bans sale, possession, and discharge of consumer fireworks under AMC 10.35. Only licensed public displays permitted. Fines start at 300 dollars and fireworks are confiscated.

Status: All consumer fireworks bannedCode: AMC 10.35

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Anchorage Fire Department enforces NFPA 58 and the International Fire Code as adopted under AMC Title 23, setting limits on residential propane cylinder size, placement, and total storage on a parcel.

Standard: NFPA 58 + IFCResidential limit: Approx 100 lb cylinder

Brush Clearance

Some Restrictions

Anchorage encourages Firewise defensible space under AMC 23.45 and Alaska DNR guidelines. Property owners should clear flammable vegetation within 30 feet of structures, especially in Hillside and Eagle River WUI zones.

Zone 1: 0-5 feet non-combustibleZone 2: 5-30 feet lean and green

πŸš— Parking Rules

Parking rules catch more new residents off guard than almost any other ordinance. RV storage, overnight parking bans, and driveway regulations vary significantly.

EV Charging

Few Restrictions

Anchorage encourages EV charging infrastructure. Level 2 home chargers require an electrical permit but no special zoning approval. Public chargers available at municipal garages and Chugach Electric partner sites.

Permit: Electrical required for L2Code: 2020 NEC adopted

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Commercial vehicles over 12,000 pounds cannot park on Anchorage residential streets overnight. Semi-trucks must use industrial zones or designated truck lots. Construction vehicles allowed during active projects.

Weight: Over 12,000 lbs GVWRHours: 10 PM-6 AM restricted

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Anchorage on-street parking is generally free outside downtown meters. Vehicles cannot park more than 24 hours in one spot and must comply with winter snow-route bans October through April.

Code: AMC Title 9Time limit: 24 hours same spot

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

RVs and boats may be stored on private Anchorage property in side or rear yards. Street storage is limited to 24 hours. Many RVs are winterized and stored from October to April due to cold-weather risk.

Street limit: 24 hoursOn-lot: Side/rear yard allowed

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Anchorage driveway aprons require a right-of-way permit and must meet Municipal Project Management and Engineering standards. Heated driveways are legal but snow must not be shoveled into the street.

Apron width: 24 feet residential maxPermit: ROW required for curb cut

Abandoned Vehicles

Some Restrictions

Under Alaska Statute 28.35.182, a vehicle left on a public street more than 48 hours or in disrepair is abandoned. Anchorage tags, tows, and auctions unclaimed vehicles after statutory notice.

State law: AS 28.35.182Street trigger: 48 hours unattended

Overnight Parking

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage snow-route parking bans run October 15 through April 15. During declared snow emergencies, vehicles on marked snow routes must be moved within posted hours or face tow. Tickets plus tow can exceed 300 dollars.

Season: Oct 15-April 15Code: AMC Β§9.28

🧱 Fence Regulations

Planning to put up a fence? Height limits, material restrictions, and permit requirements differ by city - and sometimes by which side of the property the fence sits on.

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Anchorage fences in residential zones are capped at 6 feet in side and rear yards and 4 feet in front yards under AMC Title 21. Over 6 feet requires a permit. Corner vision triangles limit height further.

Front Yard: 4 feetSide and Rear: 6 feet

Fence Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Corner lots must maintain a clear vision triangle, typically 25 feet by 25 feet at intersections, with nothing over 30 inches tall. AMC Title 21 enforces this strictly, especially given winter snow berms.

Triangle Size: 25 ft by 25 ft typicalMax Height: 30 inches

Neighbor Fence Rules

Few Restrictions

Alaska has no statewide shared-fence cost statute. Anchorage does not require cost-sharing. Boundary disputes are civil. The good-neighbor (finished) side typically faces outward by custom, not by ordinance.

Cost-Sharing Law: None statewideAgricultural Statute: AS 34.11.050 limited

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Fences 6 feet or shorter in residential zones generally do not need a building permit, but zoning compliance is required. Taller fences and retaining-wall fences require Development Services permits.

Under 6 ft: No building permitOver 6 ft: Permit required

Material Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Anchorage allows most standard fence materials under AMC Title 21: wood, vinyl, metal, chain-link, and composite. Barbed wire and electric fencing are restricted in residential zones.

Wood and Vinyl: AllowedChain-Link: Allowed

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Pools and spas require a barrier at least 48 inches tall with self-closing, self-latching gates per Alaska-adopted IRC. AMC construction permits apply. Indoor pools in heated structures are exempt.

Barrier Height: 48 inches minimumGate: Self-closing, self-latching

πŸ” Animal Ordinances

Pet owners and aspiring chicken keepers should check local animal ordinances before signing a lease or closing on a home.

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Alaska has strict statewide exotic-animal rules under 5 AAC 92.029 that apply in Anchorage. Most wild mammals and native wildlife are prohibited without a game permit. Ferrets and hedgehogs are banned.

State Rule: 5 AAC 92.029Ferrets: Prohibited

Beekeeping

Few Restrictions

Beekeeping is legal in Anchorage with no municipal permit. Hives must not create a nuisance under AMC Title 17. Alaska has no state bee registration. Short summers limit productivity.

Permit: None requiredState Registration: Not required

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Anchorage generally limits households to 5 dogs and 5 cats combined without a kennel permit under AMC Title 17. Larger counts require a kennel permit. Sled dog yards have a separate zoning pathway.

Standard Cap: 5 dogs or 5 catsKennel Permit: Required above cap

Dog Leash Laws

Heavy Restrictions

Dogs must be leashed in public or under direct voice control on designated off-leash trails. AMC Title 17 and AS 03.55 prohibit running at large. Tags issued after rabies proof. Fines start at 0.

Leash Rule: Required except designated areasCodes: AMC 17.10 plus AS 03.55

Wildlife Feeding

Heavy Restrictions

Feeding moose, bears, wolves, coyotes, or foxes is illegal under 5 AAC 92.230. Anchorage also enforces bear-attractant rules under AMC Title 17 requiring secured trash and pet food. Local fines up to 10.

State Law: 5 AAC 92.230Local Code: AMC Title 17 attractants

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Anchorage has no breed-specific legislation. Alaska does not preempt, so cities could adopt BSL, but Anchorage uses behavior-based dangerous-dog rules under AMC Title 17. Pit bulls and Rottweilers are legal.

Breed Ban: NoneSystem: Behavior-based dangerous dog

Animal Hoarding

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage Animal Care and Control investigates animal hoarding under AMC Title 17 cruelty provisions, taking action when owners keep more animals than they can humanely house, feed, or provide veterinary care.

Code: AMC Title 17Agency: Anchorage Animal Care

Cat Rules

Some Restrictions

Anchorage requires cats over six months old to be licensed with Animal Care and Control and prohibits cats from running at large in a manner that creates a nuisance to neighbors or wildlife.

License age: 6 monthsCode: AMC Title 17

Coyote Management

Some Restrictions

Anchorage shares its city limits with coyotes, lynx, wolves, and bears, and AMC Title 17 plus Alaska Department of Fish and Game rules govern hazing, defense of life and property, and reporting of urban predator encounters.

Wildlife-feed code: AMC Β§17.50DLP statute: AS 16.05.783

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Few Restrictions

Anchorage does not mandate spay or neuter for pets, but AMC Title 17 sets significantly lower license fees for altered animals and waives some impound fees, encouraging voluntary sterilization through pricing.

Mandate: None city-wideLicense fee: Lower if altered

Wildlife Rescue Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Rehabilitating injured wildlife in Anchorage requires Alaska Department of Fish and Game permits under 5 AAC 92.029 and, for migratory birds or eagles, additional federal USFWS permits. Untrained possession of wildlife is illegal.

State reg: 5 AAC 92.029Lead agency: ADF&G

Microchipping

Few Restrictions

Anchorage Animal Care and Control strongly encourages microchipping but does not require it. Microchipped pets are returned faster and avoid full impound fees, especially valuable in a city with frequent moose-spook escapes.

Mandate: NoneCost: $40-70 typical

Veterinary Clinic Zoning

Some Restrictions

Veterinary clinics and animal hospitals in Anchorage are regulated under AMC Title 21 zoning, with allowed uses varying by district and conditional-use permits required in some residential or mixed-use zones.

Code: AMC Title 21Common zone: Commercial/industrial

Pet Store Rules

Some Restrictions

Pet stores in Anchorage must hold a Municipality kennel or commercial-animal license under AMC Title 17 and meet care, sanitation, and recordkeeping standards subject to inspection by Animal Care and Control.

License: AAC commercial animalCode: AMC Title 17

Bird Protection

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage bird life is protected by federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act and Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act, plus AMC harassment provisions, with bald eagle nests, sandhill cranes, and shorebirds common throughout the city.

Federal law: MBTA + BGEPAEagle statute: 16 USC 668

Chickens & Livestock

Some Restrictions

Anchorage allows backyard chickens in residential zones under AMC Title 17 and Title 21. Hens are permitted; roosters risk noise citations. Coops need setbacks and bear-proof feed storage.

Hens: Allowed in residentialRoosters: Discouraged, noise risk

🌿 Landscaping Rules

From grass height limits to tree removal permits, landscaping rules can surprise new homeowners, especially in drought-prone areas with water restrictions.

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Some Restrictions

Anchorage does not regulate most private tree removal. Boulevard and park trees need a Parks permit. Removal in wetlands, slope-hazard overlays, or subdivision conditions requires AMC 21 review.

Private Removal: Generally no permitWetlands: Review required

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Anchorage limits grass and weeds to 12 inches under AMC 15.20 nuisance code. Taller growth on improved lots triggers abatement. Natural-area and wetland parcels may be exempt with a registered landscape plan.

Max Height: 12 inchesCode: AMC 15.20

Water Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Anchorage Water and Wastewater Utility rarely imposes outdoor watering restrictions. The Eklutna-fed system has abundant supply. AWWU asks voluntary conservation during rare turbidity events.

Utility: AWWUSource: Eklutna Lake and wells

Native Plants

Few Restrictions

Anchorage encourages sub-arctic native plantings. No ordinance mandates native landscaping, but MOA Parks publishes recommended lists. Fireweed, mountain ash, and red-osier dogwood are common.

Zone: USDA 3-4Signature Plant: Fireweed

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Rainwater harvesting is legal and encouraged in Anchorage. No permit needed for above-ground barrels. Cisterns over 5,000 gallons or plumbed to the home require building and DEC review. No state water-rights conflict.

Barrels: No permit neededLarge Cisterns: Permit if plumbed

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Anchorage treats noxious weeds and overgrown vegetation as nuisances under AMC 15.20. State-listed invasives like bird vetch, hawkweed, and sweetclover must be controlled. 10-day abatement notice.

Code: AMC 15.20State List: 11 AAC 34 invasives

Artificial Turf

Few Restrictions

Artificial turf is allowed in Anchorage residential yards with no permit for typical installations. Large installations over 500 square feet or drainage-altering projects may need stormwater review under AMC 21.45.

Permit: Usually none requiredLarge Install: Over 500 square feet reviewed

Tree Trimming

Few Restrictions

Anchorage lets owners trim trees on their own property freely. Branches over streets must clear 14 feet, over sidewalks 8 feet, under AMC 24. Boulevard trees need MOA Parks approval.

Street Clearance: 14 feetSidewalk Clearance: 8 feet

πŸ’Ό Home Business

Working from home is common, but running a business from home often requires permits and must comply with zoning restrictions on customer traffic and signage.

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Home occupations must keep client visits limited so the neighborhood stays residential in character under AMC 21.05.060. Practice: one client at a time and roughly 8-10 visits per day.

Clients at Once: One typicalDaily Visits: 8-10 soft ceiling

Zoning Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Anchorage allows home occupations in residential zones under AMC 21.05.060 with a home-occupation license. Business must be incidental to the dwelling and not change the residential character.

Code: AMC 21.05.060Max Business Area: 25 percent of dwelling

Home Occupation Permits

Some Restrictions

Anchorage requires home occupations to comply with AMC 21.05 standards: the business must be clearly incidental, operated by a resident, with no exterior evidence. A municipal business license and State of Alaska business license are both required.

Local Code: AMC 21.05 home occupationNon-Resident Employees: Max 1

Home Daycare

Some Restrictions

Anchorage allows home-based child care as a home occupation under AMC Title 21. State licensing through Alaska DHSS Child Care Program Office is required for more than four unrelated children. Zoning district and maximum-child caps control scale.

State License: Required over 4 childrenZoning: Home occupation, most residential

Cottage Food Operations

Few Restrictions

Alaska cottage food law (AS 17.20.338) allows direct sale of non-hazardous home-produced foods up to 25,000 dollars per year without a DEC permit. Anchorage still requires a home-occupation license.

State Law: AS 17.20.338Annual Cap: 25,000 dollars

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Home-based businesses in Anchorage may display one non-illuminated sign up to 2 square feet under AMC 21.07. Larger, illuminated, or off-premise signs are prohibited in residential zones.

Max Size: 2 square feetIllumination: Prohibited

🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas

Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.

Safety Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage pool safety rules cover barriers, drain covers, alarms, and CPR signage for commercial pools. Residential pools must meet IRC barrier rules and Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act drain standards.

Drain Covers: VGB Act compliantBarrier: IRC Appendix G

Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage follows IRC Appendix G pool barrier standards: minimum 48 inch barrier, self-closing and self-latching gates, and specific opening limits. Applies to pools and spas with water depth of 24 inches or more.

Minimum Height: 48 inchesVertical Spacing: 4 inches max

Above-Ground Pools

Some Restrictions

Permanent above-ground pools in Anchorage over 24 inches deep require barrier compliance and electrical permits. The pool wall itself may serve as the barrier if 48 inches or taller and ladders are secured when not in use.

Pool Wall: May serve as barrier if 48 inLadder: Removable or lockable

Hot Tub Rules

Some Restrictions

Hot tubs and spas in Anchorage need electrical permits and must meet barrier rules if the water depth exceeds 24 inches. A lockable safety cover meeting ASTM F1346 is accepted as an alternative barrier.

Depth Trigger: 24 inches for barrierAlternative: ASTM F1346 locked cover

Pool Permits

Some Restrictions

Anchorage requires a building permit for in-ground and permanent above-ground pools under the adopted International Residential Code. Electrical and plumbing permits are separate. Development Services issues permits.

Permit Threshold: Water depth 24 inchesCode: AMC Title 23, IRC

πŸ—οΈ Accessory Structures

Thinking about an ADU, shed, or garage conversion? Local rules on accessory structures have changed rapidly in recent years, especially in California.

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Garage conversions in Anchorage require full permits. Conversion to an ADU follows the 2021-2023 ADU rules. Living-space conversions need egress, insulation, heating, and replacement off-street parking.

Permits: Building, electrical, mechanicalCeiling: 7 feet minimum

ADU Rules

Few Restrictions

Anchorage passed major ADU reform 2021-2023 under AMC Title 21. ADUs are now allowed by right on most single-family lots, up to 900 square feet or 40 percent of the main home, with one off-street parking space.

Status: Allowed by rightMax Size: 900 sq ft or 40 percent

Shed Rules

Few Restrictions

Sheds up to 200 square feet and under 12 feet tall need no building permit in Anchorage, but must still meet AMC 21 zoning setbacks (typically 5 feet from side and rear lot lines). Larger sheds require a permit.

Permit Threshold: 200 sq ft and 12 feetSide Setback: 5 feet typical

Carport Rules

Few Restrictions

Carports follow garage setbacks under AMC 21 (typically 5 feet side, 20-25 feet front). Attached carports need a building permit; detached under 200 square feet may be exempt. Snow-load design is critical.

Side Setback: 5 feet typicalSnow Load: 50-70 psf Bowl

Tiny Homes

Some Restrictions

Anchorage allows tiny homes on foundations as primary dwellings or ADUs under AMC 21. Tiny homes on wheels are treated as RVs β€” restricted to RV parks and not allowed as permanent dwellings.

On Foundation: Allowed as ADU or primaryMinimum Size: About 220 sq ft

ADU Owner Occupancy

Few Restrictions

Anchorage no longer requires owner-occupancy for ADU properties. The Assembly removed the long-standing owner-occupancy mandate through AO 2022-107 (As Amended), adopted January 10, 2023. Property owners may build an ADU on rental property, rent both units to separate tenants, or sell with the ADU intact. HOA covenants under Alaska Statute Title 34 may still impose private residency restrictions.

Current Rule: No owner-occupancy requiredEffective Date: January 10, 2023 (AO 2022-107)

ADU Permits

Few Restrictions

The Municipality of Anchorage permits Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) under Title 21 Land Use Regulations as updated by Assembly Ordinance AO 2022-107 (As Amended), adopted January 10, 2023. ADUs are allowed in all residential and commercial zones wherever there is a principal dwelling. Maximum size is 900 sq ft or 40 percent of the primary structure (whichever is larger), capped at 1,200 sq ft. Building permits are issued through the Development Services Department under Title 23 (Anchorage Building Code, AK-amended 2018 IBC/IRC).

Code Authority: AMC Title 21.05 + AO 2022-107Effective Date: January 10, 2023

ADU Rental Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Anchorage allows ADUs to be rented long-term without restriction following the 2023 owner-occupancy repeal. Short-term rentals (under 30 days) must collect and remit the Municipality's 12 percent room/bed tax under AMC Chapter 12.20. Alaska has no statewide rent control and no statewide STR preemption; municipal home-rule authority governs. Tenancies fall under the Alaska Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (AS Title 34.03).

Long-Term Rental: Unrestricted (post-2023)STR Tax: 12% room/bed (AMC 12.20)

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Alaska does not authorize traditional municipal impact fees in the manner California, Washington, or Idaho do. The Municipality of Anchorage charges land use permit fees under AMC 21.20 and building permit fees under Title 23, plus Anchorage Water and Wastewater Utility (AWWU) connection charges if new service is required. There are no parks, transportation, or school impact fees on ADU construction.

Impact Fee Authority: None statewide in AlaskaPermit Fee Code: AMC 21.20 + Title 23

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

BBQ & Propane Rules

Some Restrictions

The Anchorage Fire Code (AMC Title 15, adopting the 2018 International Fire Code) enforces IFC Β§308.1.4 prohibiting open-flame cooking devices, charcoal burners, and LP-gas grills with cylinders over 1 lb on combustible balconies and decks in multi-family buildings larger than duplexes. Devices must also be kept at least 10 feet from combustible construction. Single-family and two-family homes are exempt. Electric grills are allowed throughout. Anchorage Fire Department enforces under deferral from the State Fire Marshal.

Code Authority: AMC Title 15 (2018 IFC)Multi-Unit Rule: IFC Β§308.1.4

Smoker Rules

Some Restrictions

Pellet smokers, offset smokers, kamado-style (Big Green Egg), and any charcoal- or wood-fired smoker are treated as open-flame cooking devices under IFC Β§308.1.4 as adopted in AMC Title 15. They are prohibited on combustible balconies and within 10 feet of combustible construction in buildings with 3 or more dwelling units. At single-family homes, smokers are unrestricted by city code subject to standard nuisance and air-quality rules.

Code Authority: AMC Title 15 (IFC Β§308.1.4)Treatment: Open-flame device (same as grill)

Outdoor Kitchen Permits

Some Restrictions

Permanent outdoor kitchens in Anchorage are regulated under Title 23 (Anchorage Building Code, AK-amended 2018 IBC/IRC) and Title 21.05 accessory structure standards. Detached outdoor kitchens over 200 sq ft, structures attached to the home, gas line installations, electrical work, and any plumbing all require permits through the Development Services Department. Sheds 150 sq ft or less on a foundation-less footprint may be exempt from building permits but still subject to setback rules.

Building Code: Title 23 (AK-amended 2018 IBC/IRC)Zoning: AMC 21.05.070 accessory uses

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

Holiday Light Rules

Few Restrictions

Anchorage has no specific ordinance limiting residential holiday-light displays at single-family or two-family homes. Decorative lights generally fall outside the AMC Title 21.07 sign-code definition. Standard rules apply: light trespass and nuisance under AMC 15.20, electrical safety under Title 23 (NEC), and HOA covenants under Alaska Statute Title 34. Anchorage's long winter darkness (under 6 hours daylight at solstice) makes residential lighting culturally significant.

City Specific Ordinance: NoneNuisance Recourse: AMC 15.20

Lawn Ornament Rules

Few Restrictions

Anchorage has no specific ordinance regulating decorative lawn ornaments (statues, garden gnomes, flamingos, seasonal yard decor) at residential properties. General Title 21 zoning rules apply: ornaments cannot encroach into public right-of-way per Title 24, cannot obstruct the corner vision-clearance triangle, and cannot create nuisance under AMC 15.20. HOA covenants in many subdivisions impose tighter limits.

City Specific Ordinance: NoneRight-of-Way: Title 24 β€” no encroachment

Inflatable Display Rules

Few Restrictions

Anchorage has no specific ordinance regulating residential inflatable holiday displays (giant Santas, pumpkins, etc.) at single-family or two-family homes. Title 21.07 sign-code regulates commercial inflatable displays differently. Practical limits come from Anchorage's high wind events (Knik wind, Turnagain Arm gusts often 40+ mph) requiring secure anchoring, HOA CC&Rs, and electrical safety under Title 23.

City Specific Ordinance: None (residential)Commercial Inflatables: Restricted under Title 21.07

🌍 Environmental Rules

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Some Restrictions

The 2019 Anchorage Climate Action Plan (AR 2019-189) sets a citywide target of carbon neutrality by 2050, with interim 40% emissions reductions by 2030 across buildings, transportation, energy, and waste sectors.

Target year: Carbon neutral by 2050Interim goal: 40% reduction by 2030

Vehicle Idling Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Anchorage has no general municipal idling-time limit, but AMC Title 9 prohibits leaving an unattended vehicle running with the key in the ignition on a public street, with limited remote-start exceptions.

General idling cap: None in AMCUnattended-vehicle rule: AMC Title 9

Defensible Space

Some Restrictions

AMC Title 23 fire code and Anchorage Fire Department wildland-urban interface guidance require Hillside-area homeowners to clear flammable vegetation within 30 feet of structures, mirroring statewide AS 41.15 forestry practices.

Recommended clearance: 30 feet from structuresCode authority: AMC Title 23 fire code

Sustainable Procurement

Few Restrictions

Implementing the Climate Action Plan, the Municipality follows internal green purchasing guidance favoring Energy Star, recycled-content, and low-emission fleet vehicles, but no AMC chapter binds private-sector procurement.

Authority: Mayor's administrative directiveCodified in AMC: No

Grading & Drainage

Some Restrictions

Anchorage grading permits required for earthwork over 50 cubic yards or slopes over 5 feet. Positive drainage away from structures mandatory. Frost-protected foundations required in all residential construction.

Permit: Over 50 CY or 5 ft slopeDrainage: 5% away 10 feet

Erosion Control

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage requires erosion and sediment control on all ground-disturbing projects. Bluff properties along Turnagain Arm and Knik Arm face strict setbacks due to soil instability revealed in 1964 and 2018 quakes.

Code: AMC Β§21.07, Β§26.40Slope trigger: Over 15% engineered plan

Coastal Development

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage is located on Cook Inlet with significant coastal areas subject to tidal action, earthquake-induced tsunamis, and coastal erosion. The Alaska Coastal Management Program was repealed in 2011, but Anchorage maintains local development standards for coastal areas. Title 21 requires setbacks from coastal bluffs and water bodies. The 1964 earthquake demonstrated severe coastal hazards including landslides along Turnagain Arm and Knik Arm.

Location: Cook Inlet β€” Knik Arm and Turnagain ArmHazards: Tsunamis, coastal erosion, earthquake landslides

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage operates a MS4 stormwater system under an EPA NPDES permit. New construction disturbing 1 acre or more must file a SWPPP. Illicit discharges to storm drains are strictly prohibited.

Permit: EPA NPDES MS4SWPPP trigger: 1 acre disturbance

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage participates in FEMA NFIP. Known flood areas include Turnagain along Cook Inlet, Ship Creek downtown, and Eagle River. Construction in Special Flood Hazard Areas requires elevation certificates.

Program: NFIP participantCode: AMC Β§21.07.070

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Buffer Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Licensed marijuana establishments in Anchorage cannot locate within 500 feet of schools, recreation centers, or religious centers, measured under AMC Title 21.05 and 3 AAC 306.010 (Alaska Marijuana Control Board) buffer rules.

Buffer distance: 500 feetAuthority: MCB and AMC 21.05

Social Equity Licensing

Few Restrictions

Alaska does not operate a formal social-equity cannabis licensing program. The Marijuana Control Board issues licenses through standard application with no preference for communities harmed by prohibition, unlike states such as California or Illinois.

Equity program: None statewideLicensing model: Open application

Commercial Cannabis Zoning

Some Restrictions

Marijuana retail, cultivation, manufacturing, and testing facilities in Anchorage are allowed only in specified commercial and industrial zones under AMC Title 21.05.085, and require a conditional use permit issued by the MOA Planning Department.

Retail zones: B-3 plus industrialOutdoor grow: Industrial only

Personal Cultivation Limits

Few Restrictions

Adults 21 and older in Anchorage may grow up to six marijuana plants (three flowering) per person, with no more than 12 plants total per household, under AS 17.38.020 and AMC Title 21 home-occupation rules.

Per-adult limit: 6 plants (3 flowering)Household cap: 12 plants

Cannabis Delivery Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Alaska does not allow direct-to-consumer marijuana delivery. Cannabis purchases in Anchorage must be made in person at a Marijuana Control Board licensed retail store with photo ID showing the buyer is 21 or older.

Consumer delivery: Not allowedB2B transport: Licensed only

Home Cultivation

Few Restrictions

Alaska legalized recreational cannabis in 2014. Adults 21+ may cultivate up to 6 plants per adult (max 12 per household) at their primary residence. Anchorage allows home grows under AS 17.38.

State Law: AS 17.38 (2014)Plant Limit: 6 per adult, 12 per home

Dispensary Zoning

Some Restrictions

Anchorage hosts one of the largest retail cannabis markets in Alaska. Dispensaries are licensed by the state Marijuana Control Board and under AMC 10.80, with 500-ft separation from schools and churches.

State: AMCO license + 3 AAC 306Local: AMC 10.80

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

🏚️ Property Maintenance

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

Security Deposit Rules

Some Restrictions

Under Alaska's Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, AS Β§34.03.070, security deposits in Anchorage are capped at two months' rent (excluding pet deposits). Landlords must return deposits with itemized deductions within 14 days, or 30 days if the tenant did not give proper notice.

Deposit cap: Two months rentPet deposit: One additional month

Section 8 Voucher Acceptance

Some Restrictions

The Alaska Housing Finance Corporation administers Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers in Anchorage. Landlord participation is voluntary, and units must pass an HQS inspection. Anchorage offers no local source-of-income protection compelling landlords to accept vouchers.

Administering agency: AHFCInspection standard: HUD HQS

No-Fault Evictions

Few Restrictions

Anchorage follows Alaska URLTA, which permits no-fault termination of month-to-month tenancies on 30 days' written notice. There is no local just-cause requirement, and landlords may end periodic tenancies without alleging tenant wrongdoing once proper notice is delivered.

Notice period: 30 days month-to-monthJust cause required: No

Relocation Assistance

Few Restrictions

Anchorage does not require landlords to pay relocation assistance to tenants displaced by no-fault terminations, condo conversions, or rent increases. Alaska URLTA AS Β§34.03 does not mandate displacement payments, and the Municipality has not adopted a local relocation ordinance.

Local relocation ordinance: NoneURLTA payment rule: None

Cash-for-Keys Agreements

Few Restrictions

Anchorage allows fully voluntary cash-for-keys agreements, in which a landlord pays a tenant to vacate by an agreed date. There is no required minimum payment, and Alaska URLTA AS Β§34.03 enforces such agreements as ordinary contract settlements.

Required payment: NoneEnforceable as: Contract

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Few Restrictions

Anchorage has not adopted a tenant anti-harassment ordinance. Tenants experiencing landlord harassment must rely on Alaska URLTA AS Β§34.03 quiet-enjoyment provisions, criminal harassment statutes under AS Β§11.61.120, and AS Β§18.80 fair-housing protections.

Local harassment ordinance: NoneURLTA remedy: AS Β§34.03.140

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Few Restrictions

Neither Anchorage nor Alaska law lists source of income as a protected class for housing. Landlords may refuse Section 8 vouchers and other subsidies. Federal Fair Housing Act protections still cover race, disability, family status, and other listed characteristics.

Source of income protected: NoSection 8 refusal: Allowed

Just Cause Eviction

Few Restrictions

Anchorage follows the Alaska Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (AS 34.03). No local just-cause eviction ordinance. Landlords may terminate month-to-month tenancies with 30 days notice without cause.

Governing Law: AS 34.03 URLTAMonth-to-Month: 30 days notice

Rent Control

Few Restrictions

Alaska has no statewide rent control statute and no preemption against local rent control. The Municipality of Anchorage has not adopted rent control. Market-rate rents prevail citywide.

State law: No rent controlPreemption: None

Rental Registration

Few Restrictions

Anchorage does not operate a general long-term rental registration program. Short-term rentals must register under the 2023 STR ordinance, but long-term rentals are not required to register.

Long-term Registry: NoneSTR Registration: Required AO 2022-66

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling

🚁 Drone Rules

πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors

πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door

πŸŒ™ Curfew Laws

πŸ“ Building Setbacks & Zoning

🌳 Tree Protection

Parkway Planting

Some Restrictions

AMC Title 21 landscaping and street-tree provisions require approved species, root-barrier protection, and snow-storage clearance for plantings in the public right-of-way, with Urban Forestry approval before homeowners install parkway trees.

Permit required: Yes, before plantingCold-hardiness floor: USDA Zone 4

Protected Tree Species

Some Restrictions

AMC Title 21 Tree Code identifies heritage white spruce, paper birch, and quaking aspen above defined diameter thresholds for retention review, balancing urban forest preservation with wildfire defensible-space needs in beetle-affected stands.

Code section: AMC Β§21.07 Tree CodeHeritage threshold: 18 inches DBH typical

Tree Replacement Requirements

Some Restrictions

Anchorage may require tree replacement or landscaping as part of development site plan review. Title 21 landscaping requirements include tree planting standards for new development. Species must be appropriate for the subarctic climate. Native species like birch and spruce are preferred. The short growing season limits planting windows to spring and early summer.

Development Requirement: Landscaping/tree planting for new projectsSpecies: Native subarctic species preferred

Tree Removal Permits

Some Restrictions

Anchorage Title 21 allows removal of dead trees or those posing safety hazards without a permit. Development projects must address tree preservation during site plan review. Trees in the public right-of-way are managed by the municipality. The subarctic forest includes birch, spruce, and cottonwood. Beetle-killed spruce has been a significant issue requiring removal.

Dead/Hazard Trees: May be removed without permitDevelopment: Tree preservation addressed in site review

Heritage & Protected Trees

Few Restrictions

Anchorage does not have a formal heritage or landmark tree ordinance. The municipality's subarctic climate limits tree growth rates, and large mature trees develop slowly. Trees are valued for their urban canopy contribution. Development projects consider tree preservation during review but no specific heritage tree protections exist for private property.

Heritage Ordinance: NoneGrowth Rate: Slow due to subarctic climate

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

🏘️ HOA Rules

Dispute Resolution

Some Restrictions

Alaska does not have a state HOA ombudsman. Disputes between Anchorage owners and associations are resolved through internal procedures, mediation, or civil court. AS 34.08 permits associations to adopt alternative dispute resolution rules.

State Ombudsman: NoneADR: Allowed by AS 34.08.590

Board Procedures

Some Restrictions

HOA and condominium boards in Anchorage operate under the Alaska Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act (AS 34.08) and the association governing documents. Board meetings, notice, and quorum requirements are set by statute and bylaws.

Key Statute: AS 34.08 (AUCIOA)Open Meetings: Required with notice

Assessment & Dues

Heavy Restrictions

HOA assessments in Anchorage are authorized by AS 34.08.455 and the association declaration. Associations have a statutory lien on units for unpaid assessments and may foreclose judicially or non-judicially.

Lien Statute: AS 34.08.455Budget Veto: Allowed under AS 34.08.520

CC&R Enforcement

Some Restrictions

Covenant enforcement by Anchorage HOAs is governed by the Alaska Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act (AS 34.08). Boards must provide notice, opportunity to be heard, and may impose reasonable fines consistent with the declaration.

Statute: AS 34.08.590Due Process: Notice and hearing

Architectural Review

Some Restrictions

Architectural review in Anchorage HOAs is governed by the association declaration under AS 34.08. Boards or ARCs must act reasonably, apply standards consistently, and respond to applications within the time frame set in the governing documents.

Statute: AS 34.08 rules reasonablenessProcess: Written application

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Anchorage pest control focuses on rodents and moose-attractant management rather than termites. Property owners must eliminate rodent harborage under Title 15 nuisance code. Bear-attractant garbage rules enforced seasonally.

Code: AMC Title 15 and 17.60Primary pests: Rodents, wildlife

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Some Restrictions

Anchorage scaffolding must comply with Alaska OSHA and 2018 IBC as amended post-earthquake. Permits required for scaffolds over 6 feet or in public right-of-way. Winter weather protection mandatory.

Code: 2018 IBC with AK amendmentsPermit trigger: Over 6 feet or in ROW

Lead Paint

Heavy Restrictions

Anchorage follows federal EPA Renovation, Repair and Painting (RRP) Rule and HUD Title X disclosure for homes built before 1978. The state of Alaska is authorized to run the RRP program; certified firms are required.

Threshold: Homes pre-1978Rule: EPA RRP 40 CFR 745

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Some Restrictions

Anchorage adopts the International Building Code and International Fire Code under AMC Title 23, requiring NFPA-13 or 13R fire sprinklers in most new multifamily buildings, hotels, larger commercial occupancies, and many additions.

Standard: NFPA 13 / 13RCode: AMC Title 23 (IBC/IFC)

Green Building Code

Some Restrictions

Anchorage adopts the International Energy Conservation Code under AMC Title 23, with cold-climate amendments requiring high insulation, vapor retarders, and air-sealing in new construction, and Climate Action Plan goals targeting carbon neutrality by 2050.

Code: IECC + AK BEESClimate zone: 7 / 8

Childcare Center Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Childcare centers in Anchorage must meet AMC Title 23 building code, AFD fire-safety standards, and State of Alaska Child Care Licensing requirements under 7 AAC 57, with stricter standards based on occupancy size.

State reg: 7 AAC 57Building code: AMC Title 23 IBC

Door Locking Hardware

Heavy Restrictions

AMC Title 23 adopts the IBC requirement that egress doors in commercial and multifamily buildings open with a single motion from the inside without keys, special knowledge, or effort, with limited exceptions.

Code: IBC Β§1010 (AMC 23)Single-motion: Required

Anti-Mansionization

Some Restrictions

Anchorage Title 21 zoning controls house size through floor-area ratio, lot coverage, height, and setback rules rather than a single mansionization ordinance, with stricter standards in established neighborhoods like Turnagain and South Addition.

Code: AMC Title 21Typical R-1 height: 35 feet

Elevator Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Elevators in Anchorage are regulated under Alaska statute AS 18.60.180-370 and 8 AAC 77, administered by the Alaska Department of Labor. Annual inspections, certificates of operation, and licensed mechanics are required.

Statute: AS 18.60.180-370Regulation: 8 AAC 77

🚬 Tobacco & Vaping

πŸ›οΈ Single-Use Items

πŸ’Ό Employment Preemption

πŸ›‚ Immigration Policy

πŸ›οΈ Homelessness & Encampment Rules

πŸ›΄ Mobility & Curb Rules

πŸ’§ Water Use Rules

πŸ—ΊοΈ Zoning Overlays & Bonuses

🩺 Public Health Rules

Bed-Bug Rules

Some Restrictions

Anchorage treats bed bug infestations as a habitability and nuisance issue under AMC Title 15 housing standards and Alaska Statute 34.03 (Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act), placing primary remediation duty on landlords in multi-unit buildings.

Authority: AMC Title 15Statute: AS 34.03 URLTA

Restaurant Grade Cards

Some Restrictions

Anchorage food establishments are inspected by the Municipality's Environmental Health program under AMC Title 16 and Alaska Food Code (18 AAC 31). Reports are public, but Anchorage does not post letter grades on storefronts.

Authority: MOA Environmental HealthState code: 18 AAC 31

Rodent Control

Some Restrictions

Alaska is famously one of the only US states without an established Norway rat population, and Anchorage actively guards that status. AMC Title 16 still requires owners to abate any rodent infestations and prevent attractants for native rodents and wildlife.

Norway rats: None establishedReporting: MOA Environmental Health

Syringe Disposal

Few Restrictions

Anchorage participates in Alaska's syringe-services and sharps disposal framework. The Four A's of Alaska and MOA-supported drop sites accept used syringes for free, and household sharps must not enter regular trash or recycling under AMC Title 26.

Drop site: Four A's of AlaskaStatute: AS 18.35.310

Food Handler Certification

Some Restrictions

Anyone who handles unpackaged food in an Anchorage restaurant, cafeteria, or food truck must hold a valid Alaska Food Worker Card under 18 AAC 31.012, obtained by passing the state-approved exam within 30 days of hire.

Card validity: 3 yearsAuthority: Alaska DEC

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

🚷 Public Conduct

Overall: What to Expect in Anchorage

Anchorage has 204 ordinances on file across 41 categories. Of these, 65 are rated permissive, 102 moderate, and 37 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Anchorage compared to other cities.

Rules can change, and enforcement varies. Always verify specific requirements with the city directly before making major decisions like building a fence, listing on Airbnb, or starting a home business.