Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup

Moving to Pittsburgh, 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 Pittsburgh across 43 categories and 208 specific rules we track.

46 Permissive128 Moderate34 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.

Leaf Blower Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh allows leaf blowers and power lawn equipment between 7 AM and 10 PM. Equipment must stay within the 65 dB(A) daytime residential limit at the property line under City Code Ch. 601.

Allowed Hours: 7 AM – 10 PM dailyDaytime Limit: 65 dB(A) at property line

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh prohibits amplified music plainly audible at 75 feet from the source in residential zones. Daytime limit is 65 dB(A); nighttime drops to 55 dB(A) after 10 PM under City Code Ch. 601.

Audibility Rule: Plainly audible at 75 feetDay Limit: 65 dB(A) at residential property line

Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh sets residential noise at 65 dB(A) daytime and 55 dB(A) nighttime, commercial/industrial at 70/60 dB(A) at the nearest residential line. Measured per ANSI S1.4 A-weighting.

Residential Day: 65 dB(A) (6 AM – 10 PM)Residential Night: 55 dB(A) (10 PM – 6 AM)

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh caps industrial noise at 70 dB(A) daytime and 60 dB(A) nighttime at the nearest residential property line. Zoning Code Ch. 917 governs all land-use noise including manufacturing.

Industrial Day Limit: 70 dB(A) at residential property lineIndustrial Night Limit: 60 dB(A) (10 PM – 6 AM)

Outdoor Music

Some Restrictions

Outdoor music in Pittsburgh must not be plainly audible at 75 feet in residential areas. Events need special-event permits. The 65/55 dB(A) day/night limits apply to all outdoor sound.

Audibility Standard: Not plainly audible at 75 ftDaytime Limit: 65 dB(A) at residential line

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh enforces nighttime quiet hours from 10:00 PM to 7:00 AM under Title VI, Chapter 601 of the City Code. Maximum sound at a residential property line is 60 dBA during daytime and 50 dBA at night. Continuous unreasonable noise is prohibited at any time of day.

: :

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Persistent barking dogs that exceed Pittsburgh's noise limits (65 dB day / 55 dB night) are prohibited under Β§916.06. PA Dog Law (3 P.S. Β§459) requires annual dog licensing through Allegheny County. Animal nuisance complaints may be filed with Pittsburgh Animal Care & Control.

Noise Limit: 65 dB day / 55 dB night (Β§916.06)Dog License: Annual β€” Allegheny County

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh permits construction noise audible at residential property between 7:00 AM and 9:00 PM weekdays and 9:00 AM to 9:00 PM Saturdays. Sunday and holiday construction near residences is prohibited absent a PLI special permit. Heavy equipment beyond 70 dBA at the property line requires additional noise mitigation.

: :

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Aircraft noise is federally preempted under the FAA Act (49 U.S.C. Β§40103). Pittsburgh International Airport (PIT) is located in Moon Township, Allegheny County. Allegheny County Airport Authority operates a noise compatibility program. Local ordinances cannot restrict flight paths or operations.

Local Ordinance: None β€” federally preemptedFederal Law: FAA Act 49 U.S.C. Β§40103

🏠 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.

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh's limited-lodging framework distinguishes between owner-occupied dwellings and dedicated rentals, with zoning rules favoring operators using their primary residence as a short-term rental.

Classification: Limited lodgingPrimary use: Favored in zoning

Host Presence Rule

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh's 2018 short-term rental ordinance does not impose a uniform host-presence rule, but unhosted whole-home rentals must still meet permit, life-safety, and zoning requirements before listing online.

Ordinance: 2018-1571 (Title 7)Hosted stays: Lighter scrutiny

Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Stays of thirty consecutive days or more shift a Pittsburgh dwelling out of the limited-lodging short-term rental framework and into ordinary residential leasing under the Pennsylvania Landlord and Tenant Act.

STR threshold: Under 30 daysLong stays: Treated as leases

Repeat Violator Strikes

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh's Permits, Licenses, and Inspections bureau may suspend or revoke a limited-lodging license when an operator accumulates repeated nuisance, occupancy, or life-safety violations at the same short-term rental property.

Authority: Pittsburgh PLITrigger: Repeat nuisance violations

Host Platform Liability

Some Restrictions

Online booking platforms collect Pittsburgh and Allegheny County hotel-occupancy taxes on bookings, and city ordinance trends push platforms toward verifying license numbers before publishing limited-lodging listings.

Local hotel tax: Applies under 30 daysCounty tax: Allegheny remits via platform

Registration Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh Chapter 781 requires all STR operators to obtain a Rental Permit through PLI at $35.50/unit. Properties must pass inspection. Enforcement began June 2025 with $500/unit/month fines.

Code Section: Chapter 781 (Title 7, Article X)Total Fee: $35.50 per unit (registration + inspection)

Insurance Requirements

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh does not mandate liability insurance for STR operators by ordinance. Operators should maintain property and liability coverage as platform host protection has exclusions.

City Requirement: No mandatory minimum liability insuranceRecommendation: Dedicated STR liability policy advised

Night Caps

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh does not impose any annual night caps or maximum rental day limits on short-term rental properties. Operators may rent their properties year-round without a cap on the number of nights per year.

Annual Night Cap: None -- no maximum rental nightsOwner-Occupied Distinction: None -- same rules for all STRs

Parking Rules

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh has no STR-specific parking mandates. Guests follow standard residential parking rules. Some neighborhoods require residential parking permits unavailable to short-term guests.

STR-Specific Rules: None -- standard residential parking appliesRPP Zones: Guest vehicles may not qualify for permits

Occupancy Limits

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh has no STR-specific occupancy caps. Maximum occupancy follows the IPMC based on room sizes and egress. No per-bedroom guest limits exist citywide.

STR-Specific Caps: None -- no per-bedroom guest limitsStandard: International Property Maintenance Code

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh STR guests must comply with the city noise ordinance under Chapter 601 and Title Nine Article XVI. Quiet hours run from 10 PM to 6 AM with residential limits of 55 dB(A) nighttime and 65 dB(A) daytime.

Quiet Hours: 10 PM to 6 AMNighttime Limit: 55 dB(A) in residential zones

Permit Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh's 2021 STR ordinance requires every short-term rental host to register with the Department of Permits, Licenses, and Inspections (PLI), pay an annual license fee, and post the license number on every listing. STRs in residential zones must be the operator's primary residence; investment STRs are limited to mixed-use and commercial districts.

: :

Taxes & Fees

Some Restrictions

STR operators in Pittsburgh must collect and remit: 6% PA Hotel Occupancy Tax (72 P.S. Β§7209), plus 7% Allegheny County Hotel Room Rental Tax. Total effective STR tax rate: approximately 13%. Booking platforms (Airbnb, VRBO) collect and remit the PA state tax as booking agents.

PA State Tax: 6% (72 P.S. Β§7209)Allegheny County Tax: 7% county hotel room rental tax

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

Pittsburgh backyard fires are limited to 3x3x2 feet, at least 15 feet from structures, burning only clean wood or gas. All fires banned on ACHD Air Quality Action Days.

Maximum Size: 3 ft x 3 ft x 2 ftMinimum Distance: 15 feet from structures/property lines

Smoke Detectors

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires interconnected smoke alarms on every level, inside each bedroom, and outside sleeping areas. CO alarms are required near fuel-burning appliances and attached garages under the PA UCC.

Smoke Alarms: Every bedroom, outside sleeping areas, every levelPower Source: Hardwired with battery backup (new construction)

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh has no wildfire hazard zones or WUI designation. Allegheny County is classified as low wildfire risk by PA DCNR. Standard fire prevention codes apply citywide.

Wildfire Designation: None -- low risk per PA DCNRWUI Program: Not applicable in Pittsburgh

Brush Clearance

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh has no wildfire-specific brush clearance rules. Property owners must keep yards free of excessive vegetation and debris under the IPMC property maintenance code.

Brush Clearance Mandate: None -- no wildfire-specific requirementProperty Maintenance: IPMC requires yards free of excessive vegetation

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh follows the International Fire Code and NFPA 58 as adopted under Pennsylvania UCC, capping residential propane cylinder storage and requiring permits for larger tanks, with Pittsburgh Bureau of Fire enforcing on-site.

Code basis: IFC plus NFPA 58State adoption: 35 P.S. Β§7210

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Recreational fire pits using clean-burning fuel (wood, propane, natural gas) are permitted in Pittsburgh under ACHD rules. Fires must be at least 15 feet from structures, neighboring properties, and public access areas. Fires must be extinguished by midnight. Earthen pits and burn barrels are not approved containers.

Permitted: Clean wood, propane, or natural gasDistance: 15 feet from structures and property lines

Fireworks

Some Restrictions

PA Act 74 of 2022 allows consumer fireworks for residents 18+. Pittsburgh follows state law: consumer fireworks legal but must be 150 feet from any occupied structure. Municipalities may restrict hours to 10 PM–10 AM (except July 4 and Dec 31 until 1 AM). Large displays require city permit and fire dept. inspection.

Consumer Fireworks: Legal for residents 18+ β€” PA Act 74/2022Distance: 150 ft from any occupied structure

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Allegheny County Health Department (ACHD) regulations prohibit most open burning in Pittsburgh and surrounding municipalities. Only clean wood, propane, or natural gas may be burned with negligible air contaminant contribution. Permitted ACHD exceptions: ceremonies, disease management, firefighting training.

Open Burning: Prohibited β€” ACHD air quality regulationsAllowed Fuel: Clean wood, propane, or natural gas only

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.

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh regulates driveway construction, paving materials, and parking on unpaved surfaces. The Zoning Code sets standards for driveway width, curb cuts, and surface requirements.

Min Width: 10 feet at curb lineMax Width: 24 feet at curb line

EV Charging

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh encourages EV charging through zoning incentives and a city facilities make-ready ordinance. Residential charger installation requires an electrical permit but generally no zoning variance.

Home Chargers: Electrical permit required from PLIZoning Variance: Not needed for residential Level 1/Level 2

Overnight Parking

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh restricts overnight parking of oversized vehicles on residential streets between 10 PM and 7 AM. Standard cars may park overnight on most streets, but RPP zones require permits.

Oversized Ban: No oversized vehicles on residential streets 10 PM-7 AMOversized Defined: Over 22 feet long or 8 feet wide

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh restricts overnight parking of commercial vehicles in residential zones. Vehicles over 17,001 lbs GVW or exceeding size thresholds under Chapter 541 are prohibited from street parking in many residential areas. Commercial vehicle means a vehicle designed to transport passengers or property commercially.

Code Section: Chapter 541 β€” size/weight restrictionsGVW Limit: Restrictions apply above 17,001 lbs

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh administers on-street parking through the Pittsburgh Parking Authority. Residential Permit Parking (RPP) districts require an annual permit to park beyond posted time limits. Meters typically operate Monday–Saturday, 8 AM–6 PM. Snow emergency routes must be cleared during declared snow events.

: :

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh restricts RV, boat, and trailer storage on residential properties. Front yard storage is generally prohibited. Side/rear yard storage may be allowed with screening. Large recreational vehicles are also subject to the commercial vehicle height/weight restrictions under Chapter 541.

Front Yard: RV/boat/trailer storage prohibitedSide/Rear Yard: May be allowed β€” screening may be required

Abandoned Vehicles

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh prohibits storing abandoned, inoperable, or unregistered vehicles on public streets or visible on private property. Vehicles are defined as abandoned per 75 Pa. C.S. Β§102. Abandoned vehicles may be tagged and towed after notice. PA state law (75 Pa. C.S. Β§7311.1) also requires property owners to report abandoned vehicles.

Definition: Per 75 Pa. C.S. Β§102 β€” abandoned = intent to abandonProhibited: Public street storage and visible private property storage

🧱 Fence Regulations

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

Material Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh allows fences of iron, wood, vinyl, stone, or brick. Barbed wire and razor wire are banned in residential areas. Chain-link with slat inserts is limited to GI industrial zones.

Allowed Materials: Iron, wood, vinyl, stone, brickProhibited: Barbed wire and razor wire in residential areas

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires a zoning permit for fences up to 6 feet and both zoning and building permits for taller fences. Floodplain fences need a building permit at any height. Apply via OneStopPGH.

Under 6 Feet: Zoning permit onlyOver 6 Feet: Zoning + building permit required

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires a barrier at least 48 inches high around all pools 24 inches or deeper. Gates must be self-closing and self-latching with latches at least 54 inches above grade.

Minimum Height: 48 inches (4 feet)Pool Depth Trigger: 24 inches or more

Neighbor Fence Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires the finished side of a fence to face outward toward neighbors. Fences on shared property lines are co-owned with equal maintenance responsibility. Walls over 40 feet need visual relief.

Finished Side: Must face outward toward neighbor/public wayShared Boundary: Co-owned with equal maintenance responsibility

Fence Requirements

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh limits front-yard fences to 4 feet (open/ornamental only) and rear/side fences to 6 feet. Corner-lot fences within 20 feet of an intersection must stay under 3.5 feet for visibility.

Front/Street-Side Yard: 4 feet maximum, open and ornamental onlyRear/Interior Side Yard: 6 feet maximum, may be opaque

Retaining Walls

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires a building permit for retaining walls over 4 feet from lowest grade to top. Walls supporting a surcharge need a permit at any height. Engineered drawings required for taller walls.

Permit Threshold: Over 4 feet requires a building permitUnder 4 Feet: Exempt unless supporting surcharge

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh limits residential fence height to 3.5 feet in the front yard and 6 feet in side and rear yards under Zoning Code Β§912.04. Fences taller than 6 feet require a permit. Barbed wire and razor wire are prohibited in residential districts. Corner-lot sight triangles must remain clear.

: :

πŸ” Animal Ordinances

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

Livestock

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh permits 2 dehorned goats and up to 5 chickens/ducks on lots of 2,000+ sq ft. Horses, cattle, and pigs are prohibited in residential zones. $70 zoning permit required.

Goats: 2 dehorned on 2,000+ sq ft lotsPoultry: 5 chickens/ducks on 2,000+ sq ft

Chickens & Livestock

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh allows up to 5 chickens or ducks on lots of 2,000+ sq ft, plus 1 bird per extra 1,000 sq ft. Roosters prohibited. Two dehorned goats permitted. $70 zoning permit required.

Hens Allowed: Up to 5 on 2,000+ sq ft lotAdditional Birds: +1 per extra 1,000 sq ft

Microchipping

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh does not legally require pet microchipping, but Animal Care and Control microchips every adopted animal and uses chip scans as the primary tool for reuniting strays with owners citywide.

Citywide mandate: Not requiredShelter practice: Microchipped on adoption

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh Title 5 caps the number of dogs and cats kept at a single residence to prevent nuisance conditions, with higher counts treated as a kennel requiring zoning approval under Title 9.

Code Title: Title 5 Public WelfareState Dog Law trigger: 26+ dogs per year

Animal Hoarding

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh treats animal hoarding as cruelty under Pennsylvania Title 18 Β§5532, with Animal Care and Control authorized to seize neglected animals and refer cases for prosecution by the Allegheny County District Attorney.

State statute: 18 Pa.C.S. Β§5532-5534Top charge: Felony 3 cruelty

Cat Rules

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh does not require a city cat license, but cats running at large can trigger Title 5 nuisance enforcement, and rabies vaccination is mandatory under Pennsylvania law for any cat over twelve weeks of age.

City license: Not requiredRabies law: 3 P.S. Β§455.1

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh shelters and rescue partners must sterilize dogs and cats before adoption under Pennsylvania's Dog Purchaser Protection Act and Pittsburgh Animal Care and Control adoption policy, with limited medical exemptions.

Trigger: Adoption from shelterOwner mandate: Not citywide

Pet Store Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh restricts retail pet stores from selling commercially bred dogs, cats, and rabbits, requiring sourcing from rescues or shelters under a 2021 ordinance modeled on Pennsylvania's evolving humane pet sale standards.

Allowed sources: Shelters and rescues onlySpecies covered: Dogs, cats, rabbits

Veterinary Clinic Zoning

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh Title 9 zoning permits veterinary clinics and animal hospitals in commercial and mixed-use districts subject to soundproofing, waste handling, and overnight boarding limits set through use-by-right or special exception review.

Zoning code: Title 9Outpatient: Often by right

Wildlife Rescue Permits

Some Restrictions

Wildlife rehabilitators operating in Pittsburgh must hold a Pennsylvania Game Commission permit under 34 Pa.C.S. Β§2901, with additional federal permits for migratory birds and Title 9 zoning compliance for rehabilitation facilities.

State permit: PGC under Β§2901Federal permit: USFWS for migratory birds

Bird Protection

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh participates in Lights Out programs to reduce migratory bird collisions, and federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act protections under 16 U.S.C. Β§703 apply to nest disturbance, supplemented by Game Commission rules for resident species.

Federal law: MBTA 16 U.S.C. Β§703Local program: Lights Out Pittsburgh

Coyote Management

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh follows Pennsylvania Game Commission coyote policy under 34 Pa.C.S. with no city bounty or trapping program, focusing on hazing, secured trash, and reporting aggressive behavior to the Game Commission for case-by-case action.

City program: No culling or bountyState authority: PA Game Commission

Pet Groomer Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh pet grooming businesses must hold a city business privilege license and comply with Title 9 zoning for animal services, with health and sanitation standards overseen by the Allegheny County Health Department.

Business license: City requiredState license: None for groomers

Wildlife Feeding

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh regulates wildlife feeding through City Code Ch. 636 and nuisance provisions. PA Game Commission regulation 58 Pa. Code 137.33 prohibits feeding certain wildlife statewide.

City Code: Ch. 636 (Wild Animals) + nuisance provisionsState Law: 58 Pa. Code 137.33

Beekeeping

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh permits up to 2 beehives on lots of at least 2,000 square feet (Chapter 473). State registration with the PA Department of Agriculture is required under PA Bee Law (3 P.S. Β§2101). If also keeping chickens/goats, the overall lot and combination rules apply.

Hive Limit: Up to 2 hives β€” minimum 2,000 sq ft lotCode Section: Chapter 473 β€” Use Regulations

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires all dogs on public property to be on a leash no longer than six feet, held by a person able to control the dog, under City Code Ch. 633. Off-leash use is permitted only at city-designated dog parks. PA Dog Law requires annual county licensing for dogs three months and older.

: :

Breed Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Pennsylvania does not have a statewide ban on breed-specific legislation. Some PA municipalities have breed restrictions, though they face legal challenges.

State Preemption: None - local BSL possibleDangerous Dogs: Behavior-based (state law)

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Pennsylvania prohibits possession of exotic wildlife without a PA Game Commission permit (34 Pa.C.S. Β§2961). Pittsburgh's zoning code (Chapter 473) restricts farm animals and does not permit exotic/wild animals as pets. Only domestic animals and permitted livestock listed in the Use Regulations are allowed.

State Law: 34 Pa.C.S. Β§2961 β€” PGC permit requiredProhibited: Lions, tigers, bears, wolves, coyotes without permit

🌿 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

Pittsburgh Code Section 609.08 permits Managed Natural Landscapes including native gardens, rain gardens, and pollinator gardens on private property. Owners must register with the city and maintain defined borders.

Code Section: Section 609.08 (effective Jan 2026)Registration: Required with city inspection department

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh Chapter 609 declares noxious weeds like ragweed and poison ivy a public nuisance. Owners must cut and destroy all noxious weeds. The city may abate after 5 days notice.

Named Weeds: Ragweed and poison ivy specifically citedNotice Period: 5 days to abate after notice

Tree Trimming

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh Code Chapter 483 requires property owners to trim private trees overhanging public streets or obstructing streetlights. The Department of Public Works enforces with 10 days notice.

Notice Period: Minimum 10 days to trimPermits: Required for public tree removal

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Rainwater harvesting is legal in Pittsburgh and encouraged under the city stormwater program. Pennsylvania has no restrictions on collecting rainwater for non-potable residential use.

Legal Status: Legal -- no state restrictions on non-potable usePermit Required: No permit for standard rain barrels

Artificial Turf

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh has no ordinance prohibiting artificial turf on residential properties. Synthetic lawns are permitted under zoning standards but may be subject to HOA restrictions.

City Ordinance: No specific prohibition on residential artificial turfStormwater: Title 13 may apply if drainage changes

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh Code Chapter 609 and IPMC 302.4 prohibit grass and weeds exceeding 10 inches. Owners must mow and remove cuttings. Noxious weeds like ragweed are separately banned.

Max Height: 10 inches (IPMC 302.4)Chapter 609 Limit: 6 inches for grass and weeds

Water Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh has no standing outdoor watering ban. PA Code Chapter 119 authorizes restrictions only during declared drought emergencies. Pgh2O may impose temporary limits during supply shortages.

Standing Restrictions: None -- no permanent watering banState Authority: 4 Pa. Code Chapter 119 (drought emergencies)

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires permits for tree work on publicly owned property (City Forester). Private property tree removal rules are less strict but historic districts and overlay zones may have additional requirements. Large tree removals near rights-of-way should be coordinated with Pittsburgh Public Works.

Public Trees: Written permit required from City ForesterPrivate Property: Generally no permit required

πŸ’Ό Home Business

Working from home is common, but running a business from home often requires permits and must comply with zoning restrictions on customer traffic and signage.

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh caps home occupation traffic at six one-way vehicle trips per 24-hour day. All business parking must be off-street.

Vehicle Trip Limit: 6 one-way trips per 24 hoursParking: Must be off-street

Home Daycare

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh exempts in-home child care for 3 or fewer children from home occupation rules. Larger operations need a PA DHS license and local Certificate of Occupancy.

Family Child Care: Up to 6 children -- 55 Pa. Code Ch. 3290Group Child Care: 7-12 children -- 55 Pa. Code Ch. 3280

Cottage Food Operations

Some Restrictions

PA regulates cottage food via its Limited Food Establishment program (Act 106). Pittsburgh producers register with PA Dept. of Agriculture for $35/year. No sales cap.

State Law: 3 Pa.C.S. Chapter 57 (Act 106)Registration Fee: $35 per year -- PA Dept. of Agriculture

Home Occupation Permits

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires a home occupation permit from the Division of Zoning and Development Review. Applicants must waive expansion rights under Chapter 912.

Permit Authority: Division of Zoning and Development ReviewExpansion Waiver: Required -- no right to expand beyond approved limits

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh prohibits signs for home occupations under Chapter 912. No visible evidence of a home business is allowed from the street or adjacent lots.

Signs Allowed: None -- specifically prohibitedException: Only signs required by separate licensing regulations

Zoning Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh Zoning Code Chapter 912 permits home occupations as accessory uses in residential districts. Only dwelling-unit residents may work in the business.

Code Section: Title 9, Chapter 912 (Accessory Uses)Employees: Only residents of the dwelling unit

🏊 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.

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh permits carports as accessory structures under Zoning Code Ch. 912. Carports go in rear and side yards only; front-yard placement is generally prohibited. Building permit required.

Permitted Yards: Rear and side yards onlyFront Yard: Generally prohibited (must meet primary setback)

Tiny Homes

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh allows permanent tiny homes on foundations meeting PA UCC standards. ADUs up to 1,000 sq ft and 15 ft tall are permitted. Minimum habitable room is 70 sq ft. Homes on wheels are not allowed.

Minimum Room Size: 70 sq ft under PA UCCADU Size Cap: 1,000 sq ft and 15 ft height

ADU Permits

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh permits Accessory Dwelling Units under Pittsburgh Code Title 9 (Zoning Code) Section 911.04.A.10. ADUs are permitted as accessory uses in many residential districts (R1A, R1D, R2, R3) subject to dimensional standards. Building, electrical, and plumbing permits are filed through the Department of Permits, Licenses and Inspections (PLI) via OneStopPGH.

Code Authority: Title 9 Sec. 911.04.A.10Permitted Districts: R1A, R1D, R2, R3

ADU Rental Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires a Rental Registration for all rental units including ADUs under Pittsburgh Code Title 7 Chapter 781. Pennsylvania Act 50 (1990) preempts municipal rent control. Short-term rentals are regulated under Title 7 Sec. 781.07 and require separate registration. ADU long-term rentals have no minimum lease term beyond Pennsylvania Landlord-Tenant Act defaults.

Rental Registration: Required (Title 7 Ch. 781)Rent Control: Preempted by PA Act 50

ADU Owner Occupancy

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh does not require owner-occupancy for ADUs under Title 9. The city imposes no residency restriction on ADU property owners. HOAs governed by the Pennsylvania Uniform Planned Community Act (UPCA, 68 Pa.C.S. 5101) may impose owner-occupancy through covenants. Most Pittsburgh row-house and bungalow lots are fee-simple without HOAs.

City Rule: No owner-occupancy requiredCondo Law: 68 Pa.C.S. Sec. 3101 (UCA)

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh does not impose municipal development impact fees on residential ADUs. Pennsylvania's Municipalities Planning Code Section 503-A authorizes impact fees only for transportation improvements, and Pittsburgh has not enacted any. PLI permit fees are scaled to construction value. Pittsburgh Water and Sewer Authority (PWSA) tap fees apply only if new water/sewer service is needed.

Municipal Impact Fees: NoneBuilding Permit: ~$7-$12 per $1,000 valuation

Shed Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires building permits for sheds and accessory structures. Permit fees range from $50–$300. Sheds, lean-tos, carports, playhouses, and similar structures are permitted accessory uses under Pittsburgh Zoning Code Chapter 912. Location, setback, and size restrictions apply per zoning district.

Permit Required: Yes β€” Pittsburgh PLI (fee $50–$300)Code Section: Chapter 912 β€” Accessory Uses and Structures

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Garage conversions to living space in Pittsburgh require a building permit and PA UCC compliance. Zoning approval (Certificate of Occupancy) is required if the use changes to habitable space. Additional parking must be considered when a garage is removed from its parking function.

Permit: Building permit required β€” PA UCCCertificate of Occupancy: Required before occupying converted space

ADU Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh allows ADUs in ADU Overlay Districts and certain residential zones. As of December 2024, draft ADU legislation was before the Planning Commission to expand ADU rights. Minimum lot size of approximately 10,000 sq ft commonly required. PA UCC permits and inspections required. ADUs must connect to public water/sewer.

Permitted: ADU Overlay Districts β€” by rightLot Size: ~10,000 sq ft minimum in many zones

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

Inflatable Display Rules

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh has no city ordinance regulating residential inflatable holiday displays. Size, lighting, and blower noise are governed by HOA and condo covenants under PA UCA and UPCA. Pittsburgh Code Title 6 Chapter 601 noise limits (Noise Control) could theoretically apply to blower motors but are rarely enforced for seasonal decorations. Best-display neighborhoods include Mount Lebanon-adjacent areas and Brookline.

City Rule: None on inflatablesNoise Limit: 55 dBA nighttime residential

Holiday Light Rules

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh has no municipal ordinance regulating residential holiday lights. Display timing, brightness, and animation are governed by HOA and condo covenants under PA UCA (68 Pa.C.S. 3101) and UPCA (68 Pa.C.S. 5101). Historic district properties may have informal neighborhood association guidelines. Pittsburgh's iconic Light Up Night is a city celebration, not a regulation of private displays.

City Ordinance: None on holiday lightsReal Governance: HOA / condo covenants

Lawn Ornament Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh has no city ordinance restricting lawn ornaments on residential property. Title 1003 Property Maintenance Code requires general property upkeep but does not address ornament content. Historic district properties (Mexican War Streets, Manchester, Allegheny West, others) may have Historic Review Commission appearance review for permanent installations. HOA and condo covenants commonly regulate ornaments.

City Rule: None on ornamentsHistoric Review: Permanent installations (16+ districts)

🌍 Environmental Rules

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh adopted Climate Action Plan 3.0 in 2018 committing the city to carbon-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, with 2030 interim targets covering buildings, transportation, energy, and waste sectors citywide.

Carbon neutral by: 2050Interim target: 50% reduction by 2030

Vehicle Idling Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Pennsylvania's Diesel-Powered Motor Vehicle Idling Act and Pittsburgh enforcement limit diesel truck and bus idling to five minutes per hour, with school-zone and residential adjacency restrictions enforced by Pittsburgh Police and ACHD.

Idle limit: 5 minutes per hourVehicle weight trigger: Over 10,001 pounds

Gas Leaf Blower Ban

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh has not banned gas-powered leaf blowers but restricts use through general noise ordinance decibel limits and quiet-hours rules. Council has discussed phase-outs but no city-wide gasoline equipment ban currently exists.

Gas blower banned: No, restricted onlyNoise limit: 75 dBA at property line

Sustainable Procurement

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh's sustainable procurement policy requires city departments to prioritize Energy Star, recycled-content, low-VOC, and locally sourced goods aligned with Climate Action Plan 3.0 carbon-neutrality goals across municipal operations and contracted services.

Recycled paper minimum: 30% post-consumerEquipment standard: Energy Star where available

Cool Roof Requirements

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh encourages cool roofs via the 2018 International Energy Conservation Code adopted statewide and local stormwater credits. There is no mandatory cool-roof reflectivity standard for low-rise residential, but commercial roofs face IECC compliance.

Climate zone: 5AEnergy code: 2018 IECC

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh enforces stormwater management regulations through its municipal code and the Pittsburgh Water and Sewer Authority (PWSA). New development and significant redevelopment must implement on-site stormwater controls including retention, detention, or infiltration systems. The city is currently updating its stormwater code to align with green infrastructure and resiliency goals through the Stormwater Code and Ordinance Review process.

Authority: Pittsburgh Water and Sewer Authority (PWSA)Code Reference: Zoning Code Title 13 β€” Stormwater Management

Grading & Drainage

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires grading permits for earthwork and land-disturbing activities. The city's steep terrain and hillside geography make proper grading and drainage critical. The zoning code includes hillside development regulations requiring geotechnical review for construction on steep slopes. Grading plans must be submitted to the Department of Permits, Licenses and Inspections.

Permit Required: Grading permit from PLITerrain: Steep hillsides require special attention

Coastal Development

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh is an inland city at the confluence of the Allegheny, Monongahela, and Ohio Rivers with no ocean coastline. Coastal development regulations do not apply. Riverfront development is regulated through the city's floodplain management ordinance, zoning overlays, and riverfront development standards.

Applicability: Not applicable β€” inland river cityRivers: Allegheny, Monongahela, and Ohio

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh participates in the National Flood Insurance Program and enforces floodplain development regulations for properties in FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Areas. The three rivers and numerous streams present significant flood risks. Structures in flood zones must be elevated above base flood elevation and a floodplain development permit is required.

NFIP Participant: Yes β€” National Flood Insurance ProgramFlood Sources: Allegheny, Monongahela, Ohio Rivers and tributaries

Erosion Control

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires erosion and sediment control measures on construction sites under its grading and excavation regulations. Projects disturbing one acre or more must obtain coverage under Pennsylvania's NPDES General Permit for Stormwater Discharges (PAG-02) and implement an Erosion and Sediment Control Plan approved by the Allegheny County Conservation District.

Threshold: 1 acre triggers state permit requirementsState Permit: PA NPDES PAG-02

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Buffer Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Pennsylvania Medical Marijuana Act requires medical dispensaries to sit at least 1,000 feet from schools and daycare centers; Pittsburgh zoning Title 9 layers additional residential and park buffers, sharply limiting eligible parcels citywide.

State buffer: 1,000 feet from schoolsCity overlay: Residential + park buffers

Cannabis Delivery Rules

Some Restrictions

Pennsylvania allows licensed medical dispensaries to deliver cannabis directly to certified patients and caregivers; Pittsburgh follows state rules without local additions, and only registered patients with valid ID cards may receive deliveries.

Authority: PA DOH MMA rulesRecipients: Registered patients/caregivers

Personal Cultivation Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Pennsylvania's Medical Marijuana Act bans home cultivation by patients; all medical cannabis must come from licensed dispensaries, and Pittsburgh cannot legalize personal grows because state law fully preempts the question regardless of Ord. 2015-2070.

State rule: No home cultivationSource required: Licensed dispensary

Commercial Cannabis Zoning

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh zoning Title 9, Chapter 911, designates which districts permit medical dispensaries and grower-processor facilities; most dispensaries fall under Local Neighborhood Commercial or Urban Industrial districts subject to special exception review.

Code: Title 9 Ch. 911Process: Special exception ZBA

Home Cultivation

Heavy Restrictions

Pennsylvania has not legalized recreational cannabis. Home cultivation of cannabis is illegal in Pennsylvania for both recreational and medical purposes. Medical marijuana patients may purchase from licensed dispensaries but cannot grow their own plants. Possession of cannabis without a medical card remains a criminal offense under state law.

Recreational: Illegal in PennsylvaniaMedical: Legal with PA medical card β€” no home grow

Dispensary Zoning

Heavy Restrictions

Pennsylvania regulates medical marijuana dispensary locations through the Department of Health. Dispensaries must be licensed by the state and comply with local zoning regulations. Pittsburgh's zoning code addresses where medical marijuana dispensaries may locate, with buffer zones from schools and other sensitive uses. Only state-licensed operators may open dispensaries.

State Authority: PA Department of HealthLicense: State dispensary license required

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

🏚️ Property Maintenance

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh regulates trash container storage and placement through its property maintenance code. Bins must be stored out of public view when not set out for collection. The city provides curbside collection and residents must follow placement guidelines for their designated collection day.

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

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires owners of vacant lots and properties to maintain them free of weeds, rubbish, and debris. Overgrown vegetation must be kept below specified heights. The city may issue citations and abate nuisance conditions on unmaintained vacant properties, with costs assessed to the property owner as a lien.

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

Garage Sale Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh allows residential garage and yard sales subject to general property maintenance and zoning regulations. Sales must be conducted on private property and items may not be displayed on sidewalks or in the public right-of-way. Frequent sales may be treated as unpermitted commercial activity in residential zones.

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

Property Blight

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh enforces property maintenance and anti-blight regulations through its Department of Permits, Licenses and Inspections. Properties must be maintained free of rubbish, overgrown vegetation, and structural deterioration. The city uses its condemned structures program for severely blighted buildings and may pursue demolition of unsafe structures.

Enforcement: Department of PLIProhibited: Rubbish, overgrown vegetation, structural deterioration

Snow & Sidewalk Clearing

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh property owners must remove snow and ice from sidewalks within 24 hours of the storm ending. The cleared path must run the full sidewalk width. Where ice cannot be removed, salt, sand, or ash must be applied. Code enforcement issues citations to owners who fail to comply.

: :

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh's Title 6 Section 659 prohibits landlords from refusing applicants because their income comes from Section 8 vouchers, Social Security, veterans benefits, or other lawful non-wage sources, expanding fair-housing protections beyond federal law.

Ordinance: Title 6 Β§659Covers: Vouchers and benefits

Section 8 Voucher Acceptance

Some Restrictions

The Housing Authority of the City of Pittsburgh administers Housing Choice Vouchers funded by HUD, inspecting units, executing HAP contracts, and partnering with city enforcement on habitability and source-of-income protections.

Administrator: HACPFunded by: HUD

Security Deposit Rules

Some Restrictions

Pennsylvania's Landlord and Tenant Act caps security deposits at two months' rent during the first year and one month's rent thereafter, with mandatory escrow interest and a thirty-day refund window after lease termination.

Year one cap: Two months' rentAfter year one: One month's rent

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh's 2022 Right-to-Counsel pilot funds free legal representation for low-income tenants facing eviction, deterring landlord harassment, illegal lockouts, and retaliatory filings that would otherwise pressure tenants to leave.

Program year: Established 2022Eligible: Low-income tenants

Relocation Assistance

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh has no broad municipal relocation-assistance ordinance for displaced renters, though federal Uniform Relocation Act payments may apply when government-funded projects or condemnations cause displacement of lawful tenants.

City mandate: None citywideFederal: URA may apply

No-Fault Evictions

Some Restrictions

Pennsylvania's Landlord and Tenant Act, not a Pittsburgh ordinance, controls no-fault tenancy terminations, requiring written notice tied to lease length and a magisterial district court judgment before any lockout.

Statute: 68 P.S. Β§250.501Short lease notice: 15 days

Pass-Through Charges

Few Restrictions

Pennsylvania court rulings have effectively preempted local rent regulation, so Pittsburgh has no formal pass-through framework, and landlords negotiate utility, tax, and capital pass-throughs through the lease itself.

Rent control: Effectively preemptedPass-throughs: Lease-driven

Rent Control

Few Restrictions

Pennsylvania state law preempts local rent control ordinances. Pittsburgh does not have rent control or rent stabilization regulations. Landlords may set and increase rents at market rates with proper notice. The Pennsylvania Landlord and Tenant Act governs landlord-tenant relations statewide.

Rent Control: Not allowed β€” state preemptionState Law: PA Landlord and Tenant Act (Act 1951-20)

Just Cause Eviction

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh does not have a just cause eviction ordinance. Pennsylvania landlord-tenant law allows landlords to terminate tenancies for various reasons including non-payment and lease violations. Month-to-month tenancies may be terminated with proper notice without stating a specific cause. Evictions must follow Pennsylvania's judicial process through the local magistrate court.

Just Cause Required: No β€” not required in PANotice Period: 15-30 days depending on tenancy type

Rental Registration

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh launched its Residential Housing Rental Permit Program in December 2024 through the Department of Permits, Licenses and Inspections. All rental properties must be registered with the city. The program is designed to ensure rental properties meet basic health and safety standards through regular inspections and compliance verification.

Program: Residential Housing Rental Permit ProgramLaunch Date: December 19, 2024

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh provides weekly curbside trash and recycling collection through the Department of Public Works, Environmental Services Division. Residents receive city-issued bins. 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: Environmental Services Division

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires trash and recycling bins to be placed at the curb with lids closed on collection day. Bins must not block sidewalks or create obstructions. After pickup, bins must be returned to their storage location. The city's narrow streets and steep terrain may affect placement options in some neighborhoods.

Placement: At curb with lids closedObstruction: Must not block sidewalks

Recycling Requirements

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh provides curbside single-stream recycling collection. Residents should separate recyclable materials including paper, cardboard, plastics, glass, and metal cans into the recycling bin. Pennsylvania's Act 101 requires municipalities with populations over 10,000 to provide curbside recycling collection.

State Mandate: PA Act 101 β€” mandatory recyclingService: Single-stream curbside collection

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh offers bulk item pickup services through its Environmental Services Division. Residents can request collection of large items such as furniture, appliances, and mattresses. Items must be placed at the curb on the scheduled date. Illegal dumping is a violation subject to fines and prosecution.

Service: Bulk item pickup availableProvider: Environmental Services Division

🚁 Drone Rules

πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors

πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door

πŸŒ™ Curfew Laws

πŸ“ Building Setbacks & Zoning

🌳 Tree Protection

Urban Forest Equity

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh's Urban Forest Master Plan and CAP 3.0 prioritize tree canopy investment in low-canopy and environmental-justice neighborhoods such as Hill District, Hazelwood, and Homewood, partnering with Tree Pittsburgh and the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy.

Plan: Urban Forest Master PlanEquity neighborhoods: Hill District, Hazelwood, Homewood

Tree Removal Permits

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh regulates tree removal on city property and in the public right-of-way through its shade tree program. Street tree removal requires city approval through the Department of Public Works. Private property tree removal may be subject to conditions during development review, particularly for significant trees.

Street Trees: City approval required for removalPrivate Trees: May be conditioned during development

Tree Replacement Requirements

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh may require tree replacement when street trees are removed during development or infrastructure projects. The Department of Public Works oversees replacement requirements. TreePittsburgh partners with the city on tree planting initiatives to expand the urban canopy.

Requirement: May be required for removed street treesAuthority: Department of Public Works

Heritage & Protected Trees

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh does not have a formal heritage or landmark tree ordinance. Large and mature trees may receive consideration during development review. The city's urban forestry program and TreePittsburgh nonprofit promote tree preservation and canopy expansion but do not designate individual heritage trees.

Formal Program: No formal heritage tree ordinanceDevelopment Review: Trees may be considered

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

🏘️ HOA Rules

Architectural Review

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh HOAs may require architectural review for exterior modifications under their declaration. PA law (68 Pa.C.S. Ch. 53) requires that review criteria be published and applied uniformly.

Authority: Established by recorded declarationResponse Time: Typically 30-45 days per bylaws

Assessment & Dues

Some Restrictions

PA law (68 Pa.C.S. Ch. 53) governs HOA assessments in Pittsburgh. Associations may levy regular and special assessments, and unpaid assessments create a statutory lien that can lead to foreclosure.

Lien Priority: After tax liens and first mortgagesLien Scope: Unpaid dues plus fees, interest, and attorney costs

CC&R Enforcement

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh HOAs enforce CC&Rs through violation notices, fines, and statutory liens under PA's UPCA (68 Pa.C.S. Ch. 53). Due process is required before imposing penalties.

Due Process: Written notice and hearing before finesFine Authority: Must be authorized by declaration or rules

Board Procedures

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh HOA board procedures are governed by PA's Uniform Planned Community Act (68 Pa.C.S. Ch. 53). State law mandates open meetings, annual meetings, quorum rules, and election procedures.

Governing Law: 68 Pa.C.S. Ch. 53 (UPCA) / Ch. 33 (Condo Act)Annual Meeting: At least one meeting of unit owners per year

Dispute Resolution

Some Restrictions

PA encourages but does not mandate mediation for HOA disputes. The Attorney General has UPCA oversight. Pittsburgh residents may use Allegheny County courts to resolve conflicts.

State Oversight: PA Attorney General enforces UPCACourt: Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh operates a free Rodent Baiting Program and enforces pest control through its property maintenance code. Landlords must maintain pest-free rentals under PA habitability law.

Free Service: Rodent Baiting Program (2x/year per property)Landlord Duty: Must maintain pest-free rental units

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh requires a Construction Staging Permit from DOMI for scaffolding in the public right-of-way. Scaffolds must comply with OSHA standards. A compliance inspection is required.

Permit: Construction Staging Permit from DOMIInsurance: General liability required per ROW Fee Schedule

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh enforces the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code IBC and IRC sprinkler triggers, requiring NFPA 13 or 13R systems for most new multi-family, high-rise, and commercial buildings under Title 10 plan review.

Code basis: PA UCC IBC IRCMulti-family: Sprinklers usually required

Door Locking Hardware

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh follows IBC Chapter 10 egress hardware rules under Title 10, requiring single-action unlatching, panic hardware on assembly and educational uses, and prohibitions on chains or thumb-turn locks that block escape.

Code: IBC Chapter 10Single action: Required

Green Building Code

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh advances green building through Title 10 energy provisions tied to Pennsylvania UCC IECC adoption and the city's Climate Action Plan 3.0, with city-funded projects subject to higher LEED-equivalent benchmarks.

Code basis: IECC via PA UCCCity target: Carbon neutral 2050

Lead Paint

Heavy Restrictions

Pittsburgh has strict lead safety rules under Code Chapter 782. All pre-1978 rental dwellings must undergo lead hazard inspections. PA Act 36 requires seller/landlord disclosure.

Local Law: Pittsburgh Code Chapter 782 (Lead Safety)Applies To: All pre-1978 residential rental dwellings

Elevator Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Elevator safety in Pittsburgh is regulated by PA state law under 34 Pa. Code Chapter 405. The Department of Labor and Industry has sole jurisdiction over inspections and certificates.

Authority: PA Dept. of Labor and Industry (L&I)Certificate: Required for all elevators; valid 24 or 48 months

🚢 Sidewalk & Pedestrian Rules

🚬 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

Allegheny County Health Department inspects Pittsburgh food facilities under Article III rules; consolidated 2024 absorption of city Health Department centralized food-safety enforcement countywide and posts inspection results online for public review.

Authority: Allegheny County Health DepartmentRule: Article III Food Safety

Rodent Control

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh property owners must keep premises free of rats and harborage; ACHD and Bureau of Building Inspection enforce abatement, requiring baiting, trash containment, and structural repairs in older Pittsburgh neighborhoods like Bloomfield, Lawrenceville, and the Hill District.

Authority: ACHD + city BBIOwner duty: Eliminate harborage

Bed-Bug Rules

Some Restrictions

Pennsylvania landlord-tenant law plus Pittsburgh property maintenance code make rental owners responsible for bed bug remediation; tenants must report infestations promptly, and ACHD investigates habitability complaints in multi-unit buildings citywide.

Landlord duty: Professional treatmentTenant duty: Report and cooperate

Syringe Disposal

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh supports syringe service programs through Prevention Point Pittsburgh, and ACHD provides sharps disposal kiosks; residents must place used syringes in rigid containers, never loose trash, to protect sanitation workers and the public.

Exchange program: Prevention Point PittsburghContainer: Rigid, sealed, labeled

Food Handler Certification

Some Restrictions

ACHD Article III requires every Pittsburgh food facility to designate a Certified Food Protection Manager on staff during operating hours; certification comes from ANSI-accredited programs like ServSafe and must be renewed every five years.

Authority: ACHD Article IIIRequirement: 1 CFPM per facility

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

Massage Establishments

Some Restrictions

Massage establishments in Pittsburgh require a city business license, individual practitioner certification through Pennsylvania's State Board of Massage Therapy, and zoning compliance under Title 9. Anti-trafficking inspections and posting requirements apply to all bodywork businesses.

State license: PA Board Massage TherapyTraining hours: 600 minimum

Secondhand Dealers

Some Restrictions

Secondhand goods dealers and pawnbrokers in Pittsburgh must hold a Pennsylvania pawnbroker license and a city business privilege license, plus report transactions through Pittsburgh Bureau of Police's electronic database to support stolen-property recovery.

State act: Pawnbrokers License ActReporting: daily electronic upload

Tobacco Retail License

Some Restrictions

Tobacco retailers in Pittsburgh must hold a Pennsylvania Department of Revenue cigarette dealer license and a Pittsburgh business privilege license. The Allegheny County Health Department also requires tobacco-permit registration with annual inspections and youth-access compliance checks.

State license: PA Department of RevenueCity license: business privilege

Adult Entertainment

Heavy Restrictions

Adult entertainment businesses in Pittsburgh require a special-use zoning approval under Title 9 plus a city business license. Buffer distances from schools, churches, parks, and residential districts apply, and the city enforces strict signage and operational standards.

Zoning code: Title 9 special exceptionBuffer distance: 500-1,000 feet typical

🚷 Public Conduct

Outdoor Smoking Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Smoking is prohibited inside virtually all Pittsburgh workplaces, restaurants, and public accommodations under Pennsylvania's Clean Indoor Air Act of 2008. Pittsburgh layers local rules covering city parks, playgrounds, and outdoor stadium plazas.

State law: PA Clean Indoor Air Act 2008Indoor ban scope: workplaces and restaurants

Public Alcohol Use

Some Restrictions

Pennsylvania prohibits open alcoholic containers in public, and Pittsburgh Code reinforces the ban on streets, sidewalks, parks, and city right-of-way. Limited exceptions exist for licensed sidewalk cafes, parade-route permits, and Strip District festival districts.

State statute: 47 P.S. 4-491Public drinking: prohibited

Aggressive Panhandling

Some Restrictions

Pittsburgh prohibits aggressive panhandling under Pittsburgh Code Title 6, banning solicitation that involves physical contact, following, blocking, or soliciting near ATMs, transit stops, and outdoor cafes. Passive sign-holding remains constitutionally protected speech.

Code section: Title 6 Ch 601Banned conduct: touching, blocking, following

Loud Party Ordinance

Some Restrictions

Loud parties violate Pittsburgh's noise ordinance and may trigger social-host liability when underage drinking occurs. Police can issue citations, disperse gatherings, and bill repeat-offender properties for response costs in Oakland and South Side districts.

Decibel threshold: 10 dB over ambientQuiet hours: 10pm-7am weekdays

Loitering Rules

Few Restrictions

Pittsburgh's loitering ordinance applies narrowly after Pennsylvania and federal court rulings struck down vague public-presence laws. The current rule targets specific conduct like drug-market loitering and obstructing pedestrian flow rather than mere standing in public.

Code section: Title 6 conduct chapterConduct required: drug, prostitution, obstruction

πŸ’° Local Taxes & Fees

Overall: What to Expect in Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh has 208 ordinances on file across 43 categories. Of these, 46 are rated permissive, 128 moderate, and 34 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Pittsburgh 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.

Also Moving Nearby?