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Moving to Erie, PA?

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 Erie across 29 categories and 104 specific rules we track.

21 Permissive58 Moderate25 Strict

๐Ÿ”Š Noise OrdinancesFull noise ordinances guide โ†’

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

Erie sets no fixed numeric quiet hours. Instead, Article 705 (Disorderly Conduct) of the Codified Ordinances makes it disorderly conduct to shout or make noise during the nighttime to the annoyance or disturbance of others, and more generally to disturb the good order and quiet of the City by clamor or noise.

Code Section: Codified Ordinances of the City of Erie 705.01, 705.02(d)Standard: Noise that annoys or disturbs; nighttime noise specifically targeted

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

No Erie-specific ordinance directly addresses aircraft noise; the topic is preempted. Aircraft operations and in-flight noise are governed by the Federal Aviation Administration under federal law, and Pennsylvania regulates airport operation and aircraft under the Aviation Code (74 Pa.C.S. Chapter 51 et seq.). Erie International Airport noise is managed at the airport-proprietor level, not by city ordinance.

Erie ordinance: None; aircraft noise is not addressed in the Codified OrdinancesFederal authority: FAA; ANCA (49 U.S.C. Section 47521 et seq.); 14 C.F.R. Part 36

Construction Hours

Few Restrictions

No Erie-specific ordinance directly addresses construction hours; the City's Codified Ordinances do not set start/stop times for construction noise. Daytime construction noise is governed by the general disorderly conduct standard (Article 705), and nighttime construction noise can be cited under Section 705.02(d).

Code Section: Codified Ordinances of the City of Erie 705.01, 705.02(d)Fixed construction hours: None set by ordinance

Industrial Noise

Few Restrictions

The City of Erie has no industrial-noise chapter with property-line decibel limits. Industrial and commercial sound is regulated indirectly through Article 705 (Disorderly Conduct), Article 732 (Quiet Zones near hospitals), and the city zoning ordinance, which separates manufacturing districts from residential ones. PA DEP does not regulate ambient industrial noise.

Property-Line dB Limits: None in Erie code or PA state lawZoning Tool: Erie Zoning Ordinance M-1 / M-2 districts

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Erie has no decibel-based barking-dog ordinance with fixed time thresholds; persistent animal noise that disturbs the good order and quiet of the City is addressed under the general clamor-or-noise standard of Article 705. Pennsylvania's Dog Law (3 P.S. Section 459-101 et seq.) governs licensing and dangerous-dog matters statewide.

Code Section: Codified Ordinances of the City of Erie 705.01 (clamor or noise)Numeric barking threshold: None set by Erie ordinance

Leaf Blower Rules

Few Restrictions

The City of Erie has not adopted a dedicated leaf-blower ordinance and there is no seasonal ban, decibel cap, or time-of-day restriction targeting blowers specifically. Leaf-blower noise is reachable only through the general Article 705 disorderly-conduct provisions and Article 732 (Quiet Zones) for hospital-adjacent properties.

Dedicated Blower Ordinance: None in Erie Codified OrdinancesGas-Blower Ban: None

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Article 705 of Erie's Codified Ordinances makes it disorderly conduct to operate any radio, television, phonograph, sound amplifier, musical instrument or similar device at a sound intensity audible 50 feet away in any public area, street or sidewalk, or in a manner that creates a noise disturbance across a real property boundary.

Code Section: Codified Ordinances of the City of Erie, Article 705 (Disorderly Conduct)Public-area trigger: Sound audible 50 feet away in any public area, street or sidewalk

Vehicle Noise

Some Restrictions

Erie's Article 736 (Recreational Motor Vehicles) bars muffler cutouts, bypasses and straight pipes and requires standard mufflers in constant operation to keep noise to a minimum. On-highway vehicles are also governed by the Pennsylvania Vehicle Code, 75 Pa.C.S. Section 4523, which requires an effective muffler and bans modifications that amplify exhaust noise.

Code Section: Codified Ordinances of the City of Erie, Article 736 (Recreational Motor Vehicles)Prohibited: Muffler cutouts, bypasses, straight pipes; sharp popping/cracking exhaust

๐Ÿ  Short-Term RentalsFull short-term rentals guide โ†’

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

The City of Erie requires a Short-Term Rental license before any dwelling may be rented for under 30 days. Operators must first obtain zoning approval and a Zoning Certificate, then register and pay an annual $80 fee; the license is not transferable and does not run with the property.

License: STR license required before renting (305.49(a)(1))Prerequisite: Zoning Certificate required first

Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

Erie does not impose STR-specific parking minimums, but short-term rentals are bound by the off-street parking requirements in the Erie Zoning Ordinance for the use district where the dwelling sits, and by the on-street residential parking system administered through the Erie Parking Authority. Hosts must inform guests that posted time limits and snow-emergency rules apply.

Off-Street Minimum: Per Erie Zoning OrdinanceOn-Street Authority: Erie Parking Authority

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

Short-term rental hosts in Erie are responsible for guest noise under the city's general noise and nuisance provisions in the Erie City Code (eCode360 ER3969). Loud music, parties, and amplified sound that disturb neighbors trigger citations, and repeat violations can jeopardize a host's rental registration and Business Privilege License under city enforcement practice.

Local Rule: Erie City Code (eCode360 ER3969)State Backup: 18 Pa.C.S. ยง5503 disorderly conduct

Insurance Requirements

Few Restrictions

Erie PA does not require short-term rental hosts to carry a specific insurance policy or post a liability minimum, and Pennsylvania has no statewide STR insurance mandate. However, hosts using Airbnb or VRBO rely on platform-provided host protection (AirCover up to $1M, VRBO Liability Insurance up to $1M), and a personal homeowner's policy almost always excludes commercial transient rental.

City Mandate: NoneState Mandate: None (PA)

Taxes & Fees

Heavy Restrictions

Short-term rental operators in Erie must collect the Erie County 7% hotel room rental tax administered by the Erie County Department of Finance and the Pennsylvania 6% state hotel occupancy tax under 72 P.S. ยง7210 for any stay under 30 consecutive days. The combined rate is 13%. Erie does not impose a separate municipal STR tax. Erie County requires monthly remittance.

PA State Tax: 6% (72 P.S. ยง7210)Erie County Tax: 7% hotel room rental tax

Occupancy Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Erie short-term rentals may not exceed the number of occupants allowed in the applicable zoning district, with maximum occupancy based on the number and size of bedrooms, a family unit, or no more than four unrelated occupants. In the R-1 and R-1A districts occupancy of a rentable unit is limited to one Family.

Occupancy Cap: Not to exceed district maximumCalculation: Bedrooms/size, family unit, or max 4 unrelated

๐Ÿ”ฅ Fire RegulationsFull fire regulations guide โ†’

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

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Erie adopts International Fire Code Section 307 as its local fire code. Portable outdoor fireplaces must follow the manufacturer's instructions and stay at least 15 feet from any structure or combustible material; recreational fire pits must be 25 feet away. All fires must be constantly attended with a 4-A fire extinguisher or other suppression on site.

Code Section: IFC 307.4.2 / 307.4.3 (adopted by City of Erie)Portable fireplace setback: 15 feet from structure/combustibles

Fireworks

Some Restrictions

Pennsylvania Act 74 of 2022 (3 Pa.C.S. Ch. 11) preempts local fireworks bans and legalizes consumer fireworks statewide for anyone 18 or older. They may not be discharged within 150 feet of an occupied structure or vehicle, on public/private property without the owner's permission, or while under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Erie has no separate ordinance further restricting consumer fireworks.

Governing law: PA Act 74 of 2022 (3 Pa.C.S. Ch. 11)Distance rule: 150 ft from any occupied structure or vehicle

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Burning garbage, recyclable materials, leaf waste, or grass clippings is unlawful in the City of Erie at all times under Quality of Life ordinance item QOL-31. Open burning is also prohibited whenever atmospheric conditions make fires hazardous or winds gust to or are sustained at 10 mph. Because the City of Erie lies within the state-designated Erie air basin (25 Pa. Code 121.1), stricter air-quality burning limits apply.

Code Section: QOL-31 (Quality of Life ordinance); IFC 307.1.1Always prohibited: Recyclables, leaf waste, grass clippings, garbage

Backyard Fires

Some Restrictions

Erie permits recreational backyard fires of seasoned firewood between 5 pm and 11 pm Monday-Thursday and 5 pm to midnight on weekends and federal holidays, kept 25 feet from any structure. Bonfires require a permit from the fire code official and must stay 50 feet from structures unless contained in a barbecue pit.

Code Section: IFC 307.2, 307.4.1, 307.4.2 (adopted by Erie)Permitted hours: 5-11pm Mon-Thu; 5pm-12am Fri-Sun/holidays

Brush Clearance

Some Restrictions

Erie has no California-style defensible-space program because Erie County is rated low overall wildfire risk. The city controls fire-fuel vegetation through Article 1129 (Quality of Life Ticketing Program) of the Codified Ordinances and the 2018 International Property Maintenance Code adopted under Part Fifteen. All premises must be kept free of weeds or plant growth exceeding 10 inches in height.

Maximum Vegetation Height: 10 inchesQuality of Life Article: Erie Code Article 1129

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

Erie, PA does not have a city-designated Wildfire Hazard Severity Zone. Pennsylvania has not adopted IFC Chapter 49 (Requirements for Wildland-Urban Interface Areas) statewide, and Erie has not adopted it locally through Article 1503. Erie County is rated low overall wildfire risk by the USDA Forest Service, though approximately 60 percent of Pennsylvania homes statewide sit within the wildland-urban interface boundary mapped by DCNR.

WHSZ Adopted: No (not adopted in PA or Erie)IFC Ch. 49 Adopted: No (not in Erie Art. 1503)

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Propane (LP-gas) storage in Erie is regulated through the International Fire Code Chapter 61 (Liquefied Petroleum Gases) adopted at Part Fifteen Article 1503 of the Codified Ordinances and the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code at 34 Pa. Code Chapters 401-405. IFC 6101.2 references NFPA 58 (Liquefied Petroleum Gas Code) for tank setbacks, and IFC 6109.13 caps residential aggregate LP-gas storage on R-3 lots at 500 pounds water capacity (about 125 gallons of propane).

Code Authority: Erie Art. 1503 / IFC Ch. 61Referenced Standard: NFPA 58 LP-Gas Code

๐Ÿš— Parking RulesFull parking rules guide โ†’

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

Erie Codified Ordinance Section 521.04 prohibits using city streets to store a vehicle: leaving any vehicle in one place continuously for over 72 hours is a storage violation. Statewide, 75 Pa.C.S. Section 3353 sets where stopping, standing, and parking are flatly prohibited (intersections, crosswalks, within 15 feet of a hydrant, etc.).

Code Section: Erie Codified Ord. Sec. 521.04Max continuous parking: 72 hours in one place

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

No Erie ordinance creates an RV- or boat-specific on-street parking program; recreational vehicles, boat trailers, and campers parked on city streets are governed by the general 72-hour storage limit in Section 521.04 and the statewide prohibited-places rule in 75 Pa.C.S. Section 3353. On private lots, Erie's zoning code limits outdoor storage of such vehicles.

On-street RV permit: None (no RV-specific program)Governing local rule: Erie Sec. 521.04 (72-hour storage)

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Erie's Zoning Ordinance limits commercial vehicles in residential districts: not more than one commercial truck may be stored on a lot, and heavier equipment (dump trucks, buses, tractor trailers, etc.) is prohibited. On streets, the 72-hour storage rule (Section 521.04) and statewide 75 Pa.C.S. Section 3353 apply.

Residential-lot limit: Not more than 1 commercial truck (R / W-R districts)Prohibited types: Dump/bucket/tow trucks, buses, tractor trailers, garbage trucks

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Driveway construction and curb cuts in Erie are governed by Article 907 (Curb Cuts and Driveways) of the City of Erie Codified Ordinances, which requires a written permit from the City Engineer before constructing, reconstructing or altering any driveway apron, driveway or curb across a public sidewalk. Driveway widths and curb-cut counts vary by lot width, and design must also comply with the PA Uniform Construction Code (34 Pa. Code ยงยง401-405).

Permit Required: Article 907 (City Engineer)Lot 50 ft or Less: 1 driveway/curb cut maximum

Overnight Parking

Some Restrictions

Erie has no blanket overnight ban on ordinary cars, but the 72-hour storage limit (Section 521.04) caps how long a car may sit. In the inner-city area odd-even parking runs 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays, and during a declared Snow Emergency odd-even parking is in effect 24/7, with the downtown core posted No Parking from 2 a.m. to 4 a.m.

Citywide overnight car ban: None (no blanket prohibition)Storage limit: 72 hours, Erie Sec. 521.04

EV Charging

Few Restrictions

Pennsylvania has not adopted a statewide EV-ready building mandate, and the City of Erie's Zoning Ordinance (Article 1303 / Ord. 80-2005) does not impose a city-specific EV-ready percentage on new construction. EV charging equipment in Erie is evaluated under existing zoning categories and requires an electrical permit issued under the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code (34 Pa. Code ยงยง401-405), which adopts the NEC, IBC and IRC.

State EV Mandate: None - PA uses voluntary toolkitLocal Zoning: Article 1303 (Ord. 80-2005)

Abandoned Vehicles

Heavy Restrictions

Abandoned and inoperable vehicles in Erie are handled under Article 529 (Abandoned Vehicles on Private Property) of the City Codified Ordinances, together with the Pennsylvania Vehicle Code abandoned-vehicle provisions at 75 Pa.C.S. ยง7311 et seq. Erie's Article 529 prohibits leaving any wrecked, junked, stripped or abandoned motor vehicle where it constitutes a hazard, and authorizes the Director of Public Safety to order removal.

State Law: 75 Pa.C.S. ยง7311+ (Abandoned Vehicles)Local Code: Article 529 (Abandoned Veh. on Private Prop.)

๐Ÿงฑ Fence RegulationsFull fence regulations guide โ†’

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

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Erie caps fences, hedges and enclosures in required yard space at 6 ft 6 in in Residential Districts and 8 ft 6 in in non-Residential Districts. Height is measured from the maximum grade on either side of the property.

Code Section: Zoning Ordinance Sec. 205.19Residential Max: 6 ft 6 in

Material Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Erie's zoning ordinance does not restrict fence materials by type, but it imposes an opacity rule near corners and driveways: a fence is only 'see-through' if 70 percent of its area is open.

Code Section: Zoning Ordinance Sec. 205.19See-through standard: 70% open area

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

The City of Erie issues a dedicated 'Fence' permit. Applications run through Code Enforcement (Room 407, City Hall) and require zoning and building-code review before a fence is installed.

Permit Type: Fence PermitOffice: Code Enforcement, Room 407, City Hall

Approved Materials

Few Restrictions

Erie's Zoning Ordinance regulates fence height, location, and visibility but does not prescribe a list of allowed materials for residential fences. Specialized rules apply to security fencing and utility-protection chain-link fences under Section 204.19.

Allowed Materials: Wood, vinyl, chain link, masonrySecurity Openings: Max 9 square inches

Neighbor Fence Rules

Few Restrictions

Erie's Zoning Ordinance Section 204.19 allows a fence to be placed up to but not over the property line, and does not require neighbor consent. Boundary disputes between adjoining owners are handled under Pennsylvania common law, not the City Code.

Consent Required: No (city code)Property Line: Up to but not over

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Swimming pools in Erie must comply with IRC Chapter 42 Appendix G and IBC Section 3109.4 as adopted by the PA UCC (34 Pa. Code 401-405). Barriers must be at least 48 inches high with self-closing, self-latching gates around pools over 24 inches deep.

Code Reference: Erie Art. 1503.2; IRC App. GState Adoption: 34 Pa. Code 401-405

๐Ÿ” Animal OrdinancesFull animal ordinances guide โ†’

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

Pet Limits

Few Restrictions

Erie does not set a fixed numeric limit on the number of dogs or cats a household may keep, relying instead on nuisance and restraint provisions; Pennsylvania's Dog Law requires a kennel license at 26 or more dogs in a calendar year.

City numeric limit: None set by Erie ordinanceKennel threshold: 26+ dogs/year requires state license

Chickens & Livestock

Heavy Restrictions

The City of Erie prohibits keeping any animal usually kept as a farm animal or livestock; owners receive a seven-day warning to remove the animals or face a citation.

City Code: Erie Codified Ord. Art. 729 (Animals)Farm animals: Prohibited citywide

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Erie has no breed-specific ban; Pennsylvania state law expressly prohibits any local ordinance from prohibiting or limiting a specific breed of dog, so the City regulates dangerous dogs by behavior, not breed.

Preemption statute: 3 P.S. Sec. 459-507-A(c)Breed bans: Prohibited by state law

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Erie's Codified Ordinances Article 505 (Animals and Fowl) prohibits dogs from running at large within the City of Erie โ€” dogs off the owner's property must be on a leash and under control. State-level licensing is administered by the Erie County Treasurer under the Pennsylvania Dog Law at 3 P.S. Section 459-101 et seq., which requires every dog three months or older to be licensed annually. Erie's contracted animal-control authority responds to off-leash and at-large complaints.

At Large: Prohibited โ€” Erie Codified Ord. Art. 505Tethering Floor: PA Libre's Law 18 Pa.C.S. Section 5533

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Erie's Codified Ordinances Article 505 addresses dangerous and wild animals through general nuisance and restraint provisions, and the Zoning Ordinance does not list exotic species as a customary residential accessory use. Statewide, the Pennsylvania Game and Wildlife Code at 34 Pa.C.S. Section 2961 et seq. and the Pennsylvania Game Commission's permit regulations at 58 Pa. Code Chapter 147 separately require an Exotic Wildlife Possession Permit for big cats, primates, bears, wolves, and venomous reptiles native to non-PA jurisdictions.

Local Hook: Erie Codified Ord. Art. 505 + zoningState Permit: PA Game Commission (58 Pa. Code Ch. 147)

Wildlife Feeding

Some Restrictions

Erie's local wildlife-feeding enforcement runs through Article 505 nuisance provisions of the Codified Ordinances and property-maintenance rules against accumulations attracting vermin. Statewide rules add specific bans: 58 Pa. Code Section 137.33 prohibits feeding bears and elk anywhere in Pennsylvania, and 58 Pa. Code Section 137.34 prohibits feeding wild deer within designated Disease Management Areas. As of 2025 Erie County is not within a DMA, so general deer feeding in Erie is not prohibited solely by 137.34 โ€” bird-feeder rules still apply, and a DMA designation could change this.

Local Hook: Erie Codified Ord. Art. 505 nuisanceBear/Elk Feeding: Prohibited statewide (58 Pa. Code Section 137.33)

Beekeeping

Heavy Restrictions

Erie's Codified Ordinances do not contain an express urban-beekeeping framework, and bees are not listed as a permitted accessory use in residential zones under the Erie Zoning Ordinance. The practical effect is that any hive proposed within City limits sits in regulatory gray space and would draw nuisance review under Article 505 if it triggered complaints. Statewide, the Pennsylvania Bee Law at 3 Pa.C.S. Section 2101 et seq. requires every beekeeper to register all apiaries with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry.

Erie Urban Beekeeping: Not expressly authorizedLikely Local Hook: Zoning + Art. 505 nuisance

Animal Hoarding

Heavy Restrictions

Erie addresses animal hoarding through two overlapping frameworks: (1) Article 505 of the Codified Ordinances, which prohibits keeping animals that constitute a public nuisance or menace to public health or safety; and (2) the Pennsylvania cruelty statutes at 18 Pa.C.S. Sections 5532 (neglect), 5533 (cruelty), and 5534 (aggravated cruelty), as enacted by Libre's Law in 2017. The Pennsylvania SPCA and humane society officers, working with the Erie Humane Society, enforce the criminal statutes alongside Erie Bureau of Animal Enforcement.

Local Hook: Erie Codified Ord. Art. 505State Neglect: 18 Pa.C.S. Section 5532 (Libre's Law)

๐ŸŒฟ Landscaping RulesFull landscaping rules guide โ†’

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

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Erie defines weeds as a nuisance, caps plant growth at 10 inches, and lets the City cut overgrowth and bill the owner if it is not removed after notice.

Code Section: Codified Ord. Art. 727 (Refuse on Sidewalks); IPMC Sec. 302.4 (adopted)Height Limit: 10 inches

Tree Trimming

Some Restrictions

Erie requires trees to be kept clear at 14 feet above the street and 9 feet above the sidewalk, and any planting or removal of a tree in the public right-of-way needs a City permit from the Urban Forest Committee.

Code Section: Codified Ord. Art. 165 (Urban Forest Committee)Clearance: 14 ft above street; 9 ft above sidewalk

Native Plants

Few Restrictions

The City of Erie does not mandate native-plant landscaping on residential property. The Erie Environmental Advisory Council (codified at eCode360 https://ecode360.com/43570009) is established under the Pennsylvania Environmental Advisory Council Act (53 P.S. ยง11304) and promotes sustainability education. The Penn State Extension Master Gardeners of Erie County and PA DCNR provide free native-plant guidance. Pennsylvania's Right to Farm Act (3 P.S. ยง951-957) protects qualifying agricultural operations from nuisance suits raised more than one year after operations begin.

EAC Authority: 53 P.S. ยง11304 (PA EAC Act)Codified At: Erie EAC (eCode360 43570009)

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Some Restrictions

Tree removal in the City of Erie is governed by Article 165 (Urban Forest Committee). No person may remove a tree or shrub on a street or municipal property without filing an application and procuring a permit from the City Arborist, and Article 165.07(c) imposes a $50 administrative fee for tree-removal applications (waivable for City-confirmed hazard removals). Routine removal of dead, diseased, or hazardous trees on private property is generally exempt from City permitting.

Controlling Article: Erie Article 165 (Urban Forest Committee)Street/Municipal Tree Removal: City Arborist permit required

Water Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Erie has no city lawn-watering ordinance in normal conditions; Pennsylvania state law (4 Pa. Code Chapter 119) prohibits watering grass and most outdoor plants once the Governor declares a drought emergency in the area.

Code Section: 4 Pa. Code Sec. 119.4 (state)Trigger: Governor-declared drought / water shortage emergency

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

The City of Erie's adopted property-maintenance standard requires premises to be kept free of weeds and plant growth taller than 10 inches; overgrowth is a code-enforcement and Quality of Life violation.

Code Section: IPMC Sec. 302.4 (as adopted); Codified Ord. Art. 727Height Limit: 10 inches

Composting

Few Restrictions

Backyard composting in the City of Erie is permitted and encouraged. The City operates a curbside compost-collection program that picks up grass clippings, leaves, hedge and shrub trimmings, and garden clippings in approved compostable bags (ASTM D6400) or hard containers (50-lb limit) on regular trash days. PA Act 101 (53 P.S. ยง4000.101+) requires Pennsylvania municipalities over 5,000 population to provide yard-waste collection. Open burning of leaves is prohibited under 25 Pa. Code ยง129.14.

State Mandate: PA Act 101 (53 P.S. ยง4000.101+)Curbside Program: Seasonal compost pickup with trash

๐Ÿ’ผ Home BusinessFull home business guide โ†’

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

Heavy Restrictions

A Home Occupation in Erie must be clearly secondary to the residential use and generate no more customer, delivery or pickup traffic than normal residential use; it may have no employees, no retail display or substantial inventory, no outside commercial appearance, no noise/odors/interference, and may occupy no more than 25% of the dwelling's habitable floor area, conducted only within the dwelling.

Code Section: Zoning Ordinance Art. 6 - Home Occupation definition (a)-(g)Employees: Prohibited - the commercial activity shall have no employees (b)

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

A Home Occupation in Erie may have no sign at all - the Zoning Ordinance prohibits any outside appearance of a commercial use 'including, but not limited to, parking, signs or lights.' The only sign allowed at a residence in R-1, R-1A, R-2, R-3 and W-R districts is a non-illuminated, non-reflective sign up to four square feet announcing the occupant's name and address.

Code Section: Zoning Ordinance Home Occupation (d); Sec. 303.14-303.15 (Signs)Home-business sign: Prohibited - no outside commercial appearance, including signs

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Erie's Home Occupation definition allows 'no customer, client or patient traffic, whether vehicular or pedestrian, pickup, delivery or removal functions to or from the premises, in excess of those normally associated with residential use,' so a qualifying home business cannot draw client visits, deliveries or pickups beyond ordinary household levels.

Code Section: Zoning Ordinance Home Occupation definition (intro), (a), (d)Customer traffic: None in excess of normal residential use

Home Occupation Permits

Few Restrictions

Erie's Zoning Ordinance allows a Home Occupation as a permitted accessory use and does not require a separate home-occupation permit; instead the Zoning Officer administers the use through Zoning Certificates, which a property owner may obtain on request, and any sign or new construction tied to the business needs a permit.

Code Section: Zoning Ordinance Art. 4 Sec. 401-402 (Zoning Officer / Certificates)Home-occupation permit: None required; regulated as a by-right accessory use

๐ŸŠ Swimming Pools & SpasFull swimming pools & spas guide โ†’

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

Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

A residential swimming pool, hot tub, or spa in the City of Erie must comply with the barrier provisions of the International Residential and International Building Codes, and any yard fence or pool enclosure in a residential district may not exceed six feet six inches in height under the Erie Zoning Ordinance.

Code Section: Erie Codified Ord. Art. 1503.2; IRC Appendix G (AG105); Erie Zoning Ord. Sec. 205.19Barrier height: At least 48 inches above grade (IRC AG105.2)

Pool Permits

Some Restrictions

The City of Erie requires a building permit for any swimming pool deeper than 24 inches, and the pool, hot tub, or spa must comply with the International Residential and Building Codes; the pool must sit at least six feet from the dwelling and side and rear property lines and may not be installed in front of the house.

Code Section: Erie Codified Ord. Art. 1503; City Residential Building Permits policyPermit trigger: All pools deeper than 24 inches

Safety Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Pools in Erie must comply with the federal Virginia Graeme Baker Pool & Spa Safety Act (15 USC 8003) requiring anti-entrapment drain covers, plus the PA UCC adoption of the 2018 ISPSC for circulation, electrical bonding, alarms, and barriers. Public pools also need a PADEP Bathing Place permit.

Federal Law: VGB Act (15 USC 8003)Drain Cover Std: ANSI/APSP-16 (now PHTA-7)

Hot Tub Rules

Some Restrictions

In Erie, a hot tub or spa accessory to a one- or two-family dwelling is regulated as a swimming pool: it must comply with the International Residential and Building Codes the city adopts, and statewide it must meet the International Swimming Pool and Spa Code under 34 Pa. Code Section 403.26.

Code Section: 34 Pa. Code Sec. 403.26; Erie Codified Ord. Art. 1503State code: International Swimming Pool and Spa Code (accessory residential)

๐Ÿ—๏ธ Accessory StructuresFull accessory structures guide โ†’

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

Erie added accessory dwelling units to its zoning code by Ordinance No. 52-2024 (passed 9-18-2024), defining an ADU as a single dwelling unit secondary to the principal dwelling and recognizing interior, attached and detached types. The city's earlier zoning ordinance had no ADU category.

Enabling Ordinance: Ord. No. 52-2024 (passed 9-18-2024)ADU Types: Interior, attached, detached

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Erie defines a private garage as an accessory building used only to store the occupants' vehicles and personal effects, not for commercial use or outside auto repair. Converting a garage to living space changes its use and triggers zoning review and a building permit; a garage may also host an ADU under Ordinance No. 52-2024.

Definition Source: Zoning Ordinance - 'Garage, Private'Compliance Section: Sec. 103 (conversion requires permits)

Shed Rules

Some Restrictions

In Erie's 'R' districts a detached accessory building (shed) must sit in the side or rear yard, at least 6 ft from any dwelling or alley and 3 ft from side/rear lot lines, and may be no larger than 720 sq ft or 15 ft tall. Sheds 100 sq ft or smaller are exempt from setback and lot-coverage limits, and under PA state law a shed under 1,000 sq ft accessory to a one-family home needs no state building permit.

Code Section: Zoning Ordinance Sec. 205.18Max size / height: 720 sq ft / 15 ft ('R' districts)

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Pennsylvania municipalities have limited statutory authority to impose impact fees on new development. Under the Municipalities Planning Code Article V-A (53 P.S. ยงยง10502-A through 10503-A), the only authorized impact fee is a transportation impact fee, and even that requires a multi-year traffic study, an adopted impact fee ordinance, and impact-fee districts. Erie has not adopted a transportation impact fee ordinance under Article V-A as of mid-2024. Other typical "impact" charges (water/sewer connection fees, school district contributions, recreation fees) operate under separate authorities. ADU applicants in Erie generally face only standard zoning and building permit fees, water/sewer tap-in charges through Erie Water Works and the Erie Sewer Authority, and any school district enrollment-related charges if dwelling-unit count increases.

PA Impact Fee Authority: Transportation only (Act 209 of 1990)Erie Transportation Fee: Not enacted as of 2024

ADU Permits

Some Restrictions

An accessory dwelling unit in Erie requires permits from two municipal offices: a zoning permit from the Erie Department of Planning and Neighborhood Resources (confirming the ADU is permitted in the district under the Erie Zoning Ordinance, either by right or by special exception/variance through the Erie Zoning Hearing Board) and a building permit from the Erie Building Code Official under the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code at 34 Pa Code ยง401.7 for the construction itself. Pennsylvania has no statewide ADU preemption like California's SB 9 or Oregon's HB 2001, so timelines, fees, and approval criteria are set by Erie and the PA UCC.

Permit Tracks: Zoning + Building (both required)Building Permit Authority: PA UCC 34 Pa Code ยง401.7

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Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Erie's residential refuse-container rules are codified at Article 951 of the Codified Ordinances of the City of Erie. Each receptacle must be a rigid container of rust-resistant metal or plastic, watertight, with outside handles and a tight-fitting cover, holding not less than 3 and not more than 35 gallons. On the designated weekly collection night, householders deposit either the receptacles containing securely bagged refuse, or securely bagged refuse itself, at the curbside; nothing may be set out more than 24 hours before the collection day.

Local Ordinance: Article 951 (Residential Refuse)Receptacle Size: 3-35 gallons, rigid, watertight

Property Blight

Heavy Restrictions

Erie addresses blight through three layered tools: (1) Article 1503 of the Codified Ordinances (Property Maintenance Code, based on the 2018 International Property Maintenance Code) adopted under the PA Uniform Construction Code; (2) the Erie Land Bank established under Article 941 (PA Land Bank Act, 68 Pa.C.S. ยง2101) to acquire and dispose of tax-delinquent and blighted parcels; and (3) the state-law backstop of PA Act 90 of 2010 (Neighborhood Blight Reclamation and Revitalization Act, 53 P.S. ยง6111) under which Erie may deny permits and approvals to property owners with serious code violations anywhere in the Commonwealth.

Local Ordinance: Article 1503 (Property Maintenance Code, 2018 IPMC adopted)Enforcement: Bureau of Code Enforcement, Office of Development Services

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Erie's Vacant and Foreclosure Property Registration ordinance (codified at Part 13 of the Codified Ordinances, Vacant and Foreclosure Property) requires every owner of any building or structure on real property that has been vacant for more than 180 consecutive days to register with the Office of Code Enforcement on forms or website access provided by the City. A nonrefundable $300 registration fee accompanies the form and is repeated every six months until the property is no longer subject to registration. Foreclosure-property registrations additionally name the lender, mortgage servicer, 24-hour contact, and local property management company.

Vacancy Trigger: More than 180 consecutive daysRegistration Fee: $300 nonrefundable, every 6 months

Snow & Sidewalk Clearing

Heavy Restrictions

Erie's sidewalk snow ordinance (Codified Ordinances Article 521, Snow and Ice Removal) requires the occupant of any home, apartment, store, storehouse, shop, garage, factory, church, schoolhouse, or other building to remove or hire someone to remove all snow, ice, or sleet from the sidewalk in front of the premises within three hours after snowfall ceases. Owners of corner buildings must clear the side sidewalks for the full distance their occupancy extends; owners of vacant lots and vacant buildings are responsible for the abutting sidewalk. If ice is so hardened it cannot be removed without damaging the sidewalk, sand or sawdust must be applied until it can be removed.

Local Ordinance: Article 521 Snow and Ice RemovalDeadline: Within 3 hours after snowfall stops

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Rental Inspection Programs

Some Restrictions

Erie's rental inspection program is run by the Bureau of Code Enforcement under the Department of Permitting and Inspection. Inspectors apply the International Property Maintenance Code as adopted by the City to confirm habitable conditions, on a rotation cycle and on tenant complaint.

Administrator: Erie Code EnforcementStandard: IPMC as adopted

Security Deposit Rules

Some Restrictions

Security deposits in Erie follow Pennsylvania statute. Under 68 P.S. ยง250.511a a landlord may collect at most two months' rent in the first year. Under ยง250.511b only one month may be held after year one. Under ยง250.512 the deposit must be returned with itemization within 30 days of vacancy.

Year-1 Cap: 2 months' rent (ยง250.511a)Year-2+ Cap: 1 month's rent (ยง250.511b)

Rental Registration

Some Restrictions

The City of Erie requires owners of residential rental units to register with the Bureau of Code Enforcement under the Department of Permitting and Inspection, identify a local agent, pay the annual fee, and submit to periodic IPMC inspection.

Administrator: Erie Code EnforcementDepartment: Permitting & Inspection

Rent Control

Few Restrictions

The City of Erie has no rent-control ordinance. Residential rent is governed by the Pennsylvania Landlord and Tenant Act of 1951 (68 P.S. ยง250.101 et seq.), which sets no cap on rent amounts or increases for third-class cities like Erie.

Local Rent Control: None in ErieState Framework: 68 P.S. ยง250.101+

Just Cause Eviction

Few Restrictions

Erie has no local just-cause eviction ordinance. Evictions are governed by Pennsylvania's Landlord and Tenant Act (68 P.S. ยง250.501), which allows termination at lease end or for breach with proper written notice. Filings go to Erie County Magisterial District Court.

Local Ordinance: NoneState Statute: 68 P.S. ยง250.501

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Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

Erie operates city-run residential refuse collection through the Bureau of Refuse and Recycling (Department of Public Works) under the Third Class City Code (53 P.S. ยง35101 et seq.) and Article 951 of the Codified Ordinances. Pickup is weekly and occurs at night on a route map maintained by the Bureau. All compliant receptacles and securely bagged refuse must be at the curbside or edge of the street on the designated collection night, and nothing may be placed out more than 24 hours before the collection day. Service is limited to residential properties of four units or fewer.

Operator: City-run (Bureau of Refuse and Recycling, DPW)Frequency: Weekly, night collection

Yard Waste Collection

Some Restrictions

Erie's Bureau of Refuse and Recycling operates a citywide yard-waste composting program covering grass clippings, lawn and leaf waste, and hedge trimmings. Yard waste must be placed in open rigid containers, compost-friendly plastic bags, or brown paper bags at curbside; no item may be set out more than 24 hours before the collection day per Article 951. Leaf collection runs each fall (typically early October through early December). Raking leaves into the street and bagging pet waste or cat litter with leaves are both prohibited. PA Act 101 (53 P.S. ยง4000.101 et seq.) authorizes the program at the state level.

Program: Citywide yard-waste composting (Bureau of Refuse and Recycling)Accepted: Grass, leaves, hedge trimmings

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

Article 951 of the Codified Ordinances directs householders to deposit compliant receptacles, or securely bagged refuse, at the curbside or edge of the street on the designated weekly collection night - not in the cartway, not blocking sidewalks, and not against fire hydrants or signs. The City's Bureau of Refuse and Recycling additionally instructs residents to keep set-outs away from parked vehicles and obstructions so collection trucks can access the material, and to remove containers promptly after pickup. Set-out cannot precede pickup by more than 24 hours.

Placement: Curbside or edge of street on collection nightEarliest Set-Out: 24 hours before pickup, no earlier

Illegal Dumping

Heavy Restrictions

Illegal dumping in Erie is enforced under three layered authorities: (1) 18 Pa.C.S. ยง6501 (Scattering Rubbish), the Pennsylvania criminal statute making it a summary offense to deposit waste paper, ashes, household waste, glass, metal, refuse, or rubbish onto roads, streets, alleys, railroad rights-of-way, the land of another, or waters of the Commonwealth ($50-$300 fine plus 5-30 mandatory cleanup hours for first offense, third-degree misdemeanor with $300-$1,000 for subsequent offenses); (2) Article 1129's Quality of Life Ticketing Program at $100 per ticket; and (3) the PA Solid Waste Management Act (35 P.S. ยง6018.101) for larger-scale dumping referred to PA DEP.

State Crime: 18 Pa.C.S. ยง6501 Scattering Rubbish1st Offense Fine: $50-$300 + 5-30 hrs cleanup

Recycling Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Erie's mandatory recycling program is codified at Article 958 of the Codified Ordinances (Separation of Recyclables), enacted under the Third Class City Code (53 P.S. ยง35101 et seq.) and the Pennsylvania Municipal Waste Planning, Recycling and Waste Reduction Act of 1988 (Act 101, 53 P.S. ยง4000.101 et seq.) which mandates curbside recycling for every municipality with population over 10,000. Residents must separate newspapers, office paper, magazines, #1 and #2 plastic bottles/jugs/jars with screw-top lids, flattened corrugated cardboard and paperboard, and metal food and beverage cans. Curbside set-out is in clear plastic bags or blue bins (blue bags no longer accepted) on the regular refuse night.

Local Ordinance: Article 958 (Separation of Recyclables)State Mandate: PA Act 101 of 1988, 53 P.S. ยง4000.101

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

Erie offers free curbside bulk pickup to its residential refuse customers through the Bureau of Refuse and Recycling. Residents may schedule 1-3 large items per regular refuse night by calling 814-870-1550 (weekdays 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.) at least 72 hours in advance, or by scheduling online; a 6-digit confirmation number is required and pickups may be scheduled up to two weeks ahead. Furniture (couches, chairs, mattresses) is accepted; large appliances, automotive parts, electronics, hazardous materials, and construction debris are not. Carpet must be cut into 4-foot sections and rolled (max 4 rolls); glass must be boxed and labeled.

Schedule Line: 814-870-1550 (M-F 8:30-4:30) or onlineAdvance Notice: At least 72 hours; up to 2 weeks ahead

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Lot Coverage Limits

Some Restrictions

Lot coverage in Erie is regulated by the City of Erie Zoning Ordinance (Article 1303 / Ord. 80-2005) and is set district-by-district in Article 2 (District Regulations). The Industrial Park district caps coverage by main and accessory structures at no more than 60% of the lot area. Section 205 sets R-1 lot coverage with ground floor roofless decks, swimming pools and roofless walkways excluded from the calculation. Stormwater impacts are reviewed under 25 Pa. Code Chapter 102.

Code: Article 1303 / Ord. 80-2005Industrial Park: 60% max coverage (main + accessory)

Setback Rules

Some Restrictions

Building setbacks in Erie are set by the City of Erie Zoning Ordinance (Article 1303 of the Codified Ordinances / Ordinance Number 80-2005) and vary by zoning district. In the R-1 Low Density Residential district, Section 205 of the Zoning Ordinance sets a minimum total side-yard width of 15 feet (with the least side at 5 feet minimum), and Section 205.11 sets the front-yard setback within five feet of the average depth of adjacent block structures.

Code: Article 1303 (Ord. 80-2005)R-1 Side Yards: Min total 15 ft / least side 5 ft (ยง205)

Structure Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Building height in Erie is regulated by the City of Erie Zoning Ordinance (Article 1303 / Ord. 80-2005) and is set district-by-district in the bulk standards for each zoning district. Industrial Park district building height is capped at 50 feet under the Zoning Ordinance, with R-1, R-2 and R-3 residential districts subject to lower limits set in Article 2 (District Regulations). The Pennsylvania UCC IBC height/area limits apply on top.

Local Code: Article 1303 / Ord. 80-2005Industrial Park Cap: 50 ft maximum

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Heritage & Protected Trees

Some Restrictions

Erie does not maintain a dedicated public heritage-tree registry in its Codified Ordinances, but Article 165 (Urban Forest Committee) uniformly protects all trees and shrubs on streets and municipal property โ€” no removal or disturbance without a City Arborist permit. Specimen trees on private property may be designated for protection through conditions on approved land-development plans under the Erie Zoning Ordinance. Notable mature-tree resources include Frontier Park, Glenwood Park, and the Presque Isle State Park system (PA DCNR-managed).

Heritage Registry: No separate City registryDefault Protection: All street/municipal trees (Article 165)

Tree Replacement Requirements

Some Restrictions

Tree replacement in the City of Erie is administered by the City Arborist under Article 165 (Urban Forest Committee) for street and municipal-tree removals and by the Erie Zoning Ordinance for development-site removals. Article 165 expressly contemplates 'Removal and Replacement Permit' procedures at Article 165.07(c), with the $50 administrative fee covering the combined removal-and-replacement application. Replacement species are typically drawn from the City's approved street-tree list โ€” predominantly native or proven non-invasive species suited to northwestern PA.

Controlling Section: Article 165.07(c) Removal & ReplacementCombined Application Fee: $50

Tree Removal Permits

Some Restrictions

Tree-removal permitting in the City of Erie is administered by the City Arborist under Article 165 (Urban Forest Committee). No person may plant, maintain, remove, or disturb a tree or shrub on a street or municipal property without filing an application and procuring a permit from the City Arborist. Article 165.07(c) imposes a $50 administrative fee for each tree-removal application, waivable for City-confirmed hazardous removals. Maximum fine for violation is $300, with default of payment up to 30 days' imprisonment.

Permitting Authority: Erie City Arborist (Article 165)Apply Through: Dept. of Public Works, Property & Parks

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Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Some Restrictions

Pennsylvania repealed the statewide mandate for sprinklers in new one- and two-family dwellings effective retroactively to January 1, 2011 (Act 1 of 2011, HB 377). Erie does not impose a local residential sprinkler mandate. New townhouses, commercial buildings, and existing buildings undergoing significant renovation remain subject to the sprinkler triggers in the IBC and IFC adopted at Article 1503 of the Erie Codified Ordinances, including the IFC Section 903 thresholds.

1- and 2-Family Sprinkler: Not required (Act 1 of 2011)Townhouse Sprinkler: Required (IRC R313.2)

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Erie regulates rodent and insect infestation through the 2018 International Property Maintenance Code (enforced by the Bureau of Code Enforcement) and Article 1129 (Quality of Life Ticketing Program). IPMC Section 309 requires extermination of pests by the owner of structures and shared infestations in multifamily buildings; Sections 304.5 and 308 require rodent-proofing of exterior openings and approved garbage containers.

Code Authority: Erie 2018 IPMCPest Elimination Owner Duty: IPMC Sec. 309

Lead Paint

Heavy Restrictions

The City of Erie does not have a stand-alone municipal lead ordinance equivalent to Reading Chapter 328. Lead hazards in Erie are addressed through the federal Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act (42 U.S.C. Section 4851), EPA's Renovation, Repair and Painting Rule (40 CFR Part 745), Pennsylvania's Lead Certification Act (35 P.S. Section 5901), and the Erie County Department of Health LeadSAFE program enforced under the Erie County Sanitary Code.

Federal Disclosure Rule: 24 CFR Part 35 (pre-1978 housing)EPA RRP Threshold: >6 sq ft interior / >20 sq ft exterior

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Overall: What to Expect in Erie

Erie has 104 ordinances on file across 29 categories. Of these, 21 are rated permissive, 58 moderate, and 25 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Erie 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.