Moving to Norfolk County, MA?
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 Norfolk County across 25 categories and 101 specific rules we track.
π 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 RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate amplified music. Each municipality requires entertainment licenses or one-day amplified sound permits under MGL c. 140 Β§183A. ABCC-licensed venues must meet state license conditions.
Leaf Blower Rules
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level leaf blower ordinance. Rules vary dramatically by municipality β Brookline has a full gas leaf blower ban, while other towns only regulate hours.
Quiet Hours
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County, MA does not have a county-level noise ordinance. Massachusetts counties have extremely limited regulatory authority; noise rules are set by each individual city or town. Residents must follow their municipality's ordinance.
Barking Dogs
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate barking dogs at the county level. Dog noise complaints are handled by each municipality's animal control officer and police department under local bylaws.
Construction Hours
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level construction-hours ordinance. Construction noise rules are set by each individual municipality in the county. Most towns follow typical MA practice of allowing construction weekdays approximately 7 AMβ6 PM.
π 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.
Occupancy Limits
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no STR occupancy rule. MA State Sanitary Code 105 CMR 410.400 sets minimum floor area per occupant. Quincy and Brookline impose 2-per-bedroom-plus-2 caps on registered STRs. Weymouth has no STR cap.
Insurance Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsMassachusetts requires $1M liability insurance for all short-term rentals statewide under MGL c. 64G Β§68. Hosts in Norfolk County must carry this coverage regardless of town.
Noise Rules
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level STR noise rules. STR guests are subject to the same noise ordinances as residents in whichever municipality the rental is located.
Taxes & Fees
Some RestrictionsMassachusetts imposes a 5.7% state room occupancy excise on all STRs (MGL c. 64G). Norfolk County municipalities may add a local option excise up to 6%. Many platforms (Airbnb, Vrbo) collect and remit these taxes automatically.
Permit Requirements
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not have a county STR registration program. Massachusetts state law (MGL c. 64G) requires all STR operators statewide to register with the MA Department of Revenue. Individual cities and towns may add local registration requirements.
Parking Rules
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level STR parking rules. Parking at short-term rentals is governed by the host municipality's general parking ordinances and any specific STR conditions imposed locally.
π₯ 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.
Wildfire Zones
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no designated wildfire hazard zones β not a high-risk WUI region. MA Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR) Bureau of Forest Fire Control runs the state wildfire program. Blue Hills Reservation carries moderate risk.
Brush Clearance
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County may require vegetation management for fire safety. MA does not have a statewide defensible space mandate. Local property maintenance applies.
Fireworks
Heavy RestrictionsALL consumer fireworks β including sparklers, firecrackers, Roman candles, and aerial fireworks β are ILLEGAL throughout Massachusetts under MGL c. 148 Β§39. This is a statewide prohibition; Norfolk County does not need its own ordinance.
Outdoor Burning
Heavy RestrictionsOpen burning in Massachusetts is governed by MGL c. 48 Β§13. It is prohibited from May 1 through January 14 each year. During the allowed season (Jan 15βApr 30), a permit from the local fire warden is required; burning allowed only 10 AMβ4 PM.
Fire Pit Rules
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level fire pit rules. Recreational fire pits are regulated by each municipality. Under the MA State Fire Code (527 CMR), recreational fires in approved containers (3 ft diameter or less) are generally distinct from open burning and may be permitted year-round in many towns.
π 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.
Overnight Parking
Heavy RestrictionsMany Norfolk County towns enforce overnight parking bans. Quincy bans 1-6 AM year-round (no permit option). Brookline prohibits 2-6 AM with limited permit program. Weymouth has winter overnight ban November 1-April 1.
EV Charging
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no EV charging rule. MA Stretch Code and Specialized Code require EV-ready parking in new residential construction. Brookline, Quincy, and Weymouth each adopted the Stretch Code.
Abandoned Vehicles
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not handle abandoned vehicles. MGL c. 90B Β§2 allows police to remove abandoned vehicles after 72 hours. Quincy, Brookline, and Weymouth tag and tow via local ordinance.
Street Parking Limits
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level street parking regulations. All street parking rules in Norfolk County are set and enforced by individual cities and towns.
RV & Boat Parking
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate RV or recreational vehicle parking. RV parking rules are set by each municipality's zoning bylaws and parking ordinances.
Driveway Rules
Few RestrictionsDriveway regulations in Norfolk County are set by individual municipalities through local zoning bylaws and building codes. Norfolk County government has no driveway rules.
Commercial Vehicle Restrictions
Few RestrictionsCommercial vehicle parking restrictions in Norfolk County are set by individual municipalities. There is no county-level ordinance. Many residential neighborhoods have bylaws restricting overnight commercial vehicle parking.
π§± 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 RestrictionsNorfolk County has no pool barrier rule β 780 CMR (MA Building Code) and 105 CMR 435 apply statewide. Minimum 48-inch barrier with self-closing, self-latching gates. Enforced by each town's building department.
Retaining Walls
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no retaining wall rule. 780 CMR (MA Building Code) requires a building permit for retaining walls over 4 feet (measured from bottom of footing) or with surcharge loads. Engineered plans required.
Material Restrictions
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no fence material ordinance. Towns regulate materials via zoning bylaws. Historic districts (Brookline, Dedham, Milton) require Historic District Commission approval.
Permit Requirements
Few RestrictionsFence permits in Norfolk County are issued by individual municipalities β typically by the local building department. Norfolk County government does not issue fence permits.
Neighbor Fence Rules
Some RestrictionsMassachusetts state law (MGL c. 49 Β§Β§1β21) governs boundary fences between neighbors, including cost-sharing and the Fence Viewer process for disputes. Norfolk County courts handle fence viewer appeals.
Height Limits
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level fence height limits. Fence height is regulated by each municipality through local zoning bylaws.
π Animal Ordinances
Pet owners and aspiring chicken keepers should check local animal ordinances before signing a lease or closing on a home.
Chickens & Livestock
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate chickens or livestock. Each town sets its own rules via zoning and board of health regulations. Suburban towns often restrict; rural towns like Medfield and Dover allow chickens.
Wildlife Feeding
Some RestrictionsMassachusetts prohibits feeding black bears statewide (321 CMR 2.15). MassWildlife enforces. Norfolk County's Blue Hills and Milton-Canton area see regular bear activity. Deer and turkey feeding also regulated.
Dog Leash Laws
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level leash law. Dog leash requirements are set by each municipality under MGL c. 140 Β§157. Most Norfolk County towns require dogs to be leashed in public and at large in private without owner consent.
Beekeeping
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate beekeeping. Beekeeping rules are set by each municipality. Massachusetts requires hive registration with the MA Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR) under MGL c. 128 Β§34.
Exotic Pets
Heavy RestrictionsMassachusetts MGL c. 131 Β§23 and 321 CMR 9.01 prohibit keeping most exotic and wild animals as pets. Norfolk County does not regulate exotic pets independently; state law governs statewide.
Breed Restrictions
Few RestrictionsMassachusetts state law (MGL c. 140 Β§157) prohibits breed-specific legislation (BSL) at the municipal level. No Norfolk County municipality may ban or restrict specific dog breeds based on breed alone.
πΏ Landscaping Rules
From grass height limits to tree removal permits, landscaping rules can surprise new homeowners, especially in drought-prone areas with water restrictions.
Rainwater Harvesting
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not restrict rainwater harvesting. MA has no statewide restrictions on residential rain barrel or cistern use. Many Norfolk County towns offer rain barrel rebate programs.
Artificial Turf
Some RestrictionsBrookline enacted the first MA town-wide ban on new artificial turf on town property (2023 Town Meeting Art. 14). Other Norfolk County towns allow turf residentially. State regulations on PFAS in turf evolving.
Native Plants
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no native plant rule. MA Pollinator Plan and Stretch Code encourage natives. Brookline and Quincy offer climate-resilient landscape guidance. MA prohibits sale of listed invasive species.
Weed Ordinances
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not enforce weed abatement. Individual municipalities enforce property maintenance under MGL c. 111 Β§122 (nuisance) and the State Sanitary Code (105 CMR 410) for rental property.
Grass Height Limits
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level grass height ordinance. Grass and weed height limits are set by each municipality through local public health and nuisance bylaws, typically enforced by the Board of Health.
Tree Trimming
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate tree trimming. Rules governing tree work near roads and utility lines are set by state law, each municipality's tree warden, and utility companies.
Tree Removal & Heritage Trees
Some RestrictionsTree removal in Norfolk County is governed by state law (MGL c. 87 for public trees) and municipal bylaws. Public shade trees require a Tree Warden permit. Many Norfolk County towns also require permits to remove large private trees.
Water Restrictions
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level water restriction program. Outdoor watering restrictions are set by each municipality's water department and the MA Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) Water Management Act permits.
πΌ Home Business
Working from home is common, but running a business from home often requires permits and must comply with zoning restrictions on customer traffic and signage.
Home Daycare
Heavy RestrictionsFamily childcare in MA is licensed by the Department of Early Education and Care (EEC) under 606 CMR. MGL c. 40A Β§3 protects family daycare (up to 6-10 kids) as a by-right residential use β no local zoning can exclude it.
Cottage Food Operations
Some RestrictionsMassachusetts expanded cottage food under MGL c. 94 Β§305A (2023 act). Residential kitchens may produce non-potentially-hazardous foods for direct sale up to $25,000/year. Local BOH inspection required.
Customer Traffic Restrictions
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate home business customer traffic. Municipal zoning bylaws typically limit customer visits to a home occupation to avoid impacts on residential neighborhoods.
Signage Rules
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate home business signs. Sign rules are set by each municipality's zoning bylaw. Most Massachusetts towns allow one small nameplate sign (typically 1β2 sq ft) for a permitted home occupation.
Zoning Restrictions
Some RestrictionsHome occupation (home business) rules in Norfolk County are set entirely by individual municipal zoning bylaws. Norfolk County does not regulate home businesses. Most towns allow low-impact home occupations as of right with conditions.
π Swimming Pools & Spas
Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.
Hot Tub Rules
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no hot tub rule. MA Building Code (780 CMR) requires permit for electrical, GFCI protection, and barriers for tubs over 24 in. deep. 527 CMR 12 (MA Electrical Code) governs wiring.
Pool Permits
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not issue pool permits. Pool permits are issued by each municipality under the statewide 780 CMR Massachusetts State Building Code, which is uniform across all MA towns.
Fencing Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsPool fencing in Massachusetts is governed by the MA State Building Code (780 CMR), which requires a minimum 48-inch barrier around all in-ground and above-ground pools. Norfolk County does not have an additional county pool barrier code.
Safety Rules
Some RestrictionsPool safety in Norfolk County is governed by MA Building Code (780 CMR) and the MA Department of Public Health regulations for public pools (105 CMR 435). Private residential pools must meet barrier requirements; building permits are required for new pools.
Above-Ground Pools
Some RestrictionsAbove-ground pools in Norfolk County must meet MA Building Code barrier requirements. Building permit requirements for above-ground pools vary by municipality and pool size. The 48-inch barrier requirement applies to pools over 24 inches deep.
ποΈ Accessory Structures
Thinking about an ADU, shed, or garage conversion? Local rules on accessory structures have changed rapidly in recent years, especially in California.
Tiny Homes
Some RestrictionsMA adopted IRC Appendix Q (tiny homes under 400 sq ft) into 780 CMR 9th Edition. Tiny homes on foundations must meet building code. Tiny Homes on Wheels (THOW) classified as RVs β mostly prohibited as permanent dwellings.
Carport Rules
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no carport rule. 780 CMR requires building permit. Setbacks governed by each town's zoning. Brookline and Quincy impose strict setback requirements; Weymouth is more permissive.
ADU Rules
Few RestrictionsMassachusetts 2024 Affordable Homes Act (MGL c. 40A Β§3) grants property owners the right to build ADUs on owner-occupied lots by right. Cities and towns cannot ban ADUs but may regulate size (up to 900 sq ft for internal ADUs). Norfolk County has no additional ADU rules.
Shed Rules
Few RestrictionsShed rules in Norfolk County are set by individual municipalities through local zoning bylaws. Norfolk County has no county-level shed ordinance. Permit requirements, setbacks, and size limits vary by town.
Garage Conversions
Some RestrictionsGarage conversion rules in Norfolk County are set by each municipality through zoning bylaws and building codes. A building permit is required. The 2024 MA ADU law may facilitate some garage-to-ADU conversions by right.
π Environmental Rules
Coastal Development
Heavy RestrictionsNorfolk County has coastal frontage in Quincy, Weymouth, and Cohasset. Coastal development is regulated by MA Coastal Zone Management (CZM), Wetlands Protection Act, and Chapter 91 (tidelands law) β not by the county.
Stormwater Management
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not administer stormwater programs. All Norfolk County towns are EPA MS4 permittees, enforcing stormwater standards under 310 CMR 10.05 (Wetlands) and town stormwater bylaws.
Grading & Drainage
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate grading. Each municipality requires grading permits under 780 CMR building code. Drainage cannot be diverted onto neighboring property under MA common law.
Erosion Control
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not enforce erosion control. Each municipality requires erosion and sediment controls on construction sites under local bylaws, the Wetlands Protection Act, and EPA construction general permit.
Flood Zones
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has significant flood risk from the Neponset River, Weymouth Back River, and coastal areas. FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) apply. Development in Special Flood Hazard Areas requires elevation certificates and flood zone compliance under Massachusetts and NFIP rules.
π± Cannabis Regulations
Dispensary Zoning
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not zone dispensaries. Each municipality decides host community agreements and zoning under MGL c. 94G Β§3. Brookline, Quincy, Weymouth, Dedham host dispensaries; several towns (Westwood, Dover, Sherborn) opted out.
Home Cultivation
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate cannabis. Under MA state law (MGL c. 94G Β§7), adults 21+ may grow up to 6 plants per person, 12 per household. Plants must be enclosed and not visible from public view.
βοΈ Solar Energy
HOA Restrictions
Few RestrictionsMassachusetts has no solar-access statute protecting homeowners from HOA/condo bans. Unlike CA or FL, MA condo associations can restrict solar. Brookline and Quincy condo associations commonly regulate rooftop solar.
Panel Permits
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no solar permit role. MA protects solar as-of-right under MGL c. 40A Β§3. Quincy, Brookline, and Weymouth all use the MA uniform solar permit process and 780 CMR building code.
πͺ§ Sign Regulations
Garage Sale Signs
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no garage sale sign rule. Brookline, Quincy, and Weymouth all prohibit signs in public ROW and on utility poles. Signs must be on private property with owner consent.
Holiday Displays
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no holiday display rule. Quincy, Brookline, and Weymouth allow residential holiday decorations without permits. Electrical and fire safety codes apply, especially in Brookline's historic districts.
Political Signs
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no political sign rule. Under MGL c. 40 Β§21(19), MA towns may regulate temporary political signs but cannot impose content-based restrictions. Post-Reed v. Gilbert, most Norfolk County towns removed pre-election time limits.
ποΈ Property Maintenance
Property Blight
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not enforce blight. MA State Sanitary Code (105 CMR 410) sets minimum housing standards. Quincy, Brookline, and Weymouth enforce via BOH and building inspector. MA vacant property registration common.
Vacant Lot Maintenance
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not enforce vacant lot maintenance. Quincy and Brookline have vacant property registries. Grass/weed limits typically 8-12 inches under each town's BOH rules and 105 CMR 410.600.
Garage Sale Rules
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate garage sale property maintenance. Each town enforces property maintenance bylaws and the State Sanitary Code (105 CMR 410) to prevent yard sale blight.
Trash Bin Storage
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not collect trash. Quincy uses automated single-stream carts with placement rules. Brookline provides DPW collection under Art. 8.18. Weymouth contracts with Republic Services.
Snow & Sidewalk Clearing
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not enforce snow clearing. Each municipality requires property owners to clear adjacent sidewalks after snowfall. Brookline: 3 hours daylight / 24 hours night. Quincy: 6 hours. Most: 24-48 hours.
π‘ Outdoor Lighting
Light Trespass
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not handle light trespass complaints. Each town's code enforcement, with common-law nuisance backstop, addresses light trespass. Residential limits typically 0.5-1.0 foot-candles at property line.
Dark Sky Rules
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate outdoor lighting. Several towns (Dover, Sherborn, Medfield) have dark-sky bylaws. State-level, MGL c. 40 Β§21 enables local light pollution control.
π Rental Property Rules
Just Cause Eviction
Heavy RestrictionsNorfolk County has no county-level eviction rules. Massachusetts is a strong tenant-protection state under MGL c. 239 and c. 186. Brookline adopted a local Just Cause Eviction bylaw in 2023 covering buildings with 4+ units.
Rental Registration
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not register rentals. Quincy requires annual rental registration and inspection (Ch. 11.16). Brookline requires rental registration under Art. 8.26. Weymouth has no general rental registry.
Rent Control
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate rents. Massachusetts banned local rent control statewide via 1994 Question 9 (MGL c. 40P). No Norfolk County town currently has rent control. Tenant protections remain under MGL c. 186 and c. 239.
ποΈ Trash & Recycling
Pickup Rules & Schedules
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not operate trash collection. Each of the 28 municipalities contracts its own waste hauler or runs municipal DPW pickup. Schedules and rules differ significantly town by town.
Bulk Item Disposal
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not offer bulk pickup. Each municipality runs its own bulk program β some free, others require scheduled appointment or sticker. Mattresses and textiles are banned from disposal statewide.
Bin Placement Rules
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no bin placement rule. Each town's DPW regulations or contract terms specify curbside placement time, retrieval deadlines, and storage between pickups.
Recycling Requirements
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not administer recycling. MA has strong state waste bans (310 CMR 19.017) enforced statewide. Single-stream recycling is standard across Norfolk County municipalities.
π Drone Rules
Commercial Drones
Heavy RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate commercial drones. FAA Part 107 certification is required. LAANC authorization needed for much of the county due to Logan airspace.
Recreational Drones
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate drones. Recreational drone use follows federal FAA Part 107 Exception (49 USC Β§44809). Individual towns and DCR may restrict drones in parks.
π Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors
Vending Zones
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no vending zone rules. Each town designates approved locations; most restrict food trucks near brick-and-mortar restaurants and schools. Private property requires owner permission plus zoning review.
Food Truck Permits
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not license food trucks. Mobile food vendors need a common victualler license from each town plus a food service permit from the local board of health under 105 CMR 590.
πͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door
No-Knock Registry
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no no-knock registry. Several member municipalities (Quincy, Brookline, Dedham, Weymouth) maintain their own no-soliciting lists. Posted no-soliciting signs must be respected by permitted solicitors.
Solicitor Permits
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not issue solicitor permits. Each municipality requires door-to-door commercial solicitors to obtain a local hawker/peddler or solicitor permit under MGL c. 101.
π Curfew Laws
Juvenile Curfew
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County enforces a juvenile curfew for minors under 17. Nighttime curfew hours typically run 11 PM to 6 AM on school nights with later weekend hours.
Park Curfew
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County operates no parks. State DCR properties (Blue Hills, Wollaston Beach) close dusk-to-dawn under 302 CMR 12.00. Municipal parks have town-specific hours, typically dusk or 10 PM closing.
π Building Setbacks & Zoning
Structure Height Limits
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not set height limits. Each town's zoning bylaw caps building heights. Residential zones typically allow 35 ft or 2.5 stories. 780 CMR building code enforces construction standards.
Lot Coverage Limits
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate lot coverage. Each town's zoning bylaw sets maximum coverage and Floor Area Ratio (FAR). Residential typically 25-50% coverage. Stormwater rules may apply above thresholds.
Setback Rules
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate setbacks. Each town's zoning bylaw sets minimum setbacks under MGL c. 40A (Zoning Act). Norfolk County zoning varies widely β dense Brookline requires only 15 ft fronts; rural Dover requires 40+ ft.
π³ Tree Protection
Tree Removal Permits
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate trees. Public shade trees statewide are protected under MGL c. 87. Private tree removal permits exist in some Norfolk County towns (Brookline, Milton, Newton-adjacent) but not most.
Heritage & Protected Trees
Heavy RestrictionsNorfolk County has no heritage tree program. Brookline designates heritage trees under its tree bylaw. Statewide, MA does not operate a heritage/landmark tree registry.
Tree Replacement Requirements
Some RestrictionsNorfolk County has no tree replacement rule. MGL c. 87 Β§7 requires replacement for removed public shade trees. Municipal bylaws in Brookline, Milton require private tree replacement; most other towns do not.
π·οΈ Garage & Yard Sales
Frequency Limits
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County has no frequency limit. Most municipalities cap household yard sales at 2-4 per year to prevent ongoing retail activity, which would trigger MGL c. 101 transient vendor regulation.
Time Restrictions
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not restrict garage sale hours. Municipal rules typically limit sales to 8 AM-6 PM. Sales must not violate local noise bylaws or block traffic.
Garage Sale Permits
Few RestrictionsNorfolk County does not regulate garage sales. Most member municipalities require no permit for residential yard sales. A few towns (Brookline, Milton) require free registration or have signage restrictions.
Overall: What to Expect in Norfolk County
Norfolk County has 101 ordinances on file across 25 categories. Of these, 31 are rated permissive, 58 moderate, and 12 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Norfolk County compared to other cities.
Rules can change, and enforcement varies. Always verify specific requirements with the county directly before making major decisions like building a fence, listing on Airbnb, or starting a home business.