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Moving to Atlanta, GA?

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 Atlanta across 42 categories and 199 specific rules we track.

39 Permissive102 Moderate58 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.

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Aircraft noise at Hartsfield-Jackson ATL is regulated exclusively by the FAA under federal preemption. Atlanta cannot set local limits, but homes in the 65+ DNL contour may qualify for FAA Part 150 sound insulation.

Jurisdiction: FAA (federal preemption)Airport: ATL - busiest in the world

Outdoor Music

Heavy Restrictions

Outdoor amplified music in Atlanta requires a special noise permit under Β§74-134(6). Permitted events must end by 11 PM Sun-Thu and midnight Fri/Sat; permit fee is $100 with 21 days notice.

Permit Fee: $100Advance Notice: 21 days

Leaf Blower Rules

Some Restrictions

Atlanta has no gas leaf blower ban, but operation is regulated by the Chapter 74 noise ordinance and must stay within residential audibility limits during daytime hours.

Code: Atlanta Code Β§74-131, Β§74-134Gas Blower Ban: None

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Atlanta regulates industrial noise under Ch. 74, Art. IV. Noise cannot be plainly audible beyond 300 ft during the day or 100 ft at night from the source's property line.

Code: Atlanta Code Β§74-133, Β§74-136Day Limit: Not audible >300 ft

Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

Atlanta uses a plainly audible distance test rather than strict dBA caps. Sound audible more than 100 ft from residential sources (or 300 ft commercial) is presumed a violation.

Standard: Plainly audible (not dBA-based)Residential Distance: 100 ft

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Construction noise in Atlanta is governed by Β§74-134. Work may begin at 7 AM on weekdays and 9 AM on weekends and holidays, and must stop by 8 PM daily.

Weekday Start: 7:00 AMWeekend/Holiday Start: 9:00 AM

Barking Dogs

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta amended its nuisance animal ordinance in 2022 to reduce the barking threshold from 20 minutes to 10 minutes. Fines escalate from $150 to $1,000 per offense.

Code: Atlanta Code Β§18-11Continuous Barking Limit: 10 minutes

Quiet Hours

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta enforces quiet hours under Chapter 74, Article IV. Noise plainly audible beyond 100 feet of the property boundary is prohibited. Residential zones enforce tighter standards at 300 feet after 11 PM Sunday–Thursday and midnight Friday–Saturday.

Code: Atlanta Code Β§74-131, Β§74-136Residential Limit: Not plainly audible >100 ft

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Atlanta regulates amplified music under the general noise ordinance. Sound permits available for events. O.C.G.A. Β§16-11-39 applies to unreasonable disturbances.

Permit: Required for public eventsResidential: General limits apply

🏠 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

Every short-term rental in Atlanta must have a city-issued STR license, a separate business tax certificate, and display the license number in every listing. The base license fee is $150 per property per year.

License Fee: $150/year per unitListing Display: License # required

Insurance Requirements

Some Restrictions

Atlanta short-term rental licensees must maintain liability insurance of at least $1,000,000 per occurrence covering the rental activity. Proof must be provided at application and kept current.

Minimum Coverage: $1,000,000 per occurrencePlatform Coverage: Accepted if primary

Night Caps

Some Restrictions

Atlanta sets no annual night cap on STRs, but a single host may license only one primary residence and one additional non-primary property under Ch. 30, Art. VIII.

Annual Night Cap: NoneProperty Cap: 1 primary + 1 non-primary

Host Presence Rule

Some Restrictions

Atlanta's STR ordinance 16-O-1399 does not require host presence during guest stays, but it limits each owner to one license at a primary residence plus one license at a single non-primary residence, capping investor portfolios.

Host presence: Not requiredLicense cap: Two per owner

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Some Restrictions

Atlanta's STR ordinance does not limit licenses to primary residences alone but instead allows each owner one primary-residence license plus one additional license at a single non-primary residential property within the city.

Primary residence required: For one licenseNon-primary license: One per owner

Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Once an Atlanta short-term rental guest occupies a unit for more than 30 consecutive days, Georgia's Landlord-Tenant Act under OCGA Title 44, Chapter 7 applies, creating tenancy rights and ending the city's STR-specific framework.

Tenancy threshold: 30 consecutive daysStatutory framework: OCGA Title 44-7

Repeat Violator Strikes

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta's STR ordinance authorizes license suspension or revocation after repeated violations of nuisance, noise, occupancy, or parking standards, with three substantiated complaints in a 12-month period typically triggering review by the Department of City Planning.

Strike threshold: Three in 12 monthsReviewing agency: Department of City Planning

Host Platform Liability

Some Restrictions

Atlanta places primary STR liability on the licensed host under Ord. 16-O-1399 and Georgia premises liability law, while online platforms collect the city's 8% hotel-motel and state sales taxes through voluntary collection agreements.

Primary liability: Licensed hostFederal shield: CDA Section 230

Occupancy Limits

Some Restrictions

Atlanta caps short-term rental occupancy at two adults per bedroom, plus two additional guests, not to exceed the building code maximum. Parties and events exceeding the cap are explicitly prohibited.

Adults Per Bedroom: 2Additional Guests: +2

Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

Atlanta short-term rental operators must disclose available parking to guests and cannot let STR use disrupt neighborhood parking. Parking conditions are reviewed as part of the STR license renewal process.

Code: Atlanta Code Ch. 30, Art. VIIIDisclosure: Listing must state parking available

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

Atlanta STRs must comply with the general noise ordinance. Georgia cities commonly impose additional noise conditions on STR permits.

Quiet Hours: Per city noise ordinanceParties: Prohibited at most STRs

Permit Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta requires a Short-Term Rental License (STRL) for all rentals under 30 days. The annual fee is $150. One license covers a host's primary residence and one additional dwelling unit. Enforcement began March 2022.

Code: Atlanta Part 20 (Ord. 20-O-1656)License Fee: $150/year

Taxes & Fees

Some Restrictions

Atlanta STR operators owe 8% city hotel-motel tax plus Georgia state taxes. The combined effective rate is approximately 15–16% depending on local sales tax. Airbnb collects state taxes; operators must file city portion separately.

City Hotel-Motel Tax: 8%State Sales Tax: 4% + local

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

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta homes must have smoke alarms on every level, in every bedroom, and in hallways outside sleeping areas. New construction requires hardwired interconnected alarms with battery backup.

Every Level: RequiredEach Bedroom: Required

Brush Clearance

Few Restrictions

Atlanta has no defensible-space brush clearance rules. Vegetation is managed through the housing and zoning codes, focused on sidewalks, sightlines, and utility line clearance.

Defensible Space Zone: None requiredClimate: Humid subtropical

Propane Storage

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta Fire Rescue Department enforces NFPA 58 and the Georgia State Minimum Fire Code for propane storage. Residential cylinders are tightly limited at dwellings, and larger tanks require AFRD permitting and clearance setbacks.

Governing standard: NFPA 58Permit threshold: ASME tanks over 125 gal

Backyard Fires

Some Restrictions

Backyard recreational fires are allowed if contained in an approved appliance, under 3 ft diameter, at least 25 ft from structures, and attended. Yard waste and trash cannot be burned.

Max Size: 3 ft diameterStructure Setback: >= 25 ft

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Open burning of yard debris is banned in Atlanta and 53 other metro counties from May 1 to Sep 30 under Georgia EPD rules. Small recreational fires in approved appliances remain allowed year-round.

Summer Ban: May 1 - Sep 30Counties Covered: 54 metro including Fulton/DeKalb

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

Atlanta is not in a designated wildfire-hazard zone. The humid subtropical climate and dense urban tree canopy do not produce the fuel conditions of Western states, so no CAL FIRE-style wildfire overlay districts apply.

State Hazard Map: No formal zonesClimate: Humid subtropical

Fireworks

Some Restrictions

Consumer fireworks (1.4G) are legal in Atlanta per Georgia Fireworks Safety Act. Allowed 10 AM to midnight on most days; extended to 1 AM on July 3–4, Dec 31–Jan 1, Memorial Day, and Labor Day weekends. Private property with owner consent required.

Legal Hours: 10 AM–midnightHoliday Extension: Until 1 AM

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Recreational fire pits and chimineas are permitted in Atlanta as contained cooking or recreational fires. Disposal burning in open piles is prohibited. No specific city permit is required for a residential fire pit; general nuisance and smoke rules apply.

Fire Pits: Permitted (contained, recreational)Open Disposal Fires: Prohibited

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

Atlanta's EV Ready ordinance requires 20% of new multifamily parking to be EV-capable. Home Level 2 chargers need an electrical permit, and cords cannot cross public sidewalks.

EV Ready Requirement: 20% of new MF parkingResidential Charger: Electrical permit required

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Street parking in Atlanta follows posted signs and RPP zones. No parking within 15 ft of a hydrant, 30 ft of a stop sign, or against traffic flow, per Ch. 150, Art. VI.

Hydrant Setback: 15 ftStop Sign Setback: 30 ft

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Atlanta requires vehicles to park on an approved hard-surface driveway. Parking on front lawns is prohibited, driveways cannot block sidewalks, and curb cuts require a DOT permit.

Front-Yard Parking: ProhibitedSidewalk Blocking: Prohibited

Overnight Parking

Few Restrictions

Atlanta has no citywide overnight parking ban. Vehicles may park on most streets unless posted otherwise or the block is in an RPP zone. Vehicles unmoved for 72 hours can be tagged abandoned.

Citywide Overnight Ban: None72-Hour Rule: Yes (abandoned vehicle)

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

Atlanta Code Β§16-28.013 restricts RV and recreational equipment parking in residential zones. Unless stored in a garage, RVs must be parked behind the nearest portion of a building to the street. Height limit of 6 feet for side-yard storage.

Code: Atlanta Β§16-28.013Front Yard Storage: Not permitted (must be enclosed)

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Commercial trailers and semi-trailers are banned from all residential zones under Β§16-28.013. One commercial vehicle rated 3/4-ton or less may be parked on a residential lot if stored in an enclosed garage or rear yard by a resident.

Code: Atlanta Β§16-28.013Commercial Trailers: Banned in residential zones

Abandoned Vehicles

Some Restrictions

Under Atlanta Β§16-28.013, storing a junked motor vehicle in the open on private property for 30 or more days is unlawful. A junked vehicle is defined as one without current registration, current license tag, or that is inoperative.

Code: Atlanta Β§16-28.013Storage Threshold: 30 calendar days or more

🧱 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.

Material Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Atlanta bans barbed wire, razor ribbon, and electrified fences in residential zones. Historic districts restrict materials to traditional styles - wood, wrought iron, or masonry.

Barbed Wire (Residential): ProhibitedElectrified Fence (Residential): Prohibited

Retaining Walls

Heavy Restrictions

Retaining walls more than 3 feet tall require a building permit and engineered design in Atlanta. Walls that retain soil for driveways, pools, or structures require permits regardless of height.

Permit Threshold: 3 ft heightSurcharge Loads: Always permitted

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Pool barriers must be at least 48 in high with self-closing, self-latching gates swinging outward under the Georgia-adopted ISPSC. Doors from the house to the pool need alarms or covers.

Minimum Height: 48 inMax Gap: <= 4 in

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Most residential fences under 6 ft do not need a building permit, but must pass zoning review. Walls over 6 ft, retaining walls over 3 ft, and any fence in a historic district require a permit.

Base Permit Threshold: None under 6 ft (zoning check)Retaining Wall Permit: >3 ft triggers permit

Fence Requirements

Some Restrictions

In Atlanta residential zones, fences may be up to 4 feet in the front yard and 8 feet in side and rear yards. Corner lots have sight-triangle rules to protect intersection visibility.

Front Yard Max: 4 ftSide/Rear Yard Max: 8 ft

Neighbor Fence Rules

Some Restrictions

Georgia is a good neighbor state. Atlanta property owners are generally responsible for the boundary fences on their side of the property line, and the finished side of the fence must face the neighboring property.

Cost Sharing: Not required by cityFinished Side: Faces neighbor/street

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Atlanta Zoning Code Β§16-28.008 limits residential fences to 4 feet in front yards and 6 feet in rear and side yards. R-G districts allow up to 8 feet in rear/side. Intersection sight-line triangles require maximum 2.5 feet within 20 feet of street intersections.

Code: Atlanta Β§16-28.008Front Yard Max: 4 feet

πŸ” Animal Ordinances

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

Chickens & Livestock

Some Restrictions

Atlanta allows backyard hens and a limited number of small livestock on residential lots. Up to 25 hens are permitted on standard lots with coop setbacks; roosters are prohibited in most residential zones.

Hen Limit: Up to 25Roosters: Effectively prohibited

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Georgia has strict exotic pet laws under OCGA Β§27-5. Atlanta residents cannot keep big cats, primates, venomous reptiles, wolves, or bears without a state wild animal license.

Big Cats: ProhibitedPrimates: Prohibited

Beekeeping

Some Restrictions

Backyard beekeeping is legal for registered hobbyists. Hives must sit at least 10 ft from property lines or behind a 6-ft flyway barrier, with GDA registration under OCGA Β§43-52.

Hive Setback: 10 ft (or 6 ft flyway barrier)State Registration: Required (GDA)

Livestock

Some Restrictions

Traditional livestock like cattle, horses, and pigs are restricted to agricultural or large-lot zones that are rare in Atlanta. Most residential zones allow only poultry, rabbits, and dwarf goats.

Cattle/Horses: Large lots onlyPigs: Generally prohibited

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Atlanta has no breed-specific dog ordinance. Georgia state law (HB 1367 / OCGA Β§4-8-4) prohibits local governments from banning breeds, instead focusing on dangerous and vicious dog designations based on behavior.

Breed Ban: NoneGoverning Law: OCGA Β§4-8-20

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Some Restrictions

Atlanta does not require all owned pets to be spayed or neutered, but every cat or dog adopted from the contracted shelter must be sterilized before release. Intact-pet permits and breeder rules apply for high-volume operations.

Adoption rule: Spay/neuter before releaseBreeder license: GA Dept of Agriculture

Animal Hoarding

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta Code Ch. 6 prohibits keeping animals in conditions causing suffering, including hoarding situations. Fulton County Animal Services and APD investigate cases under both city ordinance and OCGA Title 16 cruelty statutes.

Code chapter: Atlanta Ch. 6 AnimalsInvestigators: Fulton Animal Services, APD

Cat Rules

Some Restrictions

Atlanta requires rabies vaccination and tags for owned cats and treats free-roaming felines under nuisance and cruelty provisions. Fulton and DeKalb portions follow respective county registration programs administered through Lifeline Animal Project.

Vaccine age: 4 months and olderTNR status: Permitted, ear-tipped

Microchipping

Few Restrictions

Atlanta does not require all dogs and cats to carry microchips, but microchipping is mandatory for pets adopted from contracted shelters and is strongly recommended by Fulton and DeKalb Animal Services for return-to-owner success.

Mandatory at adoption: Yes, shelter contractsMandatory for owned pets: No citywide rule

Coyote Management

Some Restrictions

Coyotes are present throughout Atlanta neighborhoods. Georgia DNR classifies coyotes as nongame wildlife with year-round trapping authority, while Atlanta urges hazing and removal of attractants instead of feeding or relocation.

State authority: Georgia DNRTrapping season: Year-round

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Atlanta Code Ch. 6 caps the number of dogs and cats per residence to control nuisance and welfare conditions. Households exceeding the cap need a kennel permit and zoning approval through the Office of Buildings.

Typical cap: 4 combined dogs/catsKennel permit: Required above cap

Wildlife Feeding

Some Restrictions

Atlanta prohibits feeding wildlife that creates a nuisance. Intentional feeding of deer, raccoons, coyotes, or feral hogs is banned under both city nuisance rules and Georgia Department of Natural Resources regulations.

Deer Feeding: Prohibited (nuisance)Raccoons/Coyotes: Do not feed

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Atlanta requires dogs to be leashed in public areas. Georgia law O.C.G.A. Β§4-8-5 addresses dogs at large.

Leash Length: 6 ft max typicalRabies: Vaccination required

🌿 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 Trimming

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta has one of the strongest tree protection ordinances in the South. Removal of any tree 6 in DBH or larger requires a permit from the city arborist, with recompense for healthy trees.

Permit Threshold: 6 in DBHRecompense: Required for healthy trees

Artificial Turf

Some Restrictions

Atlanta allows artificial turf for residential landscaping. It must meet stormwater and zoning requirements, and historic districts may restrict visible turf as a non-traditional material.

Turf Ban: None citywideStormwater: May count as impervious

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Atlanta requires residential lawns and lots to be mowed so grass and weeds do not exceed 12 inches. Lots that exceed the limit are tagged for abatement under Atlanta Code Ch. 74, Art. III.

Max Grass Height: 12 inCode: Atlanta Code Β§74-62 to Β§74-66

Water Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Under OCGA Β§12-5-7, Metro Atlanta operates year-round watering rules: outdoor irrigation is allowed only between 4 PM and 10 AM. Further cuts apply during EPD-declared drought levels.

Watering Window: 4 PM - 10 AM (all days)Hand Watering: Anytime w/ shutoff

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Rainwater harvesting is legal and encouraged. Rain barrels need no permit; larger cisterns tied to interior plumbing require a plumbing permit and backflow prevention to protect potable supply.

Rain Barrels: No permit requiredInterior Cisterns: Plumbing permit required

Native Plants

Few Restrictions

Atlanta encourages native plant landscaping and bans no common Georgia native species. Oaks, dogwoods, azaleas, and pollinator gardens can be planted without special review outside historic districts.

Native Plant Ban: NoneTree Ordinance: Favors natives in recompense

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Atlanta treats tall weeds and noxious brush as a nuisance under Ch. 74, Art. III. Kudzu and privet are not banned but can be cited if they encroach on neighbors or the right-of-way.

Kudzu Ban: Not banned, but citable if encroachingEnforcement: Complaint-driven via ATL311

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta's tree protection ordinance (Chapter 158) requires a permit to remove any tree with DBH of 6 inches or more on private property. The city overhauled its tree ordinance in June 2025, effective January 1, 2026, increasing recompense caps significantly.

Code: Atlanta Chapter 158 (Β§158-101)Permit Trigger: DBH β‰₯6 inches (pines β‰₯12 in.)

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.

Home Daycare

Heavy Restrictions

Home childcare is regulated by Georgia DECAL. Family homes for 3-6 children need state registration; group homes for 7-12 need a full state license plus city zoning compliance.

Family Home (3-6): State registrationGroup Home (7-12): State license

Zoning Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Home businesses are permitted as Home Occupations under Β§158-104. Use must remain residential - no outdoor storage, limited customer traffic, and at most one non-resident employee.

Max Floor Area: 25% of dwellingOutside Employees: 1 max

Cottage Food Operations

Some Restrictions

Georgia's Cottage Food Program (GDA Rule 40-7-19) lets Atlanta residents sell shelf-stable baked goods and similar items from home. A $100 annual state license and proper labeling are required.

State Rule: GDA 40-7-19License Fee: $100/year

Home Occupation Permits

Some Restrictions

Every home business in Atlanta needs an annual business tax certificate from the Office of Revenue. No separate home occupation permit is issued; compliance is verified when the BTC is granted.

Business Tax Cert: Annual, requiredFee Basis: Gross receipts + class

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta generally prohibits commercial signage for home occupations. A small non-illuminated nameplate (~1 sq ft) is the maximum; banners and freestanding signs are not allowed.

Residential Sign Max: ~1 sq ft nameplateIllumination: Prohibited

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Home businesses in Atlanta may have clients by appointment only. Continuous retail traffic, walk-in customers, or large group meetings are not permitted under Β§158-104's home occupation standards.

Walk-In Customers: ProhibitedAppointments: Allowed at reasonable intervals

🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas

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

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.

ADU Rules

Some Restrictions

Atlanta expanded its ADU rules in 2021 to allow ADUs on most single-family lots. Detached ADUs are capped at 750 sq ft or 50% of the main dwelling's heated area and must share utilities.

Max Size (Detached): 750 sq ft or 50% of mainHeight: ~20 ft / 1.5 stories

Shed Rules

Few Restrictions

Sheds under 120 sq ft and one story (max 20 ft) do not require a building permit in Atlanta. Larger sheds require a permit. Accessory structures under Β§16-05.004 include garden sheds and private garages.

Code: Atlanta Β§16-05.004Permit Threshold: β‰₯120 sq ft requires permit

Tiny Homes

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta allows tiny homes only as detached accessory dwelling units up to 750 sq ft and 20 ft tall in R-4, R-4A, and R-5 zones, built on a permanent foundation under Georgia's Appendix S tiny-house code. Movable tiny houses on wheels (THOWs) are not permitted as dwellings, and no statewide preemption law has been enacted.

Allowed Districts: R-4, R-4A, R-5 (detached ADU only)Max Size: 750 sq ft

Garage Conversions

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta currently prohibits attached ADUs, so a garage conversion into a separate dwelling is not allowed by-right; converting a garage to additional living space for the primary dwelling requires a building permit from the Office of Buildings under the Georgia State Minimum Standard Residential Code (2018 IRC with GA amendments).

Attached ADU Status: Currently prohibited (Part 16)Allowed Districts (detached only): R-4, R-4A, R-5

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Atlanta treats carports as accessory structures regulated by Part 16 of the Code of Ordinances, with required yard, setback, and lot coverage limits set by the underlying zoning district (R-1 through R-5, etc.), and a building permit required from the Office of Buildings.

Code: Part 16, Ch. 28 Β§16-28.008; district chapters 4-9R-4/R-4A Setbacks (accessory): 7 ft side, 15 ft rear

ADU Impact Fees

Some Restrictions

Atlanta charges development impact fees on new ADUs under the Georgia Development Impact Fee Act (O.C.G.A. Β§36-71-1) and the Atlanta Impact Fee Ordinance (Code Β§16-23). Fees apply per dwelling unit and cover parks, transportation, public safety, and fire protection. ADUs are typically billed at the multi-family or accessory-unit rate.

State Authority: O.C.G.A. Β§36-71-1 et seqLocal Authority: Atlanta Code Β§16-23

ADU Permits

Few Restrictions

Atlanta permits accessory dwelling units in single-family R-4, R-4A, R-5, and other residential zones following the 2017 ADU ordinance (Ordinance 17-O-1605). ADUs are reviewed administratively (no public hearing) by the Office of Buildings under Code of Ordinances Chapter 16 (Zoning) Section 16-29.

Authority: Atlanta Code Β§16-29; Ord. 17-O-1605Max Detached: 750 sq ft

ADU Owner Occupancy

Some Restrictions

Atlanta requires that the property owner reside in either the primary dwelling or the ADU as their primary residence. This owner-occupancy requirement is part of the 2017 ADU ordinance and is recorded as a deed restriction on the parcel before the building permit is issued.

Required: Yes - one unit must be owner's residenceAuthority: Atlanta Code Β§16-29

ADU Rental Restrictions

Some Restrictions

ADUs in Atlanta can be rented long-term, but short-term rentals (under 30 days) require an Atlanta STR Permit under Code Chapter 10 Article XIX (Ordinance 21-O-0276). Hosts must also obtain a Business Tax Certificate and collect the 8% Atlanta Hotel-Motel Tax. Georgia law (O.C.G.A. Β§44-7-19) preempts rent control on long-term rentals.

STR Authority: Atlanta Code Ch. 10 Art. XIXSTR Fee: $150 annual

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

🌍 Environmental Rules

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Some Restrictions

Atlanta adopted a Climate Action Plan and the ATL2050 Comprehensive Plan committing the city to 100% clean energy by 2035 and net-zero municipal emissions, with sustainability requirements built into capital projects.

Clean energy target: 100% by 2035Plan: ATL2050 Comprehensive Plan

Sustainable Procurement

Some Restrictions

Atlanta requires city-funded buildings and major renovations to meet LEED Silver or equivalent green standards, applying sustainable procurement rules to materials, energy systems, and water-efficient fixtures.

Standard: LEED Silver minimumThreshold: 5,000 sq ft new builds

Cool Roof Requirements

Few Restrictions

Atlanta encourages high-albedo roofs through the Sustainable Building Ordinance and ATL2050 heat-island goals, but does not require cool roofs on private homes; LEED projects must meet SRI thresholds.

SRI low-slope: 78 minimumSRI steep-slope: 29 minimum

Heat Island Mitigation

Few Restrictions

Atlanta addresses urban heat through tree-canopy preservation, ATL2050 cool-corridor goals, and Beltline green infrastructure rather than a single ordinance, layering tree, stormwater, and zoning rules.

Tree canopy: About 46% citywideTool: Heat-vulnerability mapping

Gas Leaf Blower Ban

Few Restrictions

Atlanta does not ban gas-powered leaf blowers, though noise rules in Ch. 74 and HOA covenants restrict use times; some neighborhoods are pushing for an electric-only transition aligned with ATL2050 goals.

Gas blowers: Currently allowedQuiet hours: 10 PM to 7 AM

Vehicle Idling Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Georgia's Diesel Idling Rule (Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 391-3-20) limits commercial diesel idling to 15 minutes statewide, including Atlanta; the city enforces additional school-zone idling restrictions for buses and trucks.

State idle limit: 15 minutesAuthority: Ga. Comp. R. 391-3-20

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta regulates development in FEMA-designated flood hazard areas under City Code Chapter 74, Article VI (Flood Damage Prevention). Major flood risks center on Peachtree Creek, Proctor Creek, Nancy Creek, North Fork, and the Chattahoochee River. The city participates in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) and has experienced significant flooding events that have driven stricter regulations.

Governing Code: Atlanta Code Ch. 74, Art. VIElevation Requirement: 1 foot above Base Flood Elevation

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta Code Chapter 74 Article X (the Post-Development Stormwater Management Ordinance, adopted 2013) requires every new development and redevelopment to manage the first 1.0 inch of runoff on-site and execute an inspection and maintenance agreement under Sec. 74-517.

Code Section: Atlanta Code Ch. 74 Art. XInspection Section: Sec. 74-517

Erosion Control

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta requires erosion and sediment control for all land-disturbing activities under City Code Chapter 74, Article III and the Georgia Erosion and Sedimentation Act (O.C.G.A. Β§12-7). The city enforces stringent erosion control standards as part of its obligations under the Chattahoochee River watershed protections and its federal consent decree for sewer system improvements.

Governing Code: Atlanta Code Ch. 74, Art. III; O.C.G.A. Β§12-7Permit Trigger: Land disturbance of 1+ acre

Coastal Development

Few Restrictions

Atlanta is a landlocked city located approximately 250 miles from the nearest coastline and has no coastal development regulations. Georgia's Coastal Marshlands Protection Act and Shore Protection Act apply only to the six coastal counties (Bryan, Camden, Chatham, Glynn, Liberty, and McIntosh). Atlanta's waterfront regulations focus on the Chattahoochee River, Peachtree Creek, and other inland waterways.

Coastal Regulations: None β€” landlocked cityDistance to Coast: Approximately 250 miles

Grading & Drainage

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta regulates grading and drainage through the Land Disturbance Permit process under City Code Chapter 74 and the Department of Watershed Management. All grading activities must maintain natural drainage patterns and prevent adverse impacts on neighboring properties. Projects must comply with the city's stormwater management standards and the Georgia Stormwater Management Manual.

Governing Code: Atlanta Code Ch. 74 β€” EnvironmentPermit Required: Land Disturbance Permit for all grading

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Personal Cultivation Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Georgia law bans recreational and personal cannabis cultivation under OCGA Title 16 Chapter 13 Article 2, and Atlanta cannot authorize home grows. Only narrow low-THC oil possession is allowed via the GA Access to Medical Cannabis Commission.

State law: OCGA Title 16 Chapter 13 Article 2Home grow: Felony, no exceptions

Cannabis Delivery Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Recreational cannabis delivery is banned statewide under OCGA Title 16 Chapter 13. Only registered low-THC medical oil can be dispensed in person by GA Access to Medical Cannabis Commission licensees, with no home delivery.

Adult-use delivery: Prohibited statewideMedical dispensing: In-person only

Buffer Zones

Some Restrictions

Atlanta low-THC oil dispensaries licensed by the GA Access to Medical Cannabis Commission must maintain state-set buffers from schools and child care, layered with city zoning under Atlanta Part III Land Development Code.

State authority: GA Medical Cannabis CommissionCity code: Atlanta Part III LDC

Commercial Cannabis Zoning

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta cannot authorize recreational cannabis storefronts because Georgia has not legalized adult-use sales. Commercial cannabis activity is limited to state-licensed low-THC oil dispensaries and licensed hemp businesses.

Adult-use: Not legalized in GeorgiaMedical channel: GA Cannabis Commission only

Dispensary Zoning

Heavy Restrictions

Georgia does not permit cannabis dispensaries. The state's low-THC oil program allows distribution only through licensed pharmacies and specific dispensing locations authorized by the Georgia Access to Medical Cannabis Commission. Atlanta has no local dispensary zoning ordinance because retail cannabis sales remain illegal under state law.

Dispensaries Allowed: No β€” not legal in GeorgiaLow-THC Oil: State-licensed dispensing locations only

Home Cultivation

Heavy Restrictions

Home cultivation of cannabis is illegal in Georgia. Under O.C.G.A. Β§16-13-30 and Β§16-13-31, marijuana remains a Schedule I controlled substance and growing any amount is a felony. The City of Atlanta decriminalized possession of one ounce or less in 2017 (Ordinance 17-O-1152), reducing it to a $75 fine, but cultivation is not covered by the decriminalization ordinance and remains a state criminal offense.

Home Cultivation: Illegal β€” felony under state lawDecriminalization: Possession of 1 oz or less only ($75 fine)

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

🏚️ Property Maintenance

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta regulates vacant lots through the Housing Code (Appendix E), the nuisance abatement provisions of City Code Chapter 74, and the vacant property registration program. Owners of vacant lots must maintain the property free of overgrown vegetation, debris, and conditions that attract rodents or create fire hazards. The Atlanta Land Bank Authority plays a role in returning chronically vacant lots to productive use.

Vegetation Limit: Grass and weeds below 12 inchesSecured Property: Must prevent unauthorized dumping

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Atlanta regulates trash bin placement and storage under the city's solid waste ordinance (City Code Chapter 130). Residential trash bins must be placed at the curb no earlier than the evening before collection and retrieved by the end of the collection day. Bins must be stored out of public view when not set out for collection. The Department of Public Works manages residential collection services.

Governing Code: Atlanta Code Chapter 130 β€” Solid WasteSet-Out Time: After 7 PM evening before collection

Garage Sale Rules

Some Restrictions

Atlanta regulates garage sales and yard sales as temporary activities under the general provisions of the zoning code (Part 16). Garage sales on residential property are permitted without a special permit but are limited in frequency and duration. Sales must not create traffic hazards or excessive noise in residential neighborhoods.

Permit Required: No β€” but frequency limits applyFrequency Limit: Up to 3 sales per year

Property Blight

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta aggressively addresses property blight through the Atlanta Housing Code of 1987 (Appendix E of the City Code) and the Blight Tax program established by city ordinance. The city empowers code enforcement officers to inspect and cite blighted properties, and property owners face significant financial consequences including a blight tax of up to five times the standard millage rate on vacant, blighted properties.

Governing Code: Atlanta Housing Code of 1987 (Appendix E)Blight Tax: Up to 5x normal millage rate

Snow & Sidewalk Clearing

Few Restrictions

Atlanta does not have a mandatory snow and ice sidewalk clearing ordinance for residential property owners. Given Atlanta's Southern climate with infrequent snowfall (average 2 inches per year), the city relies on the Department of Public Works for road clearing during rare winter weather events. Property owners are encouraged but not legally required to clear sidewalks after snowfall.

Clearing Requirement: No mandatory residential requirementAverage Snowfall: Approximately 2 inches per year

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

Relocation Assistance

Few Restrictions

Atlanta does not require landlords to pay tenant relocation assistance for ordinary lease terminations or no-fault displacements. Georgia state law preempts cities from enacting relocation-fee mandates outside narrow federally funded scenarios.

City mandate: NoneFederal trigger: HUD-funded displacement

Security Deposit Rules

Some Restrictions

Georgia caps no maximum security deposit, but OCGA 44-7-30 through 44-7-37 require landlords with more than 10 units to use escrow accounts, provide move-in inspection lists, and return deposits within 30 days of vacancy.

Maximum deposit: No state capReturn deadline: 30 days vacancy

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta enacted Ord. 17-O-1132 in 2017 prohibiting housing discrimination based on source of income, including Section 8 vouchers, SSI, alimony, and child support. The ordinance applies citywide despite Georgia's narrower state Fair Housing categories.

Authorizing ordinance: 17-O-1132Year enacted: 2017

No-Fault Evictions

Few Restrictions

Georgia allows no-fault termination of periodic tenancies with statutory notice β€” 60 days from landlords and 30 days from tenants for tenancies-at-will under OCGA 44-7-7. Atlanta cannot impose just-cause rules due to state preemption.

Landlord notice: 60 days at-willTenant notice: 30 days at-will

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Some Restrictions

Atlanta tenants are protected mainly by Georgia's prohibition on self-help eviction and common-law remedies rather than a dedicated city ordinance. Lockouts, utility shutoffs, and threats remain unlawful and actionable in Magistrate Court.

Self-help ban: OCGA 44-7-50Required venue: Magistrate Court

Section 8 Voucher Acceptance

Some Restrictions

Atlanta Housing administers the federal Housing Choice Voucher program for city renters, and Atlanta's 2017 source-of-income ordinance requires private landlords to consider voucher holders on the same terms as cash-paying applicants.

Local PHA: Atlanta HousingTenant rent share: About 30 percent income

Cash-for-Keys Agreements

Few Restrictions

Atlanta and Georgia do not regulate cash-for-keys agreements, so landlords and tenants are free to negotiate voluntary move-out payments. The contracts are enforceable under standard Georgia contract law without minimum statutory amounts.

City regulation: NoneState regulation: None

Just Cause Eviction

Few Restrictions

Atlanta does not have a just cause eviction ordinance. Georgia follows standard landlord-tenant law (O.C.G.A. Β§44-7) which allows landlords to decline lease renewal for any lawful reason after proper notice. There is no local or state requirement that landlords demonstrate just cause to evict or non-renew a tenancy. Evictions must follow Georgia's legal dispossessory process.

Just Cause Required: No β€” not required in GeorgiaMonth-to-Month Notice: 60 days by either party

Rental Registration

Some Restrictions

Atlanta requires short-term rental properties (stays of less than 30 days) to register and obtain a Short-Term Rental License under Ordinance 18-O-1376 and City Code Chapter 30 (Businesses). Long-term rental properties do not require a specific rental registration with the city, but landlords must obtain a business license if operating rental properties as a business.

STR License Required: Yes β€” for rentals under 30 daysLong-Term Registration: Business license only

Rent Control

Few Restrictions

Atlanta does not have rent control or rent stabilization ordinances. Georgia state law (O.C.G.A. Β§44-7-19) preempts local governments from enacting rent control measures. Landlords in Atlanta may set and increase rents without government-imposed caps. The city has no pending legislation to override the state preemption.

Rent Control: None β€” prohibited by state lawState Preemption: O.C.G.A. Β§44-7-19

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

Atlanta specifies rules for trash and recycling bin placement under City Code Chapter 130. Bins must be placed at the curb edge, not in the street or blocking sidewalks, and must be retrieved after collection. Proper placement ensures efficient automated collection and prevents obstructions for pedestrians and vehicles.

Placement: Curb edge, handle facing houseDistance from Curb: No more than 3 feet

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

Atlanta provides bulk item pickup service for residential properties through the Department of Public Works. Residents must schedule bulk pickup through Atlanta 311 in advance. Common bulk items include furniture, mattresses, and appliances. There are limits on the number of items per pickup and restrictions on accepted materials.

Scheduling: Through Atlanta 311 (24 hours advance)Item Limit: Up to 6 items per scheduled pickup

Recycling Requirements

Some Restrictions

Atlanta provides single-stream recycling collection for residential properties. The city's recycling program accepts paper, cardboard, glass bottles, metal cans, and plastics #1-7. Recycling is collected weekly alongside trash using separate city-provided rollcarts. The city encourages recycling through education campaigns and the Atlanta Recycles initiative.

Collection: Weekly single-stream curbsideContainer: 96-gallon blue rollcart

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

Atlanta provides curbside trash and recycling collection for single-family and small multi-family residences (1–3 units) through the Department of Public Works. Collection occurs weekly on a designated day based on the property's zone. The city uses automated collection with 96-gallon rollcarts for trash and recycling.

Collection Frequency: Weekly trash and recyclingContainer: City-provided 96-gallon rollcart

🚁 Drone Rules

πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors

πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door

πŸŒ™ Curfew Laws

πŸ“ Building Setbacks & Zoning

Structure Height Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta's zoning code establishes maximum building heights by zoning district. Residential districts limit heights to 35 feet for single-family zones, with taller limits in multi-family and commercial districts. Special Public Interest (SPI) districts and overlay districts may have modified height limits. The compatibility rule also restricts height in certain residential areas.

Governing Code: Part 16 Zoning β€” by districtR-1 to R-3 Height: 35 feet maximum

Setback Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta's zoning code (Part 16, Chapter 28) establishes detailed setback requirements that vary by zoning district. Residential districts (R-1 through R-5) have front, side, and rear yard setbacks determined by the specific district classification and lot characteristics. The city's compatibility rule often requires new construction to match the setback patterns of existing homes on the same block face.

Governing Code: Part 16, Chapter 28 β€” General RegulationsFront Setback: 35–50 ft (or compatibility rule)

Lot Coverage Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta's zoning code limits lot coverage β€” the percentage of a lot that can be covered by structures and impervious surfaces β€” based on zoning district. Residential lot coverage limits typically range from 45% to 75% depending on the district. These limits work with the tree canopy and stormwater regulations to maintain Atlanta's urban forest character.

Governing Code: Part 16 Zoning β€” by districtR-1/R-2 Coverage: 45–55% maximum

🌳 Tree Protection

Urban Forest Equity

Some Restrictions

Atlanta's Tree Protection Ordinance (Ch. 158) and Urban Ecology Framework target an equitable canopy across NPUs, prioritizing replanting in historically underinvested south and west Atlanta neighborhoods.

Avg canopy: About 46%Tree code: Ch. 158

Tree Removal Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta has one of the strongest tree protection ordinances in the nation under City Code Chapter 158, Article II. A tree removal permit (arborist permit) is required for the removal of any tree with a diameter at breast height (DBH) of 6 inches or greater on private property. The city's Urban Ecology Division administers the program. Atlanta is known as the 'City in a Forest' and the ordinance is designed to protect that canopy.

Governing Code: Atlanta Code Ch. 158, Art. IIPermit Trigger: Any tree 6 inches DBH or greater

Heritage & Protected Trees

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta – the "City in a Forest" – protects every tree on private property 6 inches DBH or larger under City Code Chapter 158. Removal of a healthy tree requires a permit from the Arborist Division, a 15-day public posting, and either on-site replacement or payment into the Tree Recompense Fund at appraised value.

DBH threshold: 6-inch DBH (any species)Public posting: 15 days on the tree

Tree Replacement Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta requires tree replacement for any permitted tree removal under the Tree Protection Ordinance (Chapter 158, Article II). Replacement requirements are calculated based on the diameter of the removed tree and must be planted within a specified timeframe. The city's goal is to maintain and increase the urban tree canopy, which covers approximately 47% of the city.

Replacement Ratio: 1:1 caliper-inch minimumMinimum Size: 2-inch caliper at planting

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Lead Paint

Heavy Restrictions

Pre-1978 housing in Atlanta is governed by federal Title X disclosure and EPA RRP rules, enforced through the Georgia Department of Public Health and HUD. Atlanta Code Ch. 8 applies the Georgia State Minimum Building Codes for renovation permits.

Target housing: Built before 1978Required form: EPA lead pamphlet

Elevator Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Elevator safety in Atlanta is regulated by the Georgia Safety Fire Commissioner's Elevator Section, which licenses contractors and conducts annual inspections. Building owners must maintain certificates of operation and post them in elevator cabs.

Regulator: GA Safety Fire CommissionerInspection frequency: Annual

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Heavy Restrictions

Scaffolding over Atlanta sidewalks or rights-of-way requires permits from the Department of Transportation and compliance with OSHA and Georgia State Building Code structural requirements during construction or facade work.

ROW permit: ATLDOT, Ch. 138Building permit: Office of Buildings

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Atlanta Housing Code Ch. 8 requires owners to maintain rental units free of insect and rodent infestations. Commercial pest applicators must hold Georgia Department of Agriculture licenses under OCGA Title 2 Chapter 7.

Reporting line: ATL311Applicator license: GA Dept of Agriculture

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta requires NFPA 13 sprinkler systems in most new commercial and multi-family construction through Ch. 8 amendments to the Georgia State Minimum Building Codes. Annual inspection, testing, and maintenance are enforced by AFRD.

Design standard: NFPA 13/13RMaintenance standard: NFPA 25

Childcare Center Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Childcare facilities in Atlanta must satisfy state Bright from the Start licensing, AFRD fire inspections, and Office of Buildings occupancy rules under Ch. 8. Day care home zoning is regulated separately under animals/home-business rules.

State licensor: GA Bright from the StartBuilding occupancy: IBC Group I-4

Door Locking Hardware

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta requires compliant single-action egress hardware on exit doors of most occupancies. Atlanta Code Ch. 8 follows Georgia State Minimum Building and Fire Codes, including IBC Section 1010 and IFC requirements for panic hardware.

Governing section: IBC 1010 egressPanic hardware: Assembly/educational uses

Green Building Code

Some Restrictions

Atlanta encourages sustainable design through the Atlanta Sustainable Building Ordinance and Commercial Buildings Energy Efficiency Ordinance. New municipal projects must meet LEED Silver, and large commercial buildings must benchmark and audit energy use.

City projects: LEED Silver minimumBenchmarking trigger: 25,000 sq ft+ commercial

πŸ”« Firearms

🚬 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

Rodent Control

Some Restrictions

Atlanta property owners must keep premises free of rats and mice under City Code Chapter 54, with Fulton County Environmental Health enforcing harborage abatement on residential and commercial parcels.

Code: Atlanta Code Chapter 54Inspector: Fulton County Environmental Health

Restaurant Grade Cards

Some Restrictions

Atlanta restaurants are inspected and scored by the Fulton County Board of Health (or DeKalb east of Moreland Avenue) under Georgia DPH Rule 511-6-1, with placards posted at the entrance.

Authority: Fulton County Board of HealthState rule: GA DPH 511-6-1

Bed-Bug Rules

Some Restrictions

Bed bug infestations in Atlanta rental housing are treated as habitability defects under Atlanta Code Chapter 54 and Georgia landlord-tenant law, requiring landlord-paid professional treatment when not tenant-caused.

City code: Atlanta Chapter 54State law: OCGA Title 44 Chapter 7

Syringe Disposal

Few Restrictions

Atlanta authorizes syringe services programs under Georgia HB 217 (2019) codified at OCGA Title 31 Chapter 12A, and household sharps must be placed in rigid containers, never loose in curbside trash or recycling.

State law: GA HB 217 (2019)Codified at: OCGA Title 31 Chapter 12A

Food Handler Certification

Some Restrictions

Atlanta food service operations must designate a Certified Food Safety Manager under Georgia DPH Rule 511-6-1, with no separate city-level food handler card, but local operators often require ANSI training for staff.

State rule: GA DPH 511-6-1Manager required: ANSI-accredited credential

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

Tattoo & Body Modification

Some Restrictions

Tattoo and body-piercing studios in Atlanta need a Fulton or DeKalb County health permit plus a city business license, and tattooing minors under 18 is prohibited statewide under OCGA Β§16-5-71.

Minor tattooing: Banned statewideState statute: OCGA Β§16-5-71

Adult Entertainment

Heavy Restrictions

Atlanta licenses adult entertainment establishments under City Code Chapter 10, requiring annual permits, 1,000-foot buffers from churches, schools, and residences, and strict employee permitting and conduct standards inside venues.

Code chapter: Ch. 10, Art. IIBuffer distance: 1,000 feet

Massage Establishments

Some Restrictions

Atlanta requires massage establishments and individual massage therapists to be licensed, with state therapist credentials under OCGA Title 43 and city business permits enforced jointly with police to deter illicit operations.

State law: OCGA Title 43, Ch. 24ACity permit: Required annually

Tobacco Retail License

Some Restrictions

Tobacco and vape retailers in Atlanta need a state tobacco license from the Georgia Department of Revenue and a city occupation tax certificate, with federal Tobacco 21 enforcement applied at the point of sale.

Minimum age: 21 yearsState law: OCGA Title 48, Ch. 11

Pawnbrokers

Heavy Restrictions

Pawnbrokers in Atlanta must hold both a state license under OCGA Β§44-12-130 and a city permit, and must report daily transactions to APD via the LeadsOnline system to support stolen-property recovery.

State law: OCGA Β§44-12-130Reporting system: LeadsOnline (APD)

Secondhand Dealers

Some Restrictions

Secondhand dealers buying used goods in Atlanta must register with APD, photograph and record each item with seller ID, and hold purchases at least 15 days before resale to deter fencing of stolen property.

Registration: APD requiredHold period: Minimum 15 days

🚷 Public Conduct

πŸ’° Local Taxes & Fees

Overall: What to Expect in Atlanta

Atlanta has 199 ordinances on file across 42 categories. Of these, 39 are rated permissive, 102 moderate, and 58 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Atlanta 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.

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