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Moving to Buffalo, NY?

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 Buffalo across 42 categories and 204 specific rules we track.

37 Permissive110 Moderate57 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.

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Buffalo enforces quiet hours from 10 PM to 7 AM under the City of Buffalo Code of Ordinances Chapter 293 (Noise Control). Unreasonable noise audible beyond the property line during these hours is a violation, with fines starting at $100 for a first offense.

Quiet Hours: 10 PM to 7 AM weekdaysWeekend Hours: 11 PM to 8 AM Fri-Sat

Vehicle Noise

Some Restrictions

Modified exhaust, loud car stereos, and unnecessary horn use are prohibited under Buffalo Code Chapter 293 and NY Vehicle and Traffic Law section 375(31). Police may issue equipment tickets for exhaust modifications and noise violations, with fines from $150 to $1,000 under the 2022 NY SLEEP Act.

Exhaust Law: VTL 375(31) plus SLEEP ActMax Exhaust Fine: $1,000

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Buffalo classifies a dog that barks continuously for 15 minutes or intermittently for 30 minutes as a public nuisance under Chapter 341 (Dogs). Owners receive a written warning first, then face fines up to $250 per incident.

Continuous Threshold: 15 minutesIntermittent Threshold: 30 minutes

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Aircraft noise from Buffalo Niagara International Airport (BUF) is regulated by the FAA, not the City of Buffalo. BUF operates a voluntary nighttime noise-abatement program and does not have a curfew. Residents in the Cheektowaga approach corridor are most affected.

Governing Authority: FAA preemptionAirport Operator: NFTA

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Amplified music that is plainly audible 50 feet from the source or beyond the property line after 10 PM violates Chapter 293. Bars and venues in the Chippewa Street and Allentown entertainment districts must hold amplified sound permits for outdoor music.

Audibility Rule: Plainly audible at 50 ftNight Cutoff: 10 PM

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Construction noise in Buffalo is limited to 7 AM to 7 PM Monday through Saturday. Sunday construction is prohibited in residential zones except for emergency repairs. Violations carry fines up to $500 per day.

Weekday Hours: 7 AM to 7 PM Mon-SatSunday: Banned in residential zones

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Commercial operations in Buffalo must not produce noise plainly audible in residential zones after 10 PM. HVAC, compactors, and loading docks have specific placement and screening requirements. Fines reach $1,000 for repeat violations impacting residential neighbors.

Night Cutoff: 10 PM at residential lineHVAC Rule: Screening and setbacks

Leaf Blower Rules

Few Restrictions

Buffalo does not set specific hours or decibel limits for leaf blowers. General noise rules under Chapter 293 apply, meaning leaf blowers must comply with 7 AM to 7 PM limits and cannot create plainly audible disturbance beyond the property line during quiet hours.

Specific Ordinance: NoneAllowed Hours: 7 AM to 7 PM Mon-Sat

🏠 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.

Permit Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo requires all short-term rental operators to obtain a Short-Term Rental license from the City Clerk under Buffalo Code Chapter 242. Hosts must register, pass safety inspection, and operate only in approved zoning districts. Hosted and non-hosted rentals have different rules.

Code: Chapter 242 City CodeLicense: Annual via City Clerk

Registration Rules

Heavy Restrictions

All Buffalo STRs must register annually with the City Clerk under Chapter 242. Registration includes property details, owner info, local contact, insurance, and inspection certificate. Registration number must appear in all listings on Airbnb, Vrbo, and other platforms.

Registry: Buffalo Rental Registry plus STRListing Display: Registration number required

Taxes & Fees

Some Restrictions

Buffalo STR operators must collect Erie County 5 percent hotel occupancy tax plus NY State sales tax (8.75 percent in Erie County). Airbnb and Vrbo collect and remit state sales tax but Erie County bed tax is the host responsibility unless platform has a separate agreement.

Erie County Bed Tax: 5 percentNY Sales Tax: 8.75 percent combined

Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

Buffalo STR operators must provide adequate off-street parking per Green Code UDO. Typically one off-street space per bedroom is required for non-hosted rentals. On-street parking for guests is restricted in alternate-side-parking zones and residential permit areas.

Standard: 1 space per bedroomCode: Green Code Article 8

Noise Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo STRs must comply with Chapter 293 Noise Ordinance. Quiet hours are 10 PM to 7 AM. STR licenses can be revoked for repeat noise violations. Operators must post quiet-hour notices and provide local contact to respond within one hour.

Quiet Hours: 10 PM-7 AM weekdaysWeekend: 11 PM-7 AM Fri-Sat

Insurance Requirements

Some Restrictions

Buffalo STR license applicants must provide proof of liability insurance with minimum 500,000 dollars per occurrence coverage that specifically names short-term rental use. Standard homeowners policies typically exclude commercial rental activity.

Minimum Liability: 500,000 dollars per occurrenceAggregate: 1,000,000 dollars

Occupancy Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo STR occupancy is limited to two persons per bedroom plus two additional persons per unit, with a maximum based on Building Code egress and square footage. Non-hosted rentals face stricter caps. NY Multiple Dwelling Law also applies to larger buildings.

Formula: 2 per bedroom plus 2Sleeping Room: 70 sq ft first person

Host Presence Rule

Some Restrictions

Buffalo distinguishes hosted (owner-occupied) from unhosted short-term rentals, with hosted operations facing fewer restrictions because the owner remains on premises during guest stays under city zoning code.

Owner present: Required during stayPermit type: Hosted STR registration

Repeat Violator Strikes

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo's escalating enforcement framework imposes increasing penalties on STR operators who accumulate multiple nuisance, noise, or zoning violations, culminating in permit revocation after repeated infractions within a calendar year.

Strikes to revocation: Three within twelve monthsTracking period: Rolling calendar year

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo limits unhosted short-term rentals to the operator's primary residence in many residential zones, preventing investor-owned whole-home rental conversions that reduce long-term housing supply in tight Rust Belt markets.

Residency: Primary residence requiredProof: License or tax records

Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Buffalo treats home-share rentals lasting more than 30 consecutive days as long-term tenancies, exempting them from STR permits but subjecting them to NY tenant-protection laws including HSTPA security deposit and notice rules.

Threshold: 30 consecutive daysStatus after: Residential tenancy

Host Platform Liability

Heavy Restrictions

New York's statewide STR registry (HB 9275/A8284) makes booking platforms like Airbnb and Vrbo legally responsible for delisting unregistered Buffalo properties, with platforms facing per-listing fines for noncompliance.

Governing law: NY HB 9275 / A8284Platform duty: Verify registration numbers

Night Caps

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo non-owner-occupied STRs are capped at 90 rental nights per calendar year in certain residential zones. Owner-occupied hosted rentals have no night cap. Caps aim to preserve long-term housing stock in tight rental markets.

Hosted Cap: NoneUnhosted Cap: 90 nights per year

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.

Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

Consumer fireworks are illegal in the City of Buffalo. Although NY State legalized sparkling devices in 2015, Erie County opted out, meaning even sparklers and ground-based fountains remain prohibited in Buffalo under NY Penal Law Section 270.

Consumer: All banned (Erie Co. opted out)Sparklers: Also illegal in Buffalo

Backyard Fires

Some Restrictions

Small recreational backyard fires are legal in Buffalo when contained in a proper pit, at least 25 feet from structures, attended, and fueled only by clean seasoned wood. Burning leaves, trash, or construction debris is prohibited.

Max size: 3 ft wide, 2 ft tallSetback: 25 ft from structures

Smoke Detectors

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo requires working smoke detectors and carbon monoxide alarms in every dwelling unit. State law (Amandas Law) mandates CO detectors near sleeping areas, and since April 2019 all new and replacement smoke alarms must be 10-year sealed-battery models.

Smoke alarms: Every level + each bedroomCO alarms: Within 15 ft of sleeping areas

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Open burning of brush, leaves, and yard waste is prohibited year-round in the City of Buffalo. NY DEC also enforces a statewide residential brush burning ban from March 16 through May 14. Buffalo relies on curbside yard-waste collection instead.

Open burn: Prohibited year-roundState ban: 6 NYCRR Part 215

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

Buffalo is not located in a designated wildfire hazard zone. The lakefront urban environment, dense building stock, and humid climate keep wildfire risk very low, though waterfront grass fires near Tifft Nature Preserve occur occasionally.

WUI risk: Low (urban lakefront)State WUI map: None for Buffalo

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Buffalo allows small recreational fire pits on private property under the NY Uniform Fire Prevention Code (19 NYCRR Part 1225). Pits must be at least 25 feet from any structure, contain only clean seasoned wood, and remain attended with water or an extinguisher on hand.

Distance: 25 ft from structures (15 ft for portable pits)Size: 3 ft diameter, 2 ft high max

Brush Clearance

Some Restrictions

Buffalo requires property owners to keep lots free of dry brush, tall weeds, and accumulated combustible debris under the Property Maintenance Code. Wildfire risk is low in the city, but brush clearance prevents arson-prone vacant-lot fires common on the East Side.

Max height: 10 inches (weeds/grass)Debris: No accumulated combustibles

Propane Storage

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo Code Chapter 318 adopts the New York State Fire Code, which caps residential propane cylinder storage at twenty pounds inside dwellings and limits exterior tanks by setback; BFD inspects commercial installations and tank exchange cages for spacing and barrier compliance.

Indoor cap: 20 pounds per cylinderIndoor cylinders: Maximum two

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.

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Buffalo street parking is governed by City Code Chapter 413 and the NY Vehicle and Traffic Law. Parking meters operate Monday-Saturday in downtown, with residential permit parking zones near universities and hospitals.

Meters: 8 AM-6 PM Mon-SatRPP Zones: Near UB, Buffalo State, Medical Campus

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

Buffalo restricts RV and boat parking on residential streets and in front yards. City Code Chapter 511 (Zoning) limits recreational vehicle storage to side or rear yards with screening requirements.

Code: Buffalo Green Code zoningLocation: Side or rear yard only

EV Charging

Few Restrictions

Buffalo supports EV charging infrastructure with public stations downtown and at municipal lots. NY State supports Charge NY initiative. Private home chargers need standard electrical permits.

Home Charger: Electrical permit requiredState Rebate: Up to 2,000 dollars Drive Clean

Overnight Parking

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo enforces alternate-side parking during snow emergencies for plowing operations. The Snow Emergency ordinance requires vehicles to move to the opposite side of the street during declared events.

Trigger: Mayoral Snow Emergency declarationRule: Park odd/even matching date

Abandoned Vehicles

Some Restrictions

Buffalo removes abandoned vehicles under City Code Chapter 413 and NY V&T Law Section 1224. Vehicles left on streets over 96 hours or lacking current registration can be towed and impounded.

Time: 96 hours on streetWarning: 72-hour tag

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Buffalo driveways require permits for curb cuts and must meet Green Code dimensional standards. Front yard paving limited to preserve neighborhood character in historic districts.

Curb Cut: DPW permit requiredMin Width: 9 ft residential

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo prohibits overnight parking of commercial vehicles over 10,000 pounds on residential streets. City Code Chapter 413 restricts semi-trucks, dump trucks, and commercial trailers in residential zones.

Weight Limit: 10,000 lbs GVWRHours: 9 PM-6 AM restriction

🧱 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

Wood, vinyl, chain-link, wrought iron, and masonry fences are all permitted in Buffalo. Historic preservation districts restrict materials to traditional wood, iron, or masonry. Chain-link is generally prohibited in front yards in historic areas.

Allowed: Wood, vinyl, chain-link, iron, masonryHistoric: Traditional materials only

Neighbor Fence Rules

Some Restrictions

Buffalo is a common-law state for shared fences. There is no statutory 50/50 cost-sharing requirement. Spite fences over 10 feet erected to annoy neighbors are actionable under NY RPAPL section 843 as a private nuisance.

Cost Sharing: No statutory splitSpite Fence: RPAPL 843 over 10 ft

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Fences over 6 feet tall and any fence in a historic district require a permit from the Buffalo Department of Permit and Inspection Services. Fences under 6 feet in non-historic areas do not need a permit but must meet Green Code setback and material rules.

Under 6 ft: No permit in non-historicOver 6 ft: Permit required

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Buffalo limits fences to 4 feet in front yards and 6 feet in side and rear yards under the Buffalo Green Code. Corner lots have additional visibility triangle rules. Fences over 6 feet require a building permit and zoning review.

Front Yard: 4 ft maxSide and Rear: 6 ft max

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

All residential pools in Buffalo with water over 24 inches deep must be fully enclosed by a 48-inch barrier with self-closing, self-latching gates per NY State Uniform Building Code. Alarms are required on any house door opening directly to the pool area.

Minimum Height: 48 inchesGate: Self-closing, self-latching

Fence Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo Green Code requires a clear sight triangle at all street intersections. Fences, walls, and vegetation cannot exceed 30 inches in height within 25 feet of the corner. Violations require immediate correction or face daily fines.

Triangle Size: 25 ft from cornerMax Height: 30 inches

πŸ” Animal Ordinances

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

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Buffalo has no breed-specific legislation. NY Agriculture and Markets Law section 107(5) preempts local breed bans statewide since 1997. Dangerous-dog determinations are based on individual behavior, not breed.

Breed Bans: Preempted by stateState Preemption: NY AG and Markets 107(5)

Beekeeping

Some Restrictions

Backyard beekeeping is legal in Buffalo with hives registered with the NY Department of Agriculture and Markets. Hives must be set back from property lines and a flyway barrier is required near neighboring yards. No city-level permit fee applies.

City Permit: None requiredState Registration: NY AG and Markets free

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo Code Chapter 341 prohibits keeping wild or exotic animals within city limits, including big cats, primates, venomous reptiles, crocodilians, and wolf hybrids. NY Environmental Conservation Law section 11-0512 reinforces the state ban. Violators face seizure and fines up to $500.

Big Cats: BannedPrimates: Banned

Wildlife Feeding

Some Restrictions

Feeding deer is prohibited statewide under NY DEC regulation 6 NYCRR 189. Buffalo Code Chapter 341 also prohibits feeding feral cats and wildlife in a way that creates a nuisance. Bird feeders are allowed but must be squirrel- and rat-resistant.

Deer Feeding: Banned statewide 6 NYCRR 189Feral Cats: TNR only via SPCA

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Buffalo limits households to 3 dogs and 3 cats over 4 months of age without a multiple-animal permit. Combined totals cannot exceed 6 animals. Breeders and rescues must obtain separate kennel licenses.

Dogs: 3 without permitCats: 3 without permit

Animal Hoarding

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo Code Chapter 49 caps household pet numbers and authorizes the Buffalo Animal Shelter and BPD to investigate hoarding complaints, seize neglected animals, and refer cases for cruelty prosecution under New York Agriculture and Markets Law Section 353.

Code chapter: Buffalo Ch. 49State cruelty law: Ag & Markets Β§353

Cat Rules

Some Restrictions

Buffalo Chapter 49 treats cats as companion animals subject to rabies vaccination, identification, and nuisance rules; owners must keep cats from damaging neighbor property, and the Buffalo Animal Shelter handles trap-neuter-return for community cat colonies.

Rabies age trigger: Four monthsTNR program: Buffalo Animal Shelter

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Some Restrictions

New York Agriculture and Markets Section 117-a requires every dog and cat adopted from the Buffalo Animal Shelter to be sterilized before release or under a binding deposit-backed contract, with proof of compliance returned within thirty days.

State law: Ag & Markets Β§117-aCompliance window: Thirty days

Microchipping

Few Restrictions

Buffalo does not mandate microchipping for owned pets, but the Buffalo Animal Shelter chips every adopted animal and uses scans to redeem strays faster, while New York dog licensing law requires a city-issued tag at all times outdoors.

Mandatory chip: NoDog license law: Ag & Markets Β§109

Pet Groomer Rules

Few Restrictions

New York does not license pet groomers, so Buffalo grooming shops operate under Chapter 745 zoning, Erie County Health sanitation guidance, and Buffalo Code Chapter 49 cruelty rules; mobile groomers must add a peddler-style permit through the City Clerk.

State license: None requiredZoning code: Buffalo Green Code Ch. 745

Coyote Management

Some Restrictions

New York Department of Environmental Conservation classifies coyotes as game with a regulated season; Buffalo prohibits firearm discharge citywide, so urban coyote conflicts are handled through hazing, trapping permits, and removal by licensed nuisance wildlife control operators.

Regulator: NYS DEC Region 9Firearm discharge: Prohibited citywide

Pet Store Rules

Heavy Restrictions

New York General Business Law Article 35-D as amended by the 2024 Puppy Mill Pipeline Act bars Buffalo pet stores from selling dogs, cats, and rabbits sourced from breeders, allowing only adoptions through partnerships with shelters and registered rescues.

State statute: GBL Β§753-eEffective date: December 2024

Veterinary Clinic Zoning

Some Restrictions

Buffalo Green Code Chapter 745 allows veterinary clinics in mixed-use and commercial transects with a special-use permit when overnight boarding is provided; New York Education Law Article 135 governs veterinary licensure separately through the State Board.

Day clinic: By right N-2C+Overnight boarding: Special-use permit

Bird Protection

Heavy Restrictions

Federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act and New York Environmental Conservation Law Section 11-0535 protect nearly all wild birds in Buffalo; nest disturbance during breeding season can trigger DEC enforcement, and Buffalo lighting and window rules support Lake Erie flyway safety.

Federal law: Migratory Bird Treaty ActState statute: ECL Β§11-0535

Wildlife Rescue Permits

Some Restrictions

Anyone caring for injured wildlife in Buffalo must hold a New York DEC wildlife rehabilitator license under Environmental Conservation Law Section 11-0515; unlicensed possession of native birds, mammals, or reptiles is prohibited even with rescue intent.

State permit law: ECL Β§11-0515Regulation: 6 NYCRR Part 184

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Buffalo requires dogs to be leashed at all times when off the owner property under Chapter 341. Delaware Park and LaSalle Park have designated off-leash dog areas. Violations carry fines from $50 to $250 and repeat offenses may trigger dangerous-dog proceedings.

Leash Length: Max 6 feetOff-Leash Parks: Delaware, LaSalle

Chickens & Livestock

Some Restrictions

Buffalo allows backyard chickens with a permit from the Department of Permit and Inspection Services. Maximum 5 hens per parcel, no roosters, and coops must be 25 feet from any dwelling. Annual permit fee applies.

Hen Limit: 5 per parcelRoosters: Banned

🌿 Landscaping Rules

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

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Buffalo Property Maintenance Code caps grass and weeds at 10 inches. Owners of vacant lots and rental properties face escalating fines and city mow-and-bill abatement for non-compliance. Enforcement ramps up May through October.

Max height: 10 inchesCode: PMCNYS 302.4

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Rainwater harvesting for outdoor, non-potable use is legal and unregulated in Buffalo. Rain barrels and cisterns require no permit when used for garden irrigation. Connecting harvested water to household plumbing requires a plumbing permit and backflow protection.

Legal: Yes, unrestricted for outdoor usePermit: Not required for barrels

Water Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Buffalo draws drinking water from Lake Erie via the Buffalo Water Authority and rarely imposes drought restrictions. Routine outdoor watering is unrestricted, but the Authority asks customers to conserve during extreme summer demand spikes.

Source: Lake Erie (unlimited supply)Authority: Buffalo Water Authority

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Buffalo treats tall weeds and noxious plants as property-maintenance violations. Weeds over 10 inches or DEC-listed invasive species must be cut. The city targets vacant lots and rental properties first, with abatement liens for non-compliance.

Max height: 10 inchesInvasives: 6 NYCRR Part 575

Native Plants

Few Restrictions

Buffalo encourages native plantings as part of the Olmsted parkway restoration and green-infrastructure programs. There is no mandate to use native species on private property, but DEC invasive-species rules effectively prohibit many aggressive non-natives.

Mandate: None for private lotsInvasives: 6 NYCRR Part 575 applies

Tree Trimming

Some Restrictions

Street trees in the Buffalo public right-of-way are managed by the Division of Parks and Recreation Bureau of Forestry. Private pruning or removal of street trees is prohibited without a permit. Property owners may prune their own trees freely.

Street trees: City-owned, permit requiredAgency: Bureau of Forestry

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Heavy Restrictions

Removing a Buffalo street tree requires a permit from the Bureau of Forestry. Protected trees in city parks and Olmsted parkways cannot be removed without Common Council review. Trees on private property may generally be removed without a city permit.

Street trees: Forestry permit requiredPrivate trees: No city permit

Artificial Turf

Some Restrictions

Artificial turf is allowed on private residential property in Buffalo. Installations in historic preservation districts may require Preservation Board review. Commercial fields must meet stormwater and infill-recycling requirements.

Residential: AllowedHistoric district: COA may be required

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.

Zoning Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Buffalo Green Code allows home occupations in all residential N districts as accessory uses. Businesses must be clearly secondary to the home, occupy no more than 25 percent of floor area, and not change the residential character of the property.

Allowed zones: All N residentialFloor area: 25% max or one room

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Home businesses in Buffalo may receive limited client visits provided traffic and parking stay at typical residential levels. The Green Code prohibits uses that create noticeable increases in vehicle or pedestrian traffic, and on-street parking by clients cannot overwhelm neighbors.

Cap: ~4-6 visits/day typicalScale: Residential character must remain

Home Daycare

Some Restrictions

Buffalo home-based daycare is governed by NY State OCFS licensing. Family day care (up to 8 children) and group family day care (up to 16 children) require state registration or licensing. Local Buffalo zoning permits home daycare in residential districts as an accessory use.

Regulator: NY OCFS state licensingFamily Day Care: Up to 8 children

Cottage Food Operations

Few Restrictions

Buffalo home bakers and food producers operate under NY Agriculture and Markets Law Article 20-C (Home Processor exemption). Registration with NY Ag and Markets is required, limited to low-risk shelf-stable foods. No Buffalo-specific cottage-food license is required.

State law: Article 20-C Home ProcessorRegistration: Free via Ag and Markets

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Home occupations in Buffalo may display only one non-illuminated sign no larger than 2 square feet, attached flat to the dwelling. Freestanding signs and illuminated signs are prohibited, and signs in historic districts require a Certificate of Appropriateness.

Max size: 2 sq ftIllumination: Prohibited

Home Occupation Permits

Some Restrictions

Buffalo home occupations are regulated by the Unified Development Ordinance (Green Code). Home-based businesses are allowed as accessory uses in residential zones if they are clearly incidental to the residential use, conducted by the resident, and do not alter the character of the neighborhood.

Code: Green Code UDO Article 6Floor Area Limit: 25 percent maximum

🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas

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

Hot Tub Rules

Some Restrictions

Buffalo hot tubs and spas over 24 inches deep require building and electrical permits. Locking hard covers meeting ASTM F1346 can satisfy barrier requirements in place of a fence. Setbacks are 5 ft from property lines.

Permit: Over 24 inches depthCover Standard: ASTM F1346 locking

Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo pools require a 48-inch minimum barrier with self-closing, self-latching gates per NY State Uniform Code and ISPSC. Openings under barriers cannot exceed 4 inches. Above-ground pools over 48 inches may use pool walls as barrier if ladder is removable.

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

Safety Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo residential pools must meet NY State Sanitary Code when applicable, ISPSC barrier rules, and VGB anti-entrapment federal law. Public and semi-public pools require NY DOH permits, lifeguards per bather load, and weekly water testing logs.

Residential Code: ISPSCPublic Pool Regulator: Erie County DOH

Pool Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo requires a building permit from the Department of Permit and Inspection Services for all pools over 24 inches deep, including above-ground. Permits ensure setback, barrier, electrical, and plumbing compliance with NY State Uniform Code.

Threshold: Over 24 inches deepSetbacks: 10 ft property line and house

Above-Ground Pools

Some Restrictions

Above-ground pools over 24 inches deep require a Buffalo building permit. Pool walls 48 inches or taller can serve as the barrier if ladders are removable or lockable. Setback is 10 feet from property lines and primary structure.

Permit Threshold: Over 24 inchesWall Barrier: 48 inches with removable ladder

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.

Shed Rules

Some Restrictions

Sheds up to 144 square feet in Buffalo may be installed without a building permit but still must meet setback and rear-yard coverage rules. Larger sheds require a building permit from Permit and Inspection Services.

No-permit size: 144 sq ft or lessSetback: 3-5 ft typical

Tiny Homes

Some Restrictions

Tiny homes on permanent foundations may be permitted in Buffalo as primary dwellings or ADUs if they meet NYS Building Code minimums. Tiny homes on wheels (THOWs) are treated as recreational vehicles and cannot be used as permanent residences.

On foundation: Allowed with permitAppendix Q: NYS code for <400 sf

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Garage conversions to habitable space or ADUs are allowed in Buffalo with a building permit, Certificate of Occupancy amendment, and compliance with egress, insulation, and ceiling-height rules. Historic districts require extra review.

Permit: RequiredCeiling: 7 ft minimum

ADU Rules

Some Restrictions

Buffalo Unified Development Ordinance (Green Code) permits accessory dwelling units (ADUs) in most residential zones. ADUs must be on lots at least 2,500 sq ft, occupy no more than 800 sq ft, and meet parking and design standards. Owner-occupancy of the primary dwelling is required.

Max size: 800 sq ft or 33% of mainMin lot: 2,500 sq ft

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Carports in Buffalo are treated as accessory structures. Permanent carports require a building permit; temporary fabric carports are generally disallowed as long-term installations. Setback and coverage rules match those for garages and sheds.

Permanent: Permit requiredFabric: Not allowed long-term

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Buffalo does not levy a dedicated ADU impact fee. The City charges standard building, plumbing, electrical, and gas permit fees through the Department of Permit and Inspection Services, scaled to construction valuation. Water and sewer connection charges through the Buffalo Sewer Authority and Buffalo Water apply only when new service is installed for the ADU.

Dedicated ADU Impact Fee: None in BuffaloPermit Fee Basis: Construction valuation

ADU Permits

Some Restrictions

Buffalo permits accessory dwelling units (ADUs) under the Unified Development Ordinance (UDO), known as the Green Code, codified at Chapter 496 of the Buffalo City Code. Detached, attached, and internal ADUs are recognized configurations. Applicants must obtain building, plumbing, electrical, and zoning approvals through the Department of Permit and Inspection Services and comply with the New York State Uniform Code.

Governing Ordinance: Buffalo UDO Chapter 496 (Green Code)Permit Authority: Dept. of Permit and Inspection Services

ADU Rental Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Buffalo ADUs may be rented for long-term residential occupancy (six months or more) by the owner-occupant. Short-term rentals (less than six months) are governed separately by Chapter 380 of the Buffalo City Code, which requires registration through the Department of Permit and Inspection Services. Non-owner-occupied STR operation requires a special use permit approved by the Common Council.

STR Ordinance: Buffalo Code Chapter 380STR Definition: Less than 6 months

ADU Owner Occupancy

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo requires that the property owner occupy either the primary dwelling or the accessory dwelling unit as their principal residence. This owner-occupancy mandate applies at the time of permit issuance and on a continuing basis. Investor-only ADU configurations where no owner lives on the lot are not allowed under the current Green Code framework.

Owner-Occupancy: Required (primary or ADU)Governing Code: UDO Chapter 496 (Green Code)

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

BBQ & Propane Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo enforces the New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code (19 NYCRR Part 1225), which incorporates the 2020 International Fire Code with state amendments. IFC Section 308.1.4 prohibits charcoal and LP-gas grills with cylinders over 1 pound on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction on multi-family (Group R-2) buildings. One- and two-family homes are exempt.

Governing Code: 19 NYCRR Part 1225 (NY State Fire Code)Section: IFC 308.1.4 (Open-Flame Cooking)

Smoker Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo treats wood, pellet, and charcoal smokers as open-flame cooking devices under IFC Section 308.1.4 as adopted by New York State (19 NYCRR Part 1225). Smokers may not be operated on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction on multi-family buildings. One- and two-family homes are exempt and may use smokers in yards with reasonable clearance.

Governing Code: 19 NYCRR Part 1225 / IFC 308.1.4Multi-Family Balcony: Smokers prohibited

Outdoor Kitchen Permits

Some Restrictions

Permanent outdoor kitchens in Buffalo require building, plumbing, gas, and electrical permits through the Department of Permit and Inspection Services when they include gas line connections, electrical service, plumbing, or structures over 144 square feet. Gas work must be done by a licensed plumber under the Fuel Gas Code of New York State. Portable grills do not require permits.

Permit Authority: Buffalo Permit and Inspection ServicesGas Line Code: Fuel Gas Code of NY State

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

Holiday Light Rules

Few Restrictions

Buffalo does not impose a dedicated ordinance restricting residential holiday lighting. The Green Code (UDO Chapter 496) Section 7.4 regulates outdoor lighting generally and exempts temporary holiday displays from photometric limits. Permanent exterior wiring requires an electrical permit. HOAs and condo associations may set their own seasonal limits through governing documents.

Specific Light Ordinance: None in BuffaloGreen Code Reference: UDO Section 7.4 (Outdoor Lighting)

Lawn Ornament Rules

Few Restrictions

Buffalo does not restrict residential lawn ornaments, statues, or yard decorations on private property. Ornaments must stay on the owner's property and not encroach into sidewalks or public ways. Permanent structures over 144 sq ft become accessory structures subject to UDO Chapter 496 setbacks. HOAs and condo associations may set additional standards through governing documents.

City Ordinance: None on private lawn decorationsSidewalk Rule: Must stay on private property

Inflatable Display Rules

Few Restrictions

Buffalo does not impose specific restrictions on residential inflatable holiday displays. Displays must remain on private property and not encroach into sidewalks, alleys, or other public ways. Buffalo's Green Code Section 7.4 outdoor lighting exemption for seasonal displays extends to inflatables. HOAs and condo associations often regulate inflatables through their governing documents.

City Ordinance: None specific to inflatablesSidewalk Encroachment: Prohibited

🌍 Environmental Rules

Gas Leaf Blower Ban

Few Restrictions

Buffalo does not categorically ban gas-powered leaf blowers, but their use is governed by the noise ordinance Chapter 472 quiet-hour windows and general nuisance-level decibel limits in residential districts.

Outright ban: NoGoverning chapter: Ch. 472 (Noise)

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Some Restrictions

Buffalo's 2024 Climate Action Plan update commits the city to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, with interim 40% reduction targets by 2030 across municipal operations, buildings, transportation, and waste sectors.

Net-zero target year: 2050Interim 2030 target: 40% reduction

Vehicle Idling Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Buffalo follows New York State Department of Environmental Conservation rules limiting heavy-duty vehicle idling to five consecutive minutes, with narrower exemptions for cold weather and active loading.

Idling limit: 5 minutesVehicle threshold: Over 8,500 lbs GVWR

Sustainable Procurement

Few Restrictions

Buffalo's sustainable procurement policy directs city departments to prioritize Energy Star equipment, recycled-content paper, EV-eligible fleet vehicles, and green-cleaning supplies when life-cycle cost is comparable to conventional alternatives.

Applies to: City departments onlyRecycled-content paper: Required

Cool Roof Requirements

Some Restrictions

Buffalo enforces cool-roof reflectivity requirements indirectly through the New York State Energy Conservation Construction Code, which mandates minimum solar reflectance for low-slope roofs in certain commercial occupancies.

Local cool-roof ordinance: NoState code: ECCCNYS / ASHRAE 90.1

Heat Island Mitigation

Few Restrictions

Buffalo addresses urban heat island effects primarily through Green Code street-tree requirements, parking-lot shade standards, and Climate Action Plan canopy-expansion goals rather than a stand-alone heat-mitigation ordinance.

Standalone ordinance: NoTool: Green Code street trees

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo operates under an MS4 permit from NYSDEC and the Buffalo Sewer Authority manages combined sewer overflows. Stormwater controls required for developments over 1 acre under SWPPP rules.

System: Combined sewer (CSO)Agency: Buffalo Sewer Authority

Erosion Control

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo requires erosion and sediment controls for construction per NYSDEC General Permit GP-0-20-001. Silt fences, inlet protection, and stabilization required on all sites disturbing soil.

Permit: NYSDEC GP-0-20-001Threshold: 1 acre disturbance

Grading & Drainage

Some Restrictions

Buffalo grading permits required for significant earthmoving. Drainage must not adversely affect neighbors. Lake Erie watershed stormwater rules favor on-site infiltration and green infrastructure.

Permit: PIS for significant gradingRule: NY reasonable use doctrine

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo participates in the NFIP with FEMA flood maps identifying zones along the Buffalo River, Lake Erie shoreline, and Scajaquada Creek. Special Flood Hazard Areas require elevation certificates and flood insurance for mortgages.

High Risk: Buffalo River, Lake Erie, ScajaquadaZones: AE (1 percent), X

Coastal Development

Heavy Restrictions

Development along Buffalo's Lake Erie waterfront is subject to the city's Green Code waterfront overlay regulations, NYS Coastal Erosion Hazard Area provisions, and the Local Waterfront Revitalization Program.

Coastal Zone: Lake Erie and Niagara River shoreline under LWRPOverlay Districts: Waterfront zones with special development standards

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Buffer Zones

Some Restrictions

New York Cannabis Law requires adult-use cannabis dispensaries to maintain minimum distances from schools and houses of worship, and Buffalo applies state OCM siting rules without adopting tighter local buffers.

School buffer: 500 feet minimumWorship buffer: 200 feet minimum

Social Equity Licensing

Few Restrictions

New York reserves a large share of adult-use cannabis licenses for social and economic equity applicants, and Buffalo residents harmed by past cannabis enforcement qualify under criteria set by the Cannabis Control Board.

Equity license target: 50 percent minimumRegulator: NY OCM and CCB

Personal Cultivation Limits

Some Restrictions

New York Cannabis Law allows adults twenty-one or older to grow a limited number of cannabis plants at their primary residence, and Buffalo households cannot exceed the per-person and per-household caps set statewide.

Per-adult mature plants: Three plantsHousehold mature cap: Six plants

Cannabis Delivery Rules

Some Restrictions

Licensed cannabis delivery to Buffalo residences is permitted only by OCM-licensed retailers and microbusinesses using approved couriers, with package, age, and route requirements set by New York regulation.

Recipient age: Twenty-one and olderDriver cap per license: Twenty-five FTE

Dispensary Zoning

Some Restrictions

Buffalo did not opt out of adult-use cannabis retail under MRTA, so licensed dispensaries can operate subject to state buffers and local zoning as special use in commercial districts.

Opt-Out: Buffalo did not opt outSchool Buffer: 500 feet

Home Cultivation

Few Restrictions

New York MRTA (2021) allows adults 21+ to grow up to 3 mature and 3 immature cannabis plants per person (max 6 mature and 6 immature per household) for personal use in Buffalo.

Per Adult: 3 mature, 3 immatureHousehold Cap: 6 mature, 6 immature

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

🏚️ Property Maintenance

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

Security Deposit Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Under NY's Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act of 2019, Buffalo landlords cannot collect more than one month's rent as a security deposit and must return it within fourteen days of lease termination with itemized deductions.

Maximum deposit: One month rentReturn deadline: Fourteen days

No-Fault Evictions

Heavy Restrictions

NY HSTPA restricts no-fault evictions in Buffalo by requiring extended notice periods of 30, 60, or 90 days based on tenancy length, eliminating most month-to-month terminations without cause.

Under one year: 30 days noticeOne to two years: 60 days notice

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo tenants are protected from landlord harassment under NY Real Property Law and the city's anti-discrimination ordinance (Ch. 218), with intentional intimidation, utility shutoffs, or repeated unwanted entries treated as illegal eviction tactics.

Criminal classification: Class A misdemeanorCity ordinance: Buffalo Code Ch. 218

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Heavy Restrictions

New York's 2019 Human Rights Law amendment and Buffalo Code Ch. 218 prohibit landlords from refusing tenants because their rent comes from Section 8 vouchers, SSI, veterans benefits, or other lawful non-wage income sources.

Protected class: Lawful source of incomeState statute: NY Executive Law 296

Section 8 Voucher Acceptance

Some Restrictions

Buffalo Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers are administered by BMHA and Belmont Housing Resources, with landlords required to accept vouchers under NY source-of-income protections and pass HUD habitability inspections before tenant move-in.

Local administrator: BMHA and BelmontTenant share: Roughly 30 percent income

Relocation Assistance

Some Restrictions

Buffalo tenants displaced by code-enforcement vacate orders, condemnations, or building demolitions may receive relocation assistance through the city's Department of Community Services and Erie County Continuum of Care emergency funds.

Trigger event: Vacate or condemnation orderLocal agency: Buffalo Community Services

Eviction Moratorium History

Few Restrictions

During the COVID-19 emergency, New York enacted the Tenant Safe Harbor Act and successive eviction moratoriums through January 2022, freezing most Buffalo nonpayment and holdover proceedings and preserving tenancies during the pandemic.

Moratorium end: January 15, 2022Key statute: CEEFPA / Tenant Safe Harbor

Just Cause Eviction

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo opted into New York State Good Cause Eviction protections in 2024 via Common Council resolution, limiting evictions and rent increases above set thresholds for covered units.

Opt-In Date: Buffalo adopted 2024State Law: RPL Article 6-A

Rent Control

Some Restrictions

Buffalo is not subject to NYC-style rent stabilization, but NY Emergency Tenant Protection Act (ETPA) allows opt-in. City Council has debated ETPA adoption; NY Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act 2019 strengthens tenant protections statewide.

Rent Control: Not adopted in BuffaloETPA: Opt-in available, under debate

Rental Registration

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo requires all rental dwellings to be registered and inspected under the Rental Dwelling Licensing program administered by Permit & Inspection Services, with certificates valid three years.

Code: Chapter 242Agency: Permit & Inspection Services

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

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

🏘️ HOA Rules

Architectural Review

Some Restrictions

Buffalo HOA and condo architectural committees review exterior changes per declaration and bylaws. NY courts uphold reasonable aesthetic restrictions but require standards to be applied consistently and in good faith under the business judgment rule.

Standard: Business judgment ruleCase Law: Levandusky v One Fifth Ave

Dispute Resolution

Some Restrictions

Buffalo HOA and condo disputes can be resolved through board hearings, mediation, arbitration (if declaration requires), or NY Supreme Court (Erie County). Most declarations require written notice and cure period before lien or legal action.

Venue: NY Supreme Court Erie CountySmall Claims: Under 5,000 dollars

Board Procedures

Some Restrictions

Buffalo condominium and homeowner association boards follow NY Real Property Law Article 9-B (Condominium Act) and Not-For-Profit Corporation Law. Boards must hold annual meetings, allow owner inspection of records, and follow the declaration and bylaws for voting procedures.

Condo Law: NY RPL Article 9-BHOA Law: NY NPCL

Assessment & Dues

Some Restrictions

Buffalo HOAs and condos can levy regular and special assessments per the declaration. Unpaid condo assessments become priority liens under NY RPL 339-z. HOA assessments in planned communities require foreclosure action like any other lien.

Condo Lien: Priority per RPL 339-aaInterest Cap: 9 percent NY statutory

CC&R Enforcement

Some Restrictions

Buffalo condominium CCRs (declaration and bylaws) are enforceable under NY RPL Article 9-B. Restrictions must be recorded and reasonable. The business judgment rule shields boards enforcing CCRs in good faith. Waiver by non-enforcement can defeat claims.

Condo CCR Law: NY RPL 339Amendment: 66-75 percent typically

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo scaffold work is governed by NY Labor Law Section 240 (the Scaffold Law), which imposes absolute liability on owners and contractors for elevation-related injuries. Permits required through Buffalo Permit and Inspection Services.

State Law: NY Labor Law Section 240 absolute liabilityPermit: Required via Buffalo PIS

Elevator Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo elevators must be inspected annually by NY State-licensed elevator inspectors under NY Labor Law 27-a and 12 NYCRR Part 32. Certificate of Operation is posted in each car. Repairs must be performed by licensed elevator contractors. Buffalo follows NY State Uniform Code.

Inspection: Annual NY-licensedStandard: ASME A17.1

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Buffalo Property Maintenance Code requires owners to keep buildings free of rodents, insects, and other pests. Violations cited under City Code Chapter 242 (Housing Standards). Unified Green Light Law context applies for state compliance.

Code: Buffalo Chapter 242 Housing StandardsBedbug Disclosure: NY RPL Section 235-e required

Lead Paint

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo has one of the highest childhood lead poisoning rates in the US. The city operates a Proactive Lead Inspection Program under Chapter 242. Rental properties built before 1978 must be inspected and certified lead-safe. Erie County DOH enforces lead hazard rules.

Inspection: Proactive pre-1978 rentalsTrigger Level: 5 ug/dL blood lead

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo Code Chapter 113 and the New York State Building and Fire Codes require automatic sprinklers in most new multifamily, assembly, and high-rise buildings; one and two family homes are exempt unless voluntarily protected and properly inspected by BFD.

Code basis: 19 NYCRR + IBCApartment threshold: Three units

Childcare Center Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Childcare centers in Buffalo must satisfy Buffalo Code Chapter 113 building review, BFD inspection under Chapter 318, and New York Office of Children and Family Services licensing under 18 NYCRR Parts 413 and 418, including egress, separation, and lead-paint clearances.

State license: OCFS 18 NYCRRUse group: E or I-4 typical

Door Locking Hardware

Heavy Restrictions

Buffalo Code Chapter 113 adopts the New York State Building and Fire Codes governing egress hardware; doors in the path of exit must release with one operation, and classroom or assembly spaces have specific limits on barricade devices and electronic locks.

Code basis: 19 NYCRR Part 1221Single motion: Required to unlatch

Green Building Code

Some Restrictions

Buffalo Climate Action Plan goals plus the New York State Energy Conservation Construction Code and the 2026 NYStretch energy code drive higher-efficiency new construction; municipal projects target LEED Silver and net-zero designs aligned with the city Net Zero 2050 commitment.

Energy code: 19 NYCRR Part 1240All-electric law: Effective 2026

🚬 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

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

Tobacco Retail License

Some Restrictions

Buffalo tobacco and vape retailers must hold a NY State retail dealer registration through the Department of Taxation and Finance, plus comply with Erie County Smoke-Free Air Act provisions and FDA Tobacco 21 federal age verification.

Minimum sale age: 21 yearsState law: NY Tax Law Art 20-A

Massage Establishments

Some Restrictions

Massage therapists in Buffalo must hold a New York State license issued by the Office of the Professions under Education Law Article 155, and businesses must comply with Buffalo zoning and standard commercial licensing requirements.

State authority: NY Education Law Art 155Training required: 1,000+ hours

Secondhand Dealers

Some Restrictions

Buffalo secondhand dealers, including pawnshops and used-goods stores, must register with the City Clerk and report transactions to the Buffalo Police Department under Buffalo City Code provisions and New York General Business Law Article 6.

State law: NY GBL Article 6Hold period: Typically 15 days

Pawnbrokers

Heavy Restrictions

Pawnbrokers in Buffalo must hold a New York State pawnbroker license issued under General Business Law Article 5 plus a Buffalo city license, and their interest rates and redemption periods are capped by statute.

State law: NY GBL Article 5Max rate: 4% monthly under $100

Towing Companies

Some Restrictions

Tow operators performing nonconsensual tows in Buffalo must register with the City of Buffalo and comply with New York Vehicle and Traffic Law tow-truck rules, including posted rate schedules and notification requirements to the Buffalo Police Department.

State law: NY V&T Law Article 12-BRelease window: 24 hours required

Adult Entertainment

Heavy Restrictions

Adult entertainment uses in Buffalo, including adult bookstores, theaters, and cabarets, are tightly restricted by the Buffalo Green Code (Chapter 745) with mandatory buffer distances from schools, churches, parks, and residential zones.

Zoning code: Buffalo Green Code Ch 745Typical buffer: 500 feet

🚷 Public Conduct

πŸ’° Local Taxes & Fees

Overall: What to Expect in Buffalo

Buffalo has 204 ordinances on file across 42 categories. Of these, 37 are rated permissive, 110 moderate, and 57 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Buffalo 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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