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Moving to Greensboro, NC?

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 Greensboro across 43 categories and 209 specific rules we track.

52 Permissive117 Moderate40 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.

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Greensboro regulates amplified music under the general noise ordinance. Sound permits available for events. N.C.G.S. Β§14-288.4 applies to unreasonable disturbances.

Permit: Required for public eventsResidential: General limits apply

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Greensboro has no separate construction-hour windows. All noise sources including construction follow the same dB(C) limits. Nighttime work restricted by 65 dB(C) limit 11 PM-7 AM.

Daytime Limit: 70 dB(C) at property lineNighttime Limit: 65 dB(C) (11 PM-7 AM)

Leaf Blower Rules

Few Restrictions

Greensboro has no leaf blower ban. Gas and electric blowers follow the general noise ordinance: 70 dB(C) daytime, 65 dB(C) nighttime at the residential property line.

Gas Blower Ban: No ban in effectDaytime Limit: 70 dB(C) at property line

Aircraft Noise

Some Restrictions

Piedmont Triad Airport (GSO) has a FAA Part 150 program with sound insulation for homes in the 65 DNL contour. Noise maps updated 2022. Aircraft in flight federally preempted.

Airport: PTI (GSO) - FedEx hubPart 150: Approved 2008, maps updated 2022

Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

Greensboro uses C-weighted decibel limits: residential 70/65 dB(C) day/night, commercial 75 dB(C). Four 30-second readings at slow response at the complainant property line.

Residential Day: 70 dB(C)Residential Night: 65 dB(C)

Outdoor Music

Some Restrictions

Greensboro Sec. 18-50 bans amplified sound plainly audible from 50 ft on public property 11 PM-7 AM. Amplified sound audible beyond 150 ft prohibited citywide anytime.

Nighttime Ban: 11 PM - 7 AM (amplified sound)Public Property: Plainly audible at 50 ft

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Greensboro commercial zones allow 75 dB(C). Industrial sound impacting residential areas must not exceed 70/65 dB(C) day/night at the receiving residential property line.

Commercial Zone: 75 dB(C)At Residential Line: 70/65 dB(C) day/night

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Greensboro Chapter 18 sets quiet hours 11 PM-7 AM. Residential limits: 70 dB(C) daytime, 65 dB(C) nighttime. Sound measured C-weighted at the residential property line. Plainly audible standard also applies.

Quiet Hours: 11 PM - 7 AMResidential Day: 70 dB(C)

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Greensboro considers excessive barking a nuisance. Animal control handles complaints. NC Dangerous Dog Law (N.C.G.S. Β§67-4.1) is behavior-based.

Threshold: Continuous/excessiveAgency: Greensboro Animal Control

🏠 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.

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

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

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

Permit Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

All Greensboro short-term rentals require a $200 zoning permit since April 2024. Permits cover Homestay or Whole House categories under the LDO.

Code Reference: LDO Section 30-7-1.2Effective Date: April 1, 2024

Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro limits STR guest parking to one vehicle per bedroom rented. Properties follow the same parking rules as the underlying dwelling.

Parking Limit: 1 vehicle per bedroom rentedSame Rights: As underlying dwelling unit

Occupancy Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro caps STR occupancy at two adults per rented bedroom. Children under 18 are exempt. Promoted gatherings cannot exceed 2x the renter count.

Adult Limit: 2 adults per rented bedroomChildren: Under 18 do not count toward limit

Registration Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro requires STR registration via zoning permit. Operators must display the permit number on the property and in all advertisements.

Registration Portal: STR Zoning Permit Portal or in-personPermit Fee: $200 (non-refundable)

Insurance Requirements

Some Restrictions

Greensboro requires STR operators to submit liability insurance documentation with the zoning permit application. Coverage must include rental usage and guests.

Insurance Required: Liability insurance for STR usageDocumentation: Must be submitted with permit application

Night Caps

Few Restrictions

Greensboro defines STRs as stays of 30 days or less but sets no annual night cap. Rentals must remain secondary to the residential use of the property.

Stay Definition: 30 days or less per bookingAnnual Night Cap: None specified

Taxes & Fees

Some Restrictions

Greensboro STRs are subject to NC state sales tax (4.75% + local) and local Room Occupancy Tax under N.C.G.S. Β§105-164.4.

State Sales Tax: 4.75% + local optionOccupancy Tax: 3 to 6% varies by county

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Few Restrictions

Greensboro does not restrict short-term rentals to a host's primary residence. Investor-owned and second-home STRs are allowed citywide as long as the operator registers under Chapter 11 and the use is permitted by the underlying Land Development Ordinance zoning district.

Primary-residence rule: None in GreensboroInvestor STRs: Allowed if zoning permits

Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Stays of 30 days or longer in a Greensboro home generally fall outside the city's short-term rental rules and instead trigger landlord-tenant protections under NCGS Chapter 42. Hosts can offer extended monthly home-shares without Chapter 11 STR registration.

STR rules apply: Stays under 30 days30+ day stays: NCGS Ch. 42 tenancy

Host Presence Rule

Few Restrictions

Greensboro does not require an STR host to be physically present on-site during guest stays. Whole-home rentals are allowed citywide subject to Chapter 11 registration, applicable LDO zoning, and the local 24-hour responsible-agent contact requirement.

Host on-site: Not requiredWhole-home STRs: Allowed with registration

Repeat Violator Strikes

Some Restrictions

Greensboro can suspend or revoke an STR registration when an operator accumulates repeated documented violations of Chapter 11, the Land Development Ordinance, or the noise code at a single property. There is no rigid statewide three-strike rule, but persistent nuisance behavior triggers escalating action.

Approach: Progressive enforcementCommon trigger: Repeat noise violations

Host Platform Liability

Some Restrictions

Greensboro places primary STR compliance duties on the property owner or operator rather than the booking platform. Platforms such as Airbnb and Vrbo are encouraged to display registration numbers, but enforcement remains an operator-level responsibility under Chapter 11.

Liable party: Operator, not platformListing display: Registration number expected

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.

Backyard Fires

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro prohibits burning leaves, brush, trash, and refuse within city limits under Section 10-23. Only recreational fires and permitted commercial clearing allowed.

Open Burning: Prohibited within Greensboro city limitsCode Section: Section 10-23 of Greensboro Code

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro allows fire pits with a 3-foot max diameter, 25 feet from structures. Portable fireplaces need 15 feet clearance. No burning of leaves, brush, or trash.

Max Fuel Area: 3 feet diameter by 2 feet heightSetback from Structures: 25 feet minimum for open fire pits

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

Greensboro has no wildfire overlay zone or mandatory defensible-space rules. The Piedmont city faces moderate seasonal fire risk but no WUI designation.

Wildfire Zone: No designated wildfire overlay or WUI zoneRegion: Piedmont Triad, moderate seasonal risk

Brush Clearance

Few Restrictions

Greensboro has no fire-specific brush clearance ordinance. Overgrown vegetation is enforced through nuisance codes. NC Forest Service recommends voluntary clearance.

Mandatory Clearance: No fire-specific brush clearance ordinanceVegetation Enforcement: Through nuisance and property maintenance codes

Smoke Detectors

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro requires smoke alarms on every level and in each bedroom per NC Fire Code. Rentals must have tamper-resistant 10-year lithium battery alarms.

Required Locations: Every level, outside and inside each bedroomRental Standard: Tamper-resistant 10-year lithium battery alarms

Propane Storage

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro adopts the North Carolina Fire Code under Chapter 19, capping residential propane cylinder storage and setting strict commercial separation, ventilation, and signage standards inspected by the Greensboro Fire Department.

Code: Greensboro Ch. 19Standard: NFPA 58

Outdoor Burning

Some Restrictions

Greensboro regulates outdoor burning under local code and NC DEQ air quality rules. NC Forest Service issues burn permits and bans (N.C.G.S. Β§106-942).

Permit: Often required from NC Forest ServiceBanned Materials: Garbage, tires, construction debris

Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

North Carolina has very strict fireworks laws (N.C.G.S. Β§14-410). Only ground-based sparkling devices are legal. Aerial fireworks are illegal.

Legal: Sparklers, fountains onlyIllegal: Aerial, firecrackers, rockets

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.

Abandoned Vehicles

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro enforces a Junked and Abandoned Motor Vehicles Ordinance under N.C.G.S. 160A-303. Vehicles without valid tags or inoperable on private property must comply within seven days.

Definition: No valid tag and inoperable on private propertyStreet Limit: Seven consecutive days on public street

EV Charging

Some Restrictions

Greensboro requires an electrical permit for residential EV charger installations. Level 2 chargers must meet National Electrical Code standards adopted by the NC Building Code.

Permit Required: Yes, electrical permit through cityCode Standard: National Electrical Code via NC Building Code

Overnight Parking

Some Restrictions

Greensboro has no citywide overnight street parking ban for standard vehicles. Oversized vehicles over 80 inches wide or 30 feet long are prohibited from street parking overnight.

Standard Vehicles: No citywide overnight banOversized Vehicles: Prohibited overnight on streets

RV & Boat Parking

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro bans street parking of oversized vehicles (over 80 inches wide or 30 feet long) except during loading or emergencies. RVs and boats must be stored on improved driveway surfaces.

Oversized Definition: Over 80 inches wide or 30 feet longStreet Parking: Only during loading/unloading or emergencies

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Greensboro Chapter 16 restricts commercial vehicles over 80 inches wide or 30 feet long from residential streets except during active loading. Escalating penalties apply.

Size Threshold: Over 80 inches wide or 30 feet longStreet Parking: Only during loading/unloading

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro Section 16-159 prohibits parking on grass or unpaved areas in front yards. All residential parking must be on improved surfaces of gravel, concrete, or asphalt.

Code Section: Section 16-159, Domestic ParkingRequired Surface: Gravel, concrete, or asphalt

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Greensboro sets street parking rules through local ordinance under N.C.G.S. Β§160A-301, which authorizes municipal parking regulation statewide.

Hydrant: 15 ft clearanceTime Limits: Varies by zone

🧱 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.

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro requires pool barriers at least 48 inches tall with self-closing, self-latching gates per the NC Residential Code. A building permit is required for all pools.

Minimum Height: 48 inches above grade on exterior sideBottom Clearance: 2 inches maximum gap from grade

Retaining Walls

Some Restrictions

Greensboro counts retaining walls toward total fence height. Walls over 4 feet require a building permit with engineered plans. Street setback walls limited to 4 feet.

Permit Threshold: Required for walls over 4 feet tallHeight Counting: Retaining wall height adds to fence height

Neighbor Fence Rules

Few Restrictions

Greensboro does not require neighbor notification or permission before installing a fence. Fences must be entirely on the owners property. NC has no shared-cost fence statute.

Neighbor Notice: Not required by city ordinancePlacement: Must be entirely on owners property

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Greensboro limits residential fences to 4 feet near streets, 6 feet along thoroughfares, and 7 feet elsewhere per LDO Section 30-9-4. Commercial fences may reach 8 feet.

Street Frontage: 4 feet max within 15 feet of right-of-wayThoroughfare Side/Rear: 6 feet max along major/minor thoroughfares

Material Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Greensboro allows masonry, stone, metal, chain-link, vinyl, and wood fences. Barbed wire, electric fences, and flammable materials are banned in residential zones.

Allowed Materials: Masonry, stone, metal, chain-link, vinyl, woodProhibited: Barbed wire and razor wire in residential zones

Fence Requirements

Some Restrictions

Greensboro fences must be on the owners property, 2 feet from building walls, and clear of intersection sight triangles. Historic districts require design review.

Building Clearance: 2 feet minimum from building wallsSight Triangle: No obstructions 30 to 96 inches at intersections

Permit Requirements

Few Restrictions

Greensboro requires no permit for residential fences 7 feet or shorter. Taller fences, historic district fences, and retaining walls over 4 feet need permits.

Permit Threshold: Not required for residential fences 7 feet or underRetaining Walls: Permit required if over 4 feet tall

πŸ” Animal Ordinances

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

Wildlife Feeding

Few Restrictions

Greensboro has no standalone wildlife feeding ban. Guilford County Sec. 5-10 covers nuisances from feeding that creates safety or sanitation issues. NC wildlife laws apply.

Feeding Ban: No specific city banNuisance Rule: Sec. 5-10 applies if hazard created

Chickens & Livestock

Some Restrictions

Greensboro LDO Sec. 30-5-2.63 allows hens in RS/RM zones without a permit. Under 7,000 sq ft: none. 7-12K sq ft: 4 hens. Over 12K: up to 20. No roosters. Setbacks required.

Under 7,000 sq ft: No chickens allowed7,000-12,000 sq ft: Up to 4 hens

Breed Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Greensboro follows NC dangerous dog law (N.C.G.S. 67-4.1), behavior-based not breed-based. No BSL in effect. Dangerous dogs must be leashed and muzzled off property.

BSL Status: No breed bans in effectStandard: Behavior-based (N.C.G.S. 67-4.1)

Beekeeping

Some Restrictions

Greensboro LDO Sec. 30-8-11.3 allows beekeeping. Hives must be 50+ ft from property lines. Max one colony per 1,500 sq ft, up to 10 colonies total.

Setback: 50 ft from any property lineDensity: 1 colony per 1,500 sq ft

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Greensboro prohibits dogs at large on public property under Guilford County Sec. 5-9. Dogs may be loose on private property with owner permission. Animal Control enforces.

At-Large: Prohibited on public propertyPrivate Property: Allowed with owner permission

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Greensboro Code Chapter 5 caps the number of dogs and cats per residence and requires a kennel permit for households exceeding the standard limit, with enforcement led by Guilford County Animal Services.

Code: Greensboro Ch. 5Permit: Kennel permit required above limit

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Some Restrictions

Greensboro does not impose blanket spay-neuter on owned pets, but Guilford County Animal Services requires sterilization of every adopted animal and charges higher rabies and registration fees for intact dogs and cats.

Mandate: Adopted animals onlyState law: NCGS 19A-60

Cat Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro and Guilford County require cats over four months old to be vaccinated against rabies and to wear current tags, with Animal Services enforcing impoundment and rabies-related quarantine rules.

Vaccination age: Four monthsState law: NCGS 130A-185

Coyote Management

Some Restrictions

Greensboro treats coyotes as urban wildlife, and the NC Wildlife Resources Commission, not the city, regulates lethal removal, while Guilford County Animal Services responds only to sick, injured, or aggressive animals.

State agency: NC Wildlife Resources CommissionCity response: Aggressive or sick animals only

Animal Hoarding

Some Restrictions

Greensboro Chapter 5 limits the number of dogs and cats per household and lets Guilford County Animal Services intervene when conditions reach hoarding levels under Chapter 5 health provisions.

Code: Greensboro Ch. 5State law: NCGS 14-360

Microchipping

Few Restrictions

Greensboro does not mandate citywide microchipping, but Guilford County Animal Services scans every impounded animal and reduced reclaim fees plus faster owner notification reward microchipped pets returned to Greensboro households.

Mandate: Not required citywideScanned at: Guilford County Animal Services

Pet Store Rules

Some Restrictions

Pet retailers in Greensboro must hold a city business license under Chapter 11, follow Chapter 5 sanitation and humane-care standards, and comply with NC Animal Welfare Act licensing for kennels, dealers, and pet shops.

City license: Greensboro Ch. 11Sanitation code: Greensboro Ch. 5

Veterinary Clinic Zoning

Some Restrictions

Veterinary clinics in Greensboro are allowed in commercial and certain mixed-use zones under the Land Development Ordinance, with overnight boarding triggering additional standards on noise buffering, odor, and waste disposal.

Zoning code: Greensboro LDOState license: NCGS Ch. 90 Art. 11

Pet Groomer Rules

Few Restrictions

Greensboro pet groomers operate as standard service businesses needing a Chapter 11 license and LDO-compliant location, but North Carolina does not license groomers separately, so no state professional credential applies.

City license: Greensboro Ch. 11State license: Not required

Wildlife Rescue Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Anyone caring for injured native wildlife in Greensboro must hold a North Carolina Wildlife Rehabilitator License from the NC Wildlife Resources Commission, since taking wildlife without authorization is illegal under NCGS Chapter 113.

State permit: NCWRC Rehabilitator LicenseRule: 15A NCAC 10H .1300

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Guilford County Sec. 5-11 and 5-26 regulate exotic animals in Greensboro. Bears, lions, tigers, wolves prohibited. Other exotics need a free Animal Control permit.

Prohibited: Bears, lions, tigers, wolves, etc.Exotic Permit: Free permit from Animal Control

Livestock

Some Restrictions

Greensboro LDO Sec. 30-8-11.3 permits horses, cows, sheep, goats (not swine) as accessory use. One animal per 3,000 sq ft, 50 ft setback. Fencing required.

Permitted: Horses, cows, sheep, goatsProhibited: Swine

🌿 Landscaping Rules

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

Native Plants

Few Restrictions

Greensboro adopted a native plants policy in March 2024 requiring 50% native species on city properties. Private property is not regulated.

Policy Adopted: March 5, 2024Native Requirement: At least 50% of new city plantings

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Greensboro prohibits grass and weeds over 12 inches under Chapter 17 (Nuisances). Owners get 10 days to mow after notice or face fines starting around $300.

Code Reference: Chapter 17, NuisancesMax Grass Height: 12 inches

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Weeds over 12 inches are a nuisance under Greensboro Chapter 17. Code Compliance gives 10 days to abate, then fines starting around $300.

Code Reference: Chapter 17, NuisancesHeight Limit: 12 inches for weeds and noxious vegetation

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Rainwater harvesting is fully legal in Greensboro. NC state law prohibits cities from banning rain barrels or cisterns used for irrigation.

Legal Status: Fully legal under NC state lawState Law: NC Legislature State Law 243 (2009)

Tree Trimming

Some Restrictions

Street trees on Greensboro rights-of-way are city property maintained by the City Arborist at no cost. Private trees are the owner's responsibility.

Authority: City Arborist, Planning DepartmentRight-of-Way Trees: City property, maintained at no cost

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Some Restrictions

Greensboro requires tree conservation plans for commercial and multi-family sites under LDO Articles 10 and 12.1. Single-family homes are exempt.

Code Reference: LDO Articles 10 and 12.1Applies To: Commercial, retail, and multi-family development

Water Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro enforces tiered outdoor watering restrictions tied to NC drought classifications. Stage 2 limits sprinklers to 10 PM-4 AM on assigned days.

Water Sources: Lake Townsend, Lake Brandt, Lake HigginsAuthority: NC Drought Management Advisory Council

Artificial Turf

Few Restrictions

Greensboro has no ordinance prohibiting artificial turf on residential properties. No special permit is needed; general nuisance rules apply.

City Ordinance: No specific artificial turf regulationPermit Required: No special permit needed for residential use

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.

🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas

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

πŸ—οΈ Accessory Structures

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

ADU Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro allows ADUs by right in all residential zones under LDO 30-8-11.2. The 2024 amendment dropped minimum size and owner-occupancy rules.

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Shed Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro requires a building permit for sheds over 12 feet in any dimension. Must be behind the front building line with 3-foot minimum setbacks.

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Tiny Homes

Some Restrictions

Foundation-based tiny homes in Greensboro must meet the 120-square-foot NC code minimum and can qualify as ADUs. Tiny homes on wheels cannot be dwellings.

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Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro carports need a building permit if over 12 feet in any dimension. Must be behind the front building line with 3-foot minimum setbacks.

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Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Garage conversions in Greensboro require a building permit and must meet NC Residential Code habitable room standards. ADU conversions follow LDO 30-8-11.2.

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ADU Owner Occupancy

Some Restrictions

Greensboro currently requires the property owner to occupy either the primary dwelling or the ADU as a primary residence under LDO Sec. 30-8-11.2. The owner cannot rent both units to non-owner tenants simultaneously. North Carolina has no statewide ADU statute, so local choice governs. HOA covenants in deed-restricted neighborhoods (Irving Park, Sedgefield, etc.) may impose independent restrictions.

Owner-Occupancy: Required (LDO 30-8-11.2)Common Ownership: Required - cannot subdivide

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Greensboro does not impose a general residential impact fee on ADUs. Following the NC Court of Appeals ruling against Greensboro on pre-2018 water/sewer impact fees, the city now charges system development fees under NCGS Ch. 162A only when a new water or sewer lateral is installed. ADU costs include standard building, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical permit fees by valuation.

General Impact Fee: NoneWater/Sewer SDF: Only if new lateral

ADU Rental Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro permits long-term ADU rentals subject to the LDO 30-8-11.2 owner-occupancy rule. Since April 1, 2024, all short-term rentals (under 30 days) require a Greensboro Short-Term Rental Zoning Permit ($200) and $1 million liability insurance. The NC Court of Appeals decision in Schroeder v. City of Wilmington (2019) preempts cities from outright STR bans, so Greensboro regulates rather than prohibits.

Long-Term Rental: OK if owner occupies one unitSTR Permit: Required since 4/1/2024 ($200)

ADU Permits

Some Restrictions

Greensboro's Land Development Ordinance Section 30-8-11.2 permits one accessory dwelling unit per single-family lot in residential zones (R-3, R-5, R-7, RM-8, etc.). The ADU may not exceed 50% of the heated floor area of the primary dwelling. Building, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical permits are issued separately by Greensboro Engineering and Inspections under NC General Statute 160D-1110.

Authority: LDO Sec. 30-8-11.2Max Size: 50% of primary heated area

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

Outdoor Kitchen Permits

Some Restrictions

Built-in outdoor kitchens in Greensboro require permits for gas lines, electrical, plumbing, and any roofed structure under NC General Statute 160D-1110. Building, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical permits are issued separately by Greensboro Engineering and Inspections. Gas piping requires an NC-licensed plumbing or mechanical contractor. Outdoor accessory structures must comply with LDO Sec. 30-8-11 setback rules.

Authority: NCGS 160D-1110; LDO 30-8-11Permits: Greensboro Engineering & Inspections

BBQ & Propane Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro enforces the 2018 North Carolina Fire Prevention Code, which adopts IFC Section 308. NCFC 308.1.4 prohibits charcoal burners and open-flame cooking devices on combustible balconies or within 10 ft of combustible construction at multi-family buildings. LP-gas cylinders over 2.5 lb water capacity are prohibited within 10 ft of combustible construction. One- and two-family dwellings and fully sprinklered buildings are exempt.

Code: NCFC 308.1.4; City Code Ch. 11Multi-Family: 10-ft setback or sprinklered

Smoker Rules

Few Restrictions

Greensboro has no ordinance specifically targeting backyard smokers, pellet grills, or wood-fired ovens at single- or two-family homes. General nuisance authority under Greensboro Code of Ordinances and NC air-quality rules under 15A NCAC 02D govern excessive smoke. At multi-family buildings, charcoal or wood-fired smokers must comply with NCFC 308.1.4 clearance from combustible construction.

Specific Smoker Rule: NoneNuisance Authority: Ch. 18; County Health

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

Holiday Light Rules

Few Restrictions

Greensboro has no city ordinance restricting when residents may install or must remove holiday lights at single-family homes. The Greensboro LDO sign standards exempt seasonal decorations from sign-permit requirements. Limits arise primarily from HOA covenants in deed-restricted subdivisions and the Greensboro Noise Ordinance (Code Ch. 18) if amplified music is part of a light show.

City Code: None for residential lightsSign Exemption: LDO seasonal decorations

Inflatable Display Rules

Few Restrictions

Greensboro has no zoning, building, or sign-code rule specifically targeting residential inflatable holiday displays. The LDO sign standards exempt seasonal decorations. Practical limits include HOA covenants, the Greensboro Noise Ordinance (Code Ch. 18) for blower-motor noise, sight-triangle setbacks at intersections under the LDO, and accessory-structure standards (LDO 30-8-11) if items become permanent.

City Rule: None for residentialSign Exemption: LDO seasonal decorations

Lawn Ornament Rules

Few Restrictions

Greensboro has no city ordinance regulating year-round lawn ornaments, statuary, or religious displays at single-family properties. The LDO sign standards exempt non-commercial decorations. Restrictions come from HOA architectural-review covenants - widespread in Greensboro's deed-restricted subdivisions. Right-of-way installations require encroachment permits. First Amendment protections apply to religious and political expression.

City Rule: None for private yardRight-of-Way: Encroachment permit required

🌍 Environmental Rules

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Some Restrictions

Greensboro adopted the Climate Action and Resilience Plan (CARP) in 2024 setting community-wide greenhouse gas reduction targets, resilience strategies, and equity-centered climate adaptation actions across municipal operations and the broader Greensboro community.

Adopted: 2024Reduction Target: 80% by 2050

Vehicle Idling Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Greensboro encourages reduced vehicle idling under CARP and applies state diesel idling rules near schools, hospitals, and city facilities to limit local air pollution affecting children, patients, and outdoor workers in the urban core.

State Limit: 5 minutes dieselRule: 15A NCAC 02D .1010

Heat Island Mitigation

Few Restrictions

Greensboro uses tree canopy expansion, cool-roof guidance, and green infrastructure to reduce urban heat island effects in heat-vulnerable neighborhoods identified through the CARP equity mapping process and historical redlining analysis.

Focus: East GreensboroProgram: NeighborWoods trees

Erosion Control

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro requires erosion and sediment control on all construction sites under North Carolina's Sedimentation Pollution Control Act. Projects disturbing one acre or more must obtain an approved erosion and sediment control plan. The city administers a local erosion control program and conducts inspections. Violations may result in civil penalties up to $5,000 per day.

State Law: NC Sedimentation Pollution Control ActThreshold: 1 acre of land disturbance

Coastal Development

Few Restrictions

Greensboro is an inland Piedmont city approximately 200 miles from the Atlantic coast. North Carolina's Coastal Area Management Act (CAMA) applies only to the 20 designated coastal counties. Greensboro has no coastal development regulations.

Applicability: Not applicable β€” Greensboro is inlandDistance: Approximately 200 miles from coast

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro enforces stormwater management regulations through its Water Resources Department and Land Development Ordinance. The city operates under an NPDES Phase I MS4 permit and requires post-construction stormwater controls for new development and redevelopment. Projects must meet water quality and quantity standards to protect the Haw River watershed and Jordan Lake.

Permit Type: NPDES Phase I MS4 permitAuthority: Water Resources Department

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro participates in the National Flood Insurance Program and regulates development in FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Areas. Multiple creeks and streams throughout the city create flood risks. Structures in flood zones must be elevated above base flood elevation. The city's floodplain management ordinance is part of the Land Development Ordinance.

NFIP Participant: Yes β€” National Flood Insurance ProgramFlood Sources: Multiple creeks and streams

Grading & Drainage

Some Restrictions

Greensboro requires grading permits for earthwork and land-disturbing activities through the Land Development Ordinance. Projects must maintain existing drainage patterns and prevent adverse impacts on neighboring properties. Grading plans are reviewed by the city's engineering staff as part of the development review process.

Permit Required: Grading permitCode Reference: Land Development Ordinance

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Personal Cultivation Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Personal cannabis cultivation is illegal in Greensboro because North Carolina has not legalized medical or recreational marijuana; growing any amount remains a felony or misdemeanor under NCGS 90-95 regardless of city policy.

Legal status: Fully prohibited statewideStatute: NCGS 90-95

Cannabis Delivery Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Cannabis delivery services are illegal in Greensboro because no commercial cannabis market exists in North Carolina; any transport for sale violates NCGS 90-95 and qualifies as drug trafficking depending on weight transported.

Legal market: None statewideHemp delivery: Permitted with COA

Buffer Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro has no cannabis dispensary buffer zone ordinance because North Carolina has not authorized commercial cannabis sales; existing drug-free school zone enhancements under NCGS 90-95(e) apply to any controlled-substance offense.

Cannabis buffer: None on booksDrug-free zone: 1,000 feet schools

Home Cultivation

Heavy Restrictions

Cannabis is illegal in North Carolina for both recreational and medicinal purposes. Home cultivation of cannabis is a criminal offense. North Carolina has not legalized medical marijuana or decriminalized possession. Growing any amount of cannabis plants is a felony under NC law.

Legal Status: Illegal β€” all purposesCultivation: Felony under NC law

Dispensary Zoning

Heavy Restrictions

Cannabis dispensaries are not permitted in Greensboro or anywhere in North Carolina. The state has not legalized medical or recreational cannabis sales. There is no state licensing framework for cannabis retail operations. Any cannabis sales remain illegal under state law.

Status: Not permitted β€” cannabis illegal in NCState Law: No medical or recreational program

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

🏚️ Property Maintenance

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Greensboro regulates trash container storage and placement through its property maintenance and sanitation codes. Bins must be stored out of public view when not set out for collection. The city provides curbside collection through its Field Operations Department.

Storage: Out of public view when not at curbCollection: Curbside on designated day

Property Blight

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro enforces property maintenance through its Code Compliance Division. Properties must be maintained free of rubbish, debris, overgrown vegetation, and inoperable vehicles. The city actively addresses blighted conditions through code enforcement, citations, and nuisance abatement. The Housing Code in Chapter 11 sets minimum housing standards.

Enforcement: Code Compliance DivisionCode Reference: Chapter 11 β€” Housing Code

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro requires owners of vacant lots to maintain properties free of weeds, rubbish, and debris. Vegetation must be kept below specified heights. The city may abate nuisance conditions and bill the property owner, with costs potentially becoming a lien on the property.

Maintenance: Clear of weeds, rubbish, debrisVegetation: Must be below height limits

Snow & Sidewalk Clearing

Few Restrictions

Greensboro has a mild Piedmont climate with limited snowfall averaging about 7 inches annually. The city does not have a strict snow removal ordinance for sidewalks. When snow does occur, property owners are encouraged to clear sidewalks but enforcement is minimal due to infrequent snowfall.

Average Snowfall: About 7 inches annuallyClimate: Mild Piedmont β€” infrequent snow

Garage Sale Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro allows residential garage and yard sales subject to general property maintenance and zoning rules. Sales must be on private property. Items may not extend into the right-of-way. Frequent sales may be treated as commercial activity prohibited in residential zones.

Location: Private property onlyROW: Items cannot extend into right-of-way

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Few Restrictions

North Carolina does not include source of income, including Section 8 vouchers, in its statewide Fair Housing Act protected classes. Greensboro has no separate ordinance creating a local source-of-income protection, so most landlord refusals to accept vouchers remain lawful in the city.

State protection: Not includedLocal ordinance: None in Greensboro

Pass-Through Charges

Few Restrictions

Greensboro landlords may pass through utilities, water, trash, and approved fees if the lease clearly authorizes them. North Carolina caps late fees and bad-check fees under NCGS 42-46, and water-utility billing must follow NC Utilities Commission and NCGS 62-110(g) submetering rules.

Late fee cap: $15 or 5%Water submetering: NCGS 62-110(g)

Security Deposit Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro landlords follow North Carolina's Tenant Security Deposit Act in NCGS 42-50 through 42-56. Deposits are capped based on tenancy length, must be held in a trust account or bonded, and an itemized accounting must be provided to the tenant within 30 to 60 days of move-out.

Month-to-month cap: 1.5 months rentLong-term cap: 2 months rent

Section 8 Voucher Acceptance

Some Restrictions

The Greensboro Housing Authority administers Housing Choice Vouchers locally. Tenants must lease eligible units, units must pass HUD Housing Quality Standards inspections, and voucher acceptance is voluntary for most private landlords because North Carolina does not protect source of income.

Local agency: Greensboro Housing AuthorityInspection: HUD Housing Quality Standards

Relocation Assistance

Few Restrictions

Greensboro does not require private landlords to pay relocation assistance to tenants displaced by lease non-renewal, sale, or condemnation. Limited federal Uniform Relocation Act benefits may apply only when displacement is caused by federally funded projects.

Local ordinance: None in GreensboroState authorization: Not provided

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Some Restrictions

North Carolina's NCGS 42-25.6 through 42-25.9 bar landlord self-help eviction, lockouts, utility shutoffs, and personal-property seizure. Greensboro tenants experiencing these tactics can call code enforcement and pursue civil remedies in Guilford County small-claims court.

Authority: NCGS 42-25.6 to 42-25.9Self-help eviction: Prohibited

No-Fault Evictions

Few Restrictions

North Carolina permits no-fault terminations at the end of a fixed-term lease and during month-to-month tenancies with proper notice. Greensboro has no just-cause eviction ordinance, so a landlord can decline to renew without stating a reason, subject only to anti-retaliation and Fair Housing limits.

Month-to-month notice: 7 daysYear-to-year notice: 1 month

Rent Control

Few Restrictions

North Carolina state law prohibits local rent control ordinances. Greensboro does not have rent control or rent stabilization regulations. Landlords may set and increase rents at market rates with proper notice. The North Carolina Residential Rental Agreements Act governs landlord-tenant relations statewide.

Rent Control: Not allowed β€” state prohibitionState Law: NC Residential Rental Agreements Act

Just Cause Eviction

Few Restrictions

Greensboro does not have a just cause eviction ordinance. North Carolina landlord-tenant law allows landlords to terminate tenancies for various reasons. Month-to-month tenancies may be terminated with 7 days notice without stating a cause. Evictions must follow North Carolina's summary ejectment process through the court system.

Just Cause: Not requiredNotice Period: 7 days for month-to-month

Rental Registration

Some Restrictions

Greensboro enforces minimum housing standards through Chapter 11 of the Code of Ordinances. Rental properties must meet housing code requirements. The city's Code Compliance Division inspects rental properties for compliance with health and safety standards. While not a formal registration program, inspections are conducted on a complaint basis.

Code Reference: Chapter 11 β€” Housing CodeStandards: Minimum housing requirements

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro provides weekly curbside trash, recycling, and yard waste collection through the Field Operations Department. Residents receive city-issued carts. Collection days vary by neighborhood. Trash must be in approved containers placed at the curb by the morning of collection day.

Frequency: Weekly curbside collectionProvider: City Field Operations Department

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro requires trash and recycling carts to be placed at the curb with lids closed on collection day. Carts should be spaced apart and away from obstacles. After collection, carts must be returned to their storage location and not left at the curb.

Placement: At curb with lids closedSpacing: Spaced apart from obstacles

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

Greensboro offers bulk item pickup services for large items. Residents can schedule pickups through the Field Operations Department. Items such as furniture, appliances, and mattresses are accepted. Illegal dumping is subject to fines and prosecution.

Service: Bulk item pickup availableProvider: Field Operations Department

Recycling Requirements

Some Restrictions

Greensboro provides curbside single-stream recycling collection. The city accepts paper, cardboard, plastics, glass, and metal cans. North Carolina's solid waste management goals encourage recycling. The city provides recycling carts and educational materials to promote participation.

Service: Curbside single-stream recyclingAccepted: Paper, cardboard, plastics, glass, metal

🚁 Drone Rules

πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors

πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door

πŸŒ™ Curfew Laws

πŸ“ Building Setbacks & Zoning

🌳 Tree Protection

Heritage & Protected Trees

Few Restrictions

Greensboro does not have a formal heritage tree ordinance. Large and mature trees may be considered during the development review process. The city's urban forestry program promotes tree preservation and canopy expansion.

Formal Program: No heritage tree ordinanceDevelopment Review: Trees considered during review

Protected Tree Species

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro Tree Code Chapter 44 protects significant and heritage trees on public and certain private properties, requiring permits before removal of trees that meet diameter, age, or species-listed thresholds across the city.

Code: Chapter 44Permit Authority: City Arborist

Parkway Planting

Some Restrictions

The Greensboro Tree Code and LDO require street trees in new development and govern planting in the public right-of-way with approved species, spacing, and clearance from utilities, sidewalks, and traffic-control devices.

Spacing: 30-40 feet typicalReviewer: City Arborist

Urban Forest Equity

Few Restrictions

Greensboro tracks tree canopy by neighborhood and prioritizes new plantings in lower-canopy, historically underserved areas of East Greensboro, integrating CARP equity goals with the Tree Code, NeighborWoods, and federal urban-forestry grant funding.

Citywide Goal: About 47 percentPriority: East Greensboro

Tree Removal Permits

Some Restrictions

Greensboro regulates tree removal through its Land Development Ordinance. Street tree removal requires city approval. Development projects may be required to preserve significant trees or provide mitigation. The city's urban forestry program manages public trees.

Street Trees: City approval required for removalDevelopment: Tree preservation may be required

Tree Replacement Requirements

Some Restrictions

Greensboro may require tree replacement when public trees are removed during development. The Land Development Ordinance includes landscaping and tree preservation requirements. Replacement ratios and species are determined during the development review process.

Requirement: May be required for removed public treesLDO: Landscaping requirements in LDO

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

🏘️ HOA Rules

Architectural Review

Some Restrictions

Greensboro HOAs operate architectural review committees under N.C.G.S. 47F. Courts uphold restrictions that serve a legitimate purpose and follow proper procedures.

Authority: Community declaration and N.C.G.S. 47FCommon Reviews: Paint, fencing, additions, landscaping, solar panels

CC&R Enforcement

Some Restrictions

Greensboro HOA covenants are enforceable under N.C.G.S. 47F-3-102. Fines require written notice and a hearing under 47F-3-107.1 before the association can impose penalties.

Enforcement Authority: N.C.G.S. 47F-3-102Fine Procedure: Written notice and hearing required (47F-3-107.1)

Dispute Resolution

Some Restrictions

Greensboro HOA disputes may be resolved through mediation or arbitration under N.C.G.S. 47F. The Act requires notice and a hearing before fines under 47F-3-107.1.

Fine Procedures: Notice and hearing required (47F-3-107.1)Mediation: Often required by declaration before litigation

Board Procedures

Some Restrictions

Greensboro HOA boards are governed by N.C.G.S. Chapter 47F, the Planned Community Act. The Act requires at least one annual meeting, quorum rules, and defined voting procedures.

Governing Law: N.C.G.S. Chapter 47F (Planned Community Act)Annual Meeting: At least one per year (47F-3-108)

Assessment & Dues

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro HOA assessments are governed by N.C.G.S. 47F-3-115. Associations may levy assessments and record liens under 47F-3-116 for unpaid amounts including attorneys fees.

Assessment Authority: N.C.G.S. 47F-3-115Lien Authority: 47F-3-116 allows lien recording

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Greensboro requires rental properties to be pest-free at move-in under Chapter 11. The Good Repair Ordinance treats vermin infestation as a code violation with 30-day compliance.

Move-In Standard: Property must be pest-free (Chapter 11)Landlord Duty: Control pests in multi-family common areas

Lead Paint

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro landlords must disclose lead paint in pre-1978 housing under federal law. EPA penalties reach $19,507 per violation. NC Real Estate Commission also enforces.

Applies To: Housing built before 1978Disclosure Required: EPA pamphlet and disclosure form before lease signing

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro requires building permits for scaffold installations under Chapter 6. Scaffolding must comply with the NC Building Code and OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart L.

Permit: Required as part of building permit under Chapter 6Code Standards: NC Building Code and OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart L

Childcare Center Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro child care centers must meet North Carolina Building Code Group E or I-4 standards, hold a NC DCDEE state license, and pass Greensboro Fire Department safety inspections covering exits, smoke alarms, and fenced outdoor play areas.

State law: NCGS 110 Art. 7Building code: Group E or I-4

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro enforces NC Building Code sprinkler thresholds, requiring fire sprinklers in most new commercial, multi-family, and large residential buildings, with inspections by the Greensboro Fire Department and city building inspectors.

Code: NC State Building CodeState law: NCGS 143-138

Green Building Code

Some Restrictions

Greensboro applies the NC Energy Conservation Code through Chapter 8 and supports voluntary green-building goals in its Climate Action and Resilience Plan, but state preemption under NCGS 143-138 blocks city-only stretch energy codes.

Code: NC Energy Conservation CodeState law: NCGS 143-138

Door Locking Hardware

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro enforces NC Building and Fire Code rules requiring exit doors in commercial and assembly buildings to unlock from the inside without keys, tools, or special knowledge, inspected by GFD and city building inspectors.

Code: NC Building and Fire CodeRule: Single motion egress

Elevator Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Greensboro enforces the NC Building Code for elevator safety under ASME A17.1 standards. The NC Department of Labor oversees annual inspections and certificates of operation.

Governing Code: NC Building Code adopting ASME A17.1State Oversight: NC Department of Labor, Elevator Bureau

🚢 Sidewalk & Pedestrian Rules

πŸ”« Firearms

🚬 Tobacco & Vaping

πŸ›οΈ Single-Use Items

πŸ’Ό Employment Preemption

πŸ›‚ Immigration Policy

πŸ›οΈ Homelessness & Encampment Rules

πŸ›΄ Mobility & Curb Rules

πŸ’§ Water Use Rules

πŸ—ΊοΈ Zoning Overlays & Bonuses

🩺 Public Health Rules

Restaurant Grade Cards

Some Restrictions

Greensboro restaurants are inspected by Guilford County Health Department under NC rules, receiving a numerical score plus letter grade (A, B, or C) that must be posted visibly near the entrance for customers.

Inspector: Guilford County Health DeptScale: 100-point scale, A/B/C

Syringe Disposal

Few Restrictions

North Carolina authorizes syringe exchange programs under NCGS 90-113.27, and Guilford County Public Health partners with local nonprofits to provide sharps containers and safe disposal sites within Greensboro for harm-reduction purposes.

State authority: NCGS 90-113.27Authorized since: 2016 statewide

Rodent Control

Some Restrictions

Greensboro property owners must keep premises free of rodent harborage and infestation, eliminating food sources, sealing structures, and abating active rodent populations when notified by Code Compliance or Guilford County Public Health.

Code chapter: Housing minimum standardsOwner duty: Eliminate harborage

Food Handler Certification

Some Restrictions

Greensboro food establishments must employ at least one Certified Food Protection Manager on staff under NC food code rules, with certification through ANSI-accredited programs such as ServSafe required for permit issuance.

Standard: FDA Food Code adoptionApproved exams: ANSI-accredited only

Bed-Bug Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro treats bed bug infestations as a violation of minimum housing standards when the landlord fails to maintain a sanitary, pest-free dwelling, requiring professional treatment when infestation results from building-wide conditions.

Landlord duty: Habitable, pest-free unitTenant duty: Avoid introduction, cooperate

Healthy Food Retail

Few Restrictions

Greensboro encourages healthy food retail through the Greensboro Fresh Mobile Market, community garden support, and Guilford County Healthy Corner Store partnerships, but does not impose mandatory stocking requirements on private retailers.

Approach: Voluntary, incentive-basedMobile market: Greensboro Fresh runs weekly

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

Tobacco Retail License

Some Restrictions

Greensboro tobacco retailers follow North Carolina state licensing under the NC Department of Revenue. The city has limited home-rule authority over tobacco retail because NCGS 143-595 partially preempts local tobacco regulation, leaving most rules at state level.

State License: NC Dept of RevenueMinimum Age: 21 (federal Tobacco 21)

Tattoo & Body Modification

Some Restrictions

Tattoo and body-art establishments in Greensboro must hold a Guilford County Health Department permit under the North Carolina tattoo rules in 15A NCAC 18A .3200. Operators follow strict sanitation, sterilization, and minimum-age standards for clients.

State Rule: 15A NCAC 18A .3200Permit Issuer: Guilford County Health

Massage Establishments

Some Restrictions

Massage therapists in Greensboro must be licensed by the North Carolina Board of Massage and Bodywork Therapy. Massage establishments register under Greensboro Code Chapter 11 business licensing and must comply with zoning rules in the Greensboro Land Development Ordinance.

State Board: NC Massage Therapy BoardState Statute: NCGS Chapter 90 Art. 36

Towing Companies

Some Restrictions

Towing companies operating in Greensboro must register with the city, post fee schedules, and follow North Carolina tow-and-storage rules in NCGS 20-219. Non-consent tows from private property require posted signage and prompt notice to vehicle owners.

State Statute: NCGS 20-219.2Signage: Required before non-consent tow

Secondhand Dealers

Some Restrictions

Greensboro secondhand and pawn dealers must register transactions with police under North Carolina state pawnbroker law and city code. Sellers provide identification, and dealers report items to a property reporting system to help recover stolen goods through Greensboro Police.

State Statute: NCGS Chapter 91AHolding Period: 15 days typical

🚷 Public Conduct

Public Urination

Some Restrictions

Public urination in Greensboro is prohibited under city offenses against public decency in Code Chapter 28. Officers can issue citations or arrest near downtown bars, the Coliseum, parks, and UNCG game-day crowds for sanitary and decency violations.

City Code: Greensboro Ch. 28State Statute: NCGS 14-190.9

Public Alcohol Use

Some Restrictions

Open containers of alcohol in public places and on Greensboro streets are prohibited except in approved Social Districts. Greensboro Code Chapter 28 and NCGS 18B-301 restrict open consumption outside licensed premises and city-designated districts downtown.

State Statute: NCGS 18B-301City Code: Greensboro Ch. 28

Skateboarding Rules

Some Restrictions

Skateboarding is restricted in parts of downtown Greensboro and on city plazas to protect pedestrians and property. The LeBauer Park and Center City Park areas post no-skating signs, while the city operates Latham Skate Park as a designated place to ride.

Designated Park: Latham Skate ParkCity Code: Greensboro Ch. 30

Loitering Rules

Some Restrictions

Greensboro Code Chapter 28 addresses loitering for unlawful purposes and aggressive panhandling, while passive begging remains protected speech. Officers focus on conduct such as blocking sidewalks or threatening behavior rather than mere presence in public spaces.

City Code: Greensboro Ch. 28Protected: Passive panhandling

Outdoor Smoking Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Greensboro restricts outdoor smoking in city-owned parks, playgrounds, athletic fields, and within entrances to municipal buildings. Statewide rules under NCGS 130A-491 ban smoking in restaurants and bars, while UNCG and NC A&T maintain campus-wide tobacco-free policies.

State Statute: NCGS 130A-491City Code: Greensboro Ch. 30

Overall: What to Expect in Greensboro

Greensboro has 209 ordinances on file across 43 categories. Of these, 52 are rated permissive, 117 moderate, and 40 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Greensboro 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.