Moving to Rogers, AR?
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 Rogers across 18 categories and 100 specific rules we track.
๐ Noise OrdinancesFull noise ordinances guide โ
Noise rules affect everything from weekend parties to lawn care schedules. Quiet hours, construction restrictions, and barking dog limits vary widely between cities.
Quiet Hours
Some RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas regulates nighttime noise through Chapter 18, Article II of its Municipal Code. Radios and music devices are prohibited from disturbing others between midnight and 7:00 a.m., and yelling, shouting, whistling, and similar noise is barred from 10:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m.
Amplified Music & Events
Some RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas regulates amplified music, loudspeakers, and public-address systems under Chapter 18, Article II, Sec. 18-26. Such devices require a police-chief permit and are restricted to 8:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. in residential zones and 8:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. (until midnight Saturday) in commercial zones.
Construction Hours
Few RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas does not publish a single fixed citywide construction start/stop time in its noise ordinance. Construction noise is governed by the general prohibition on unreasonable noise (Sec. 18-24), with a specific permit rule for work near schools, churches, hospitals, and courts (Sec. 18-26).
Barking Dogs
Some RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas regulates barking dogs and animal noise through its animal code. Under Rogers City Code 6-102, an owner is responsible for preventing excessive noise emanating from their premises and becoming a nuisance. The noise ordinance (Sec. 18-26) also prohibits keeping any animal that disturbs the comfort or repose of others.
Leaf Blower Rules
Few RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas has no leaf-blower-specific ordinance. Leaf blowers and similar yard equipment fall under the general noise ordinance (Chapter 18, Article II, Sec. 18-24), which prohibits unreasonably loud, disturbing, and unnecessary noise, rather than any device-specific time or decibel rule.
Vehicle Noise
Some RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas restricts vehicle noise through its noise ordinance (Sec. 18-26): sound from a motor vehicle that is plainly audible from 30 feet or more is prohibited, as is sounding a horn except as a danger signal. Arkansas state law (A.C.A. 27-37-601) separately requires working mufflers and bans excessive-noise exhaust devices.
Decibel Limits
Some RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas does not set numeric decibel (dBA) limits in its noise ordinance. Instead, it uses a 'plainly audible' distance standard: sound from a vehicle audible 30 feet away, or from private property audible 50 feet beyond the boundary line, can establish a violation under Chapter 18, Article II, Sec. 18-26.
Outdoor Music
Some RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas regulates outdoor and live music under its noise ordinance (Chapter 18, Article II). Amplified sound requires a police-chief permit and is limited by zone hours, but the city amended the code to exempt qualifying music venues such as the Arkansas Music Pavilion (AMP) when their design limits noise spread.
Industrial Noise
Some RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas does not have a dedicated industrial-noise chapter with separate dBA limits by zone. Industrial and commercial noise is governed by the general noise prohibition (Sec. 18-24), the 'plainly audible' property standard (50 feet, Sec. 18-26), and zoning controls within the Municipal Code.
Aircraft Noise
Few RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas does not regulate aircraft-in-flight noise. Aircraft operations and noise are controlled by the federal government through the FAA and the Noise Control Act; under U.S. Supreme Court precedent (City of Burbank v. Lockheed, 1973), local ordinances cannot restrict flight operations or in-flight noise.
๐ Short-Term RentalsFull short-term rentals guide โ
If you plan to rent out your home on Airbnb or VRBO - even occasionally - you need to know the local STR rules before listing.
Permit Requirements
Some RestrictionsRogers, Arkansas does not have a standalone short-term rental ordinance, but a vacation rental is treated as a business. To operate legally an owner must obtain a City of Rogers business license, pass a Certificate of Occupancy fire and life-safety inspection by the Community Risk Reduction Division, and register to collect the city's 3% lodging tax.
Registration Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers short-term rental owners must register their property with the Rogers Advertising and Promotion Commission and file monthly through the GovOS (formerly MUNIRevs) online system. Registration began January 1, 2022, when the City Council expanded the 3% lodging tax to cover short-term rentals. Owners also complete the city's Vacation Home Rentals business information process.
Taxes & Fees
Some RestrictionsRogers levies a 3% city lodging (advertising and promotion) tax on short-term rental stays under 30 days, applied to STRs since January 1, 2022. Combined with city and county sales tax, the 6.5% Arkansas state sales tax, and the 2% state tourism tax, a guest pays roughly 14.5% total. A $25 Certificate of Occupancy fee also applies.
Primary-Residence-Only Rule
Few RestrictionsRogers does not require a short-term rental to be the owner's primary residence. The city has no ordinance limiting vacation rentals to owner-occupied homes, so non-owner-occupied and investor-owned short-term rentals are not prohibited, provided the operator holds a business license, passes the safety inspection, and collects the 3% lodging tax.
Occupancy Limits
Few RestrictionsRogers has not adopted a short-term rental ordinance that sets a guest-per-bedroom or maximum-occupancy cap specific to vacation rentals. Occupancy is governed instead by the city's general fire and life-safety code, enforced through the Certificate of Occupancy inspection by the Community Risk Reduction Division, plus building-code limits that apply to any dwelling.
Parking Rules
Few RestrictionsRogers has no short-term rental ordinance that imposes parking requirements specific to vacation rentals. Parking is governed by the city's general zoning and Unified Development Code standards for residential dwellings and by ordinary on-street parking rules, since a short-term rental in Rogers is treated as a residential use rather than a separately regulated lodging category.
Noise Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers does not have a noise rule written specifically for short-term rentals. Guests and hosts are subject to the city's general noise and disturbing-the-peace provisions, which apply citywide to all properties. Repeated noise complaints tied to a vacation rental can be reported to Code Enforcement and can factor into the city's short-term rental enforcement.
Host Presence Rule
Few RestrictionsRogers does not require a host or owner to be present during short-term rental stays. There is no ordinance mandating on-site host presence or a hosted-only model, so unhosted whole-home rentals are allowed. The city does encourage operators to provide a responsible contact, but on-site presence is not a code requirement.
Night Caps
Few RestrictionsRogers imposes no annual night cap or limit on the number of nights a short-term rental may be booked, and no ordinance restricts rental frequency. The only durational line in the rules is the 30-day threshold: stays under 30 days are taxable short-term rentals; 30 days or more are exempt from the lodging tax.
Insurance Requirements
Few RestrictionsRogers does not require short-term rental operators to carry a specific amount of liability insurance as a condition of licensing. No city ordinance mandates STR insurance, and Arkansas has no statewide STR insurance requirement. Operators are nonetheless strongly advised to carry short-term-rental or commercial liability coverage, since standard homeowner policies often exclude rental activity.
๐ฅ Fire RegulationsFull fire regulations guide โ
Fire pit rules, fireworks restrictions, and brush clearance requirements are especially important if you are coming from a state with different fire risk profiles.
Fireworks
Some RestrictionsThe City of Rogers permits consumer fireworks only on July 2-4 each year, between 11:00 a.m. and 11:00 p.m. Bottle rockets are banned. Fireworks may not be used on city-owned property, and using them on private property requires the owner's consent.
Fire Pit Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers allows recreational fires and portable outdoor fireplaces without a burn permit if they meet the adopted fire code. Recreational fires must stay 25 feet from structures, portable fireplaces 15 feet (with a one- and two-family dwelling exception), be constantly attended, and have extinguishing equipment ready.
Outdoor Burning
Heavy RestrictionsOpen burning in Rogers requires a free permit from the Rogers Fire Department unless the fire qualifies as a recreational fire. Permits are valid only for the day issued, allow burning dawn to dusk, are void during any burn ban, and only vegetation may be burned. Burning is prohibited when wind exceeds 10 mph.
Brush Clearance
Some RestrictionsRogers does not publish a numeric defensible-space ordinance. Brush and yard vegetation may be disposed of by open burning only with a Fire Department permit (or as a qualifying recreational fire), kept at least 50 feet from structures, attended, and only when wind is under 10 mph and no burn ban is in effect.
Backyard Fires
Some RestrictionsBackyard recreational fires are allowed in Rogers without a permit if they meet the fire code: at least 25 feet from structures (15 feet for a portable outdoor fireplace), burning only clean vegetation or firewood, constantly attended, with extinguishing equipment ready, and not during high wind or a burn ban.
Smoke Detectors
Some RestrictionsSmoke alarm requirements in Rogers come from the adopted Arkansas Fire Prevention Code (2021 edition, Volumes I-III) rather than a unique city ordinance. Code requires smoke alarms in each sleeping room, outside each sleeping area, and on every level of a dwelling, with interconnection required in new construction.
Propane Storage
Some RestrictionsPropane storage and use in Rogers is regulated by the adopted Arkansas Fire Prevention Code (2021 IFC, Chapter 61) rather than a separate city ordinance. The code limits LP-gas container sizes and placement, and the city restricts where fireworks sales may sit near propane dispensers under state law.
Wildfire Zones
Few RestrictionsRogers is not in a designated high-fire-hazard zone like wildfire-prone Western states use, and the city has no special wildfire building-code overlay. Parts of Benton County fall within the wildland-urban interface (WUI) addressed by the county Community Wildfire Protection Plan, but Rogers relies on standard fire codes and open-burn rules.
๐ Parking RulesFull parking rules guide โ
Parking rules catch more new residents off guard than almost any other ordinance. RV storage, overnight parking bans, and driveway regulations vary significantly.
RV & Boat Parking
Some RestrictionsRogers does not ban storing a personal RV, camper, or boat trailer on your own private property, but it restricts on-street parking of larger trailers. Under Rogers Code Section 52-122, no trailer with a capacity of three-quarter ton or larger may be parked on any street between 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. Smaller trailers may park legally on the street.
Street Parking Limits
Some RestrictionsOn-street parking in Rogers is governed by Chapter 52 of the city code plus Arkansas state law. Vehicles must park parallel and within 18 inches of the curb (A.C.A. 27-51-1301), and parking is prohibited in places like crosswalks, intersections, driveways, and within 15 feet of a fire hydrant (A.C.A. 27-51-1302). Posted no-parking and loading zones carry city fines of $5 to $25.
Overnight Parking
Some RestrictionsRogers has no blanket ban on parking a standard passenger vehicle on a public street overnight, but it does restrict larger trucks and trailers. Under Section 52-122, no truck, tractor, or trailer with a capacity of three-quarter ton or larger may be parked on any street between 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. Posted signs may impose additional time limits in certain zones.
Commercial Vehicle Restrictions
Some RestrictionsRogers limits heavy commercial vehicles on residential streets through Section 52-122, which prohibits parking any truck, tractor, or trailer of three-quarter-ton-or-larger capacity on any street between 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. The same provision bars using a street to repair or recondition such a vehicle, except in an emergency. Daytime curbside parking by large trucks is still subject to general traffic rules.
Abandoned Vehicles
Heavy RestrictionsRogers prohibits storing inoperable vehicles in the open on private property. Per the city's Code Enforcement rules, an owner or occupant cannot store an inoperable vehicle other than inside an enclosed structure. A vehicle is inoperable if it lacks current registration, has flat tires, is missing an engine, or cannot legally be driven. Abandoned vehicles on public ways fall under Arkansas Code 27-50-1201 et seq.
Driveway Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers prohibits parking on the grass in the front-yard area. Under Section 52-140, no person shall stop, stand, or park a vehicle on the grass between the residence and the street right-of-way in any residential zone. The city says this applies only to the front: parking beside or behind a home is not a violation. State law also bars blocking driveways.
Oversized Vehicle Parking
Some RestrictionsRogers controls oversized vehicles on residential streets through Section 52-122, which prohibits parking any truck, tractor, or trailer with a capacity of three-quarter ton or larger on any street between 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. Streets cannot be used to repair such vehicles except in an emergency. Movement of genuinely oversize/overweight loads on state routes additionally requires ARDOT permits.
EV Charging
Few RestrictionsRogers has no dedicated city ordinance reserving on-street spaces for electric vehicle (EV) charging or penalizing 'ICE-ing' of public chargers; no such provision was found in the Rogers Code of Ordinances. EV charging is treated as a normal land use, and parking at chargers follows general Chapter 52 rules. Arkansas has no statewide law penalizing non-EVs parked at public charging spaces.
Loading Zones
Some RestrictionsRogers enforces designated loading zones under Chapter 52 of its Code of Ordinances. Improper parking in a posted no-parking or loading zone is punishable by a fine of not less than $5.00 nor more than $25.00. Where time-limit signs are posted, vehicles may not park longer than the posted period during the stated enforcement hours. State no-parking locations under A.C.A. 27-51-1302 also apply.
Curb Color Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers controls parking through official signs and curb markings under Chapter 52; only the city may install enforceable curb markings, and obeying posted no-parking markings is required. No standalone Rogers ordinance was found establishing a color-coded curb system or allowing private painting of public curbs. Painting or altering a public curb without city authority is not a recognized private right.
๐งฑ Fence RegulationsFull fence regulations guide โ
Planning to put up a fence? Height limits, material restrictions, and permit requirements differ by city - and sometimes by which side of the property the fence sits on.
Height Limits
Some RestrictionsRogers limits front-yard fences to 4 feet so they do not block driver sight lines. There is no flat citywide height cap on back and side fences, but any fence taller than 7 feet (or set on concrete footings) needs a building permit. Arkansas has no statewide residential fence height limit, so the city rule controls.
Permit Requirements
Few RestrictionsRogers does not currently require a standalone fence permit for ordinary residential fences. A building permit is required only when a fence is over 7 feet tall and/or has concrete footings. Permits are also needed for retaining walls over 4 feet. Contact Community Development before building in any easement.
Material Restrictions
Few RestrictionsRogers does not publish a citywide list of prohibited fence materials in its general guidance. Standard materials such as wood, vinyl, chain link, and ornamental metal are commonly used. Material and structural safety default to the adopted 2021 Arkansas Fire Prevention Code; transect zoning districts may add design standards. Confirm specifics with Community Development.
Neighbor Fence Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers does not publish a specific shared-fence or cost-sharing ordinance. Boundary and shared-fence disputes fall under Arkansas state law: Arkansas Code Title 2, Chapter 39 covers partition fences and cost-sharing, while property-line disputes are resolved by survey and common law. Confirm your line before building.
Retaining Walls
Some RestrictionsIn Rogers, retaining walls over 4 feet tall require a building permit. Walls 4 feet or shorter generally do not need a permit, but should not interfere with drainage, easements, or fire hydrant access. Engineering and structural standards follow the city's adopted 2021 Arkansas Fire Prevention Code.
Fence Requirements
Some RestrictionsRogers fence requirements focus on safety and access: front-yard fences limited to 4 feet for sight lines, no fencing within 3 feet of fire hydrants, and consultation before fencing in utility or drainage easements. A building permit applies only to fences over 7 feet or with concrete footings.
Approved Materials
Few RestrictionsStandard fence materials are allowed in Rogers; the city does not publish a list of approved or banned materials in its general fence guidance. Concrete footings trigger a building permit, and construction safety follows the adopted 2021 Arkansas Fire Prevention Code. Transect zoning districts and HOA covenants may add appearance standards.
๐ Animal OrdinancesFull animal ordinances guide โ
Pet owners and aspiring chicken keepers should check local animal ordinances before signing a lease or closing on a home.
Dog Leash Laws
Heavy RestrictionsRogers requires that all dogs be confined or under the owner's physical control at all times. Physical control means a leash; voice command alone does not satisfy the requirement. Dogs may not run at large on streets, sidewalks, parks, or other public places in the city.
Chickens & Livestock
Some RestrictionsResidential (RSF) properties in Rogers may keep up to four female fowl with a permit from Animal Services. No roosters or males are allowed. The coop must be at least 2 feet off the ground and 25 feet from neighbors' homes. Agricultural (A-1) zoned land has no numeric limit.
Breed Restrictions
Few RestrictionsRogers Animal Services materials describe no breed-specific ban; dangerous-dog rules are based on an animal's behavior (vicious animals), not its breed. Arkansas has no statewide preemption blocking breed-specific local laws, but Rogers does not publish a breed ban.
Beekeeping
Few RestrictionsRogers does not publish a city ordinance specifically regulating honeybees, so beekeeping is governed primarily by Arkansas state apiary law. All apiaries must register with the Arkansas Department of Agriculture, Apiary Section, within 10 days of acquiring bees.
Exotic Pets
Some RestrictionsRogers' published animal materials address common animals but no broad city exotic-pet list; exotic and wild animals are largely controlled by Arkansas law. State law bans private possession of large carnivores (bear, lion, tiger), requires permits for venomous reptiles, and limits native wildlife pets.
Livestock
Heavy RestrictionsIn Rogers, livestock such as goats are allowed by right only on A-1 (agricultural) zoned land. Other residential zones require an approved Conditional Use Permit to keep livestock. Swine of all types - including pot-belly and miniature pigs - are prohibited citywide.
Pet Limits
Few RestrictionsRogers' published Animal Services materials do not state a fixed maximum number of dogs or cats per household. All dogs and cats must be licensed with the city after rabies vaccination. Confirm any kennel-license threshold directly with Rogers Animal Services.
Cat Rules
Some RestrictionsOutdoor cats in Rogers are not required to be confined as long as they are not a nuisance, but they must be altered (spayed/neutered), vaccinated against rabies, microchipped, and licensed with the city. All cats must be licensed and rabies-vaccinated.
Wildlife Feeding
Few RestrictionsRogers' published materials do not include a specific ordinance prohibiting the feeding of wild animals. For nuisance critters, Rogers Animal Services does not service residents' own traps but loans humane traps for a refundable $50 deposit. Wildlife is otherwise regulated by Arkansas Game and Fish.
Animal Hoarding
Some RestrictionsRogers' published materials do not set a specific hoarding threshold or numeric pet cap. Animal hoarding is addressed mainly through Arkansas's animal-cruelty law, which makes failing to supply adequate food, water, or shelter a misdemeanor, with each animal a possible separate offense.
๐ฟ Landscaping RulesFull landscaping rules guide โ
From grass height limits to tree removal permits, landscaping rules can surprise new homeowners, especially in drought-prone areas with water restrictions.
Grass Height Limits
Some RestrictionsRogers sets no fixed grass height in inches. The city's Code Enforcement standard is that tall grass and weeds 'shall be maintained to the prevailing standards of the community.' Owners must control grass and weeds on their parcel. Violations bring a posted notice and certified letter giving 7 days to correct before the city abates and bills the owner.
Tree Trimming
Few RestrictionsIn Rogers, homeowners maintain their own trees on private property; the Street Department does not trim or remove trees on private land. It trims or removes a tree or bush only when it obstructs the city's right-of-way or hinders traffic visibility. There is no published permit for routine pruning of a tree on your own property.
Tree Removal & Heritage Trees
Few RestrictionsRogers publishes no general tree-removal permit for private residential trees โ homeowners maintain their own trees. The city's Tree Board (Ordinance No. 86-48) oversees preservation plans for trees on public property, and the Street Department removes trees obstructing the right-of-way. Removal tied to new development is instead governed by Unified Development Code landscaping standards.
Weed Ordinances
Some RestrictionsRogers requires owners to control weeds with grass: they 'shall maintain all grass and weeds' to the 'prevailing standards of the community.' Code Enforcement treats overgrown vegetation, dumping, and unsightly conditions as nuisances. Violators get a notice and 7 days to comply before the city abates and bills the owner, per Arkansas Code ยง 14-54-901 et seq.
Native Plants
Few RestrictionsRogers does not prohibit native or drought-tolerant landscaping, and there is no city xeriscaping ban. Native plantings are encouraged by the regional water supplier: Beaver Water District recommends drought-tolerant native plants for Northwest Arkansas and provides a downloadable native plant list. Any landscaping must still meet the city's 'prevailing standards of the community' for maintenance.
Water Restrictions
Few RestrictionsRogers Water Utilities serves the city, buying treated water wholesale from Beaver Water District. There is no published mandatory year-round lawn-watering ban in Rogers. Beaver Water District promotes a voluntary conservation schedule: an even/odd watering schedule, no watering after 9:00 a.m. (evaporation), and 'No Water Wednesdays.' These are conservation recommendations, not codified penalties, absent a declared drought emergency.
Rainwater Harvesting
Few RestrictionsRogers has no ordinance prohibiting rainwater harvesting; the topic is governed by Arkansas state law. Arkansas Code ยง 17-38-201 allows harvested-rainwater systems for non-potable uses (such as toilet flushing and irrigation), if designed by an Arkansas-licensed engineer with cross-connection safeguards and compliant with the Arkansas Plumbing Code. Outdoor rain barrels for lawn and garden use are not restricted.
Artificial Turf
Few RestrictionsRogers publishes no ordinance specifically prohibiting artificial turf for residential lawns, and there is no statewide Arkansas ban on synthetic grass. For new construction and commercial sites, turf use is reviewed against the city's Unified Development Code landscaping standards. Existing-home owners installing turf should confirm there is no HOA restriction and that drainage is handled.
Composting
Few RestrictionsRogers does not publish an ordinance prohibiting backyard composting, and home composting for gardening is allowed. The main constraint is the city's nuisance standard: compost and yard material must not create unsanitary conditions, attract pests, or become an 'unsightly/unsanitary condition,' which Code Enforcement can cite. Keep compost contained and tended to stay within the 'prevailing standards of the community.'
๐ผ Home BusinessFull home business guide โ
Working from home is common, but running a business from home often requires permits and must comply with zoning restrictions on customer traffic and signage.
Zoning Restrictions
Some RestrictionsRogers permits home occupations in residential zones under its Unified Development Code, provided the business is clearly incidental and secondary to the home's residential use. No more than 25 percent of the dwelling's gross floor area may be used, the outside appearance cannot change, and no outside storage is allowed.
Signage Rules
Heavy RestrictionsRogers prohibits exterior signage for home occupations. Under the city's Unified Development Code home occupation standards, a home-based business may not display any exterior sign advertising the business, and the activity may not otherwise change the outside appearance of the dwelling.
Home Occupation Permits
Some RestrictionsRogers regulates home-based businesses as home occupations under its Unified Development Code, which requires that operators maintain all permits required by applicable local, state, and federal law. Home occupation standards limit floor area, employees, signage, and outside activity. Operators should confirm permit and licensing steps with the Rogers Planning Department.
Cottage Food Operations
Few RestrictionsCottage food in Rogers is governed by Arkansas's Food Freedom Act (Act 1040 of 2021, A.C.A. 20-57-501 et seq.), which lets producers sell non-perishable homemade foods without a state health department permit or inspection. Products must be labeled as home-produced. Local zoning home occupation rules still apply in Rogers.
Home Daycare
Some RestrictionsHome daycare in Rogers is regulated by the state. Under Arkansas DHS rules (Child Care Facility Licensing Act, A.C.A. 20-78-201 et seq.), a home caring for five or fewer children may operate as a voluntarily Registered Child Care Family Home, while caring for six or more children from more than one family requires a license, up to a maximum of 16 children. Rogers home occupation zoning also applies.
๐ Swimming Pools & SpasFull swimming pools & spas guide โ
Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.
Pool Permits
Some RestrictionsRogers requires a building permit for residential swimming pools, applied for through the city's online permitting portal by the pool contractor or homeowner. Plans must be uploaded and approved before fees are paid and the permit is issued. Separate electrical and plumbing permits are required for pool equipment.
Fencing Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsRogers enforces pool barrier requirements through the state-adopted Arkansas residential building code rather than a standalone city ordinance. The code requires a minimum 48-inch barrier with self-closing, self-latching gates around residential pools. The city itself does not require a general fence permit unless the fence exceeds 7 feet.
Safety Rules
Heavy RestrictionsResidential pool safety in Rogers is governed by the state-adopted Arkansas residential building code, which requires enclosure barriers, self-closing/self-latching gates, and electrical bonding and grounding. Rogers building inspection verifies these standards during the permit and inspection process. Public and commercial pools are additionally regulated by the Arkansas Department of Health.
Above-Ground Pools
Some RestrictionsAbove-ground pools in Rogers require a building permit through the city's permitting portal, the same as in-ground pools. Barrier and ladder/access safety is governed by the state-adopted residential building code, which treats the pool wall as a barrier only when at least 48 inches high and otherwise requires a removable or lockable ladder.
Hot Tub Rules
Some RestrictionsHot tubs and spas in Rogers are regulated through the state-adopted Arkansas residential building code. The adopted code allows a spa or hot tub equipped with an approved safety cover to be exempt from the standard pool barrier requirement. Electrical work requires a city permit pulled by a master electrician.
๐๏ธ Accessory StructuresFull accessory structures guide โ
Thinking about an ADU, shed, or garage conversion? Local rules on accessory structures have changed rapidly in recent years, especially in California.
ADU Rules
Some RestrictionsArkansas has no statewide ADU mandate, so rules are purely local. Rogers's Unified Development Code (Chapter 14) defines an accessory dwelling unit but regulates it through its accessory-building standards rather than as a separate use. An accessory building that includes a dwelling unit may reach 25 ft (vs. 16 ft), reflecting that ADUs are allowed as a subordinate use on the same lot.
Shed Rules
Some RestrictionsSheds in Rogers are regulated as accessory buildings under the Unified Development Code (Chapter 14), Article 4. A detached shed must be subordinate to the main home, meet the same yard setbacks as the principal building, and not exceed 16 feet in height. In most placetypes accessory buildings may sit in any yard; some higher-intensity placetypes limit them to interior yards.
Garage Conversions
Some RestrictionsRogers has no special standalone garage-conversion ordinance; converting a garage into living space is governed by the Unified Development Code (Chapter 14) and building permits. If the conversion creates a separate accessory dwelling unit, the UDC's accessory-building and ADU standards apply, including the 25-foot height allowance for accessory buildings that include a dwelling unit. Arkansas sets no statewide garage-conversion rules.
Carport Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers does not have a dedicated carport ordinance; a detached carport is regulated as an accessory building under the Unified Development Code (Chapter 14). It must be subordinate to the home, meet the same yard setbacks as the principal building, and stay within the 16-foot accessory-building height limit. Placement (any yard vs. interior yards only) depends on the property's placetype.
Tiny Homes
Some RestrictionsRogers's Unified Development Code (Chapter 14) does not single out 'tiny homes.' A tiny house on a permanent foundation is reviewed as a dwelling under the applicable placetype standards, while a tiny home used as a subordinate second unit follows the UDC's accessory-dwelling-unit rules. RV-style tiny homes on wheels tie to RV-park provisions limited to the T2 placetype. Arkansas has no statewide tiny-home zoning mandate.
๐ Outdoor CookingFull outdoor cooking guide โ
BBQ & Propane Rules
Few RestrictionsBackyard barbecuing in Rogers is allowed and not specially restricted at single-family homes. The main limits come from the adopted fire code: charcoal and LP-gas grills generally cannot be used on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction at multifamily buildings, with exceptions for one- and two-family dwellings and sprinklered buildings.
Smoker Rules
Few RestrictionsUsing a backyard smoker in Rogers is allowed and is treated as cooking, not open burning. The adopted fire code restricts charcoal and open-flame cooking devices on combustible multifamily balconies (within 10 feet of combustible construction), but single-family use is permitted. Smoke that becomes a nuisance can still be addressed.
๐ชง Sign RegulationsFull sign regulations guide โ
Political Signs
Some RestrictionsRogers's sign code (Sec. 5.8.7.12) allows political campaign signs starting 60 days before an election; they must be removed within five days after. Size limits run from 4 sq ft in neighborhood areas to 8 sq ft in most placetypes and 32 sq ft in corridor/industrial placetypes. Statewide, Arkansas Code 7-6-228 requires a 'Paid for by' disclosure, and signs are barred from highway rights-of-way.
Garage Sale Signs
Some RestrictionsRogers's sign code does not list 'garage sale signs' as a separate category; they are handled under the general temporary-sign provisions of the Unified Development Code (Sec. 5.8). Temporary signs are permitted for up to ten business days, with one ten-business-day extension on request. Signs may not be placed in city rights-of-way or on utility poles, traffic signals, or street signs.
๐๏ธ Property MaintenanceFull property maintenance guide โ
Property Blight
Some RestrictionsRogers Code Enforcement (Neighborhood Services) prohibits unsightly and unsanitary conditions. Owners may not openly store appliances, building materials, rubbish, dead trees, brush, household items, or inoperable vehicles visible from the public right-of-way. Violators get 7 days' written notice before the city abates and bills the owner.
Trash Bin Storage
Some RestrictionsRogers households use city-contracted 96- or 64-gallon rolling carts (smaller sizes case-by-case). Carts remain GFL property, must not be painted or marked, and must not be overfilled. A trash bin and recycle bin are delivered within 7 calendar days of a new-resident request, and trash service is mandatory.
Vacant Lot Maintenance
Some RestrictionsRogers requires every property owner โ including owners of vacant lots โ to maintain grass and weeds and to keep the lot free of rubbish and unsightly conditions. There is no fixed grass height; lots that offend the prevailing standard of the community are cited, with 7 days' notice before the city mows and bills the owner.
Weeds & Overgrown Grass
Some RestrictionsEvery Rogers property owner must maintain grass and weeds. Rogers does not set a numeric height limit; instead, tall grass is judged against the 'prevailing standard of the community.' Owners get 7 days' written notice to cut before the city mows and bills a $200 mobilization fee plus costs.
Garage Sale Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers requires a free garage sale permit, available online or at City Hall. No more than 2 sales are allowed per property per calendar year, each lasting no more than 3 consecutive days. Signs may go up no more than 2 days before and cannot be placed on trees or poles. The permit must be posted during the sale.
๐ก Outdoor LightingFull outdoor lighting guide โ
Light Trespass
Some RestrictionsRogers's outdoor-lighting standards (Sec. 5.7) directly limit light trespass: illumination 'shall not exceed 2 footcandles at the property line,' and fixtures must be full cut-off, shielded downward, with the light source not visible from off-site. Detached and attached houses are exempt. Arkansas has no statewide light-trespass law, so the Rogers UDC controls for nonresidential and larger sites.
Dark Sky Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers's Unified Development Code (Sec. 5.7) sets dark-sky-style lighting standards: fixtures must be full cut-off, shielded downward, with the light source not visible off-site, and illumination is capped at 2 footcandles at the property line. Detached and attached houses are exempt, among other listed types. Arkansas has no statewide lighting code, so these local rules control.
๐๏ธ Trash & RecyclingFull trash & recycling guide โ
Bin Placement Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers carts must be at the curb by 7 a.m. on collection day, placed less than three feet from the street curb with the lid toward the road and wheels toward the house. Keep carts at least 3 feet from recycling bins, 6 feet from mailboxes, and 10 feet from fire hydrants. Never place carts in alleys or behind obstacles.
Pickup Rules & Schedules
Some RestrictionsRogers residential trash is collected once weekly at the curb by GFL on an assigned day (see the city schedule map). Carts must be out by 7 a.m. on collection day. Missed collections through no fault of the customer are recovered within 36 hours of notice. Holidays (Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year's) push pickup one day.
Bulk Item Disposal
Some RestrictionsRogers offers bulky waste pickup once a month by GFL. Households get 2 bulk items per month at no charge; additional items cost $25 each. Pickups must be scheduled at least 48 hours ahead by calling GFL. Construction/demolition debris (toilets, boards, plywood, cabinets) is not accepted, and bagged trash should not be co-mingled.
Recycling Requirements
Few RestrictionsRogers offers weekly curbside recycling through GFL/Orion (sign up separately; extra fee applies). Accepted: #1/#2 plastic bottles and jugs, aluminum and steel cans, cardboard, and paper. Glass is NOT accepted curbside but can go to the 2300 N. Arkansas St. drop-off center. Rinse containers, keep paper dry, flatten boxes, and keep items loose (no bags).
Illegal Dumping
Heavy RestrictionsIllegal dumping of trash is a code violation in Rogers, enforced by Code Enforcement (479-621-1196) and reportable through the city's online Report a Concern portal. Litter in public spaces is handled by Rogers Police (479-636-4141). Under Arkansas law, repeated or imminent-threat health and safety violations can be declared a common nuisance subject to court action.
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๐ Building Setbacks & ZoningFull building setbacks & zoning guide โ
Setback Rules
Some RestrictionsRogers sets building setbacks through its form-based Unified Development Code, which uses transect zones (T2 through T6) plus HC and industrial districts instead of conventional R-1-style zones. Front (exterior yard) and side/rear (interior yard) setbacks vary by district. Confirm exact figures for your zone with Community Development.
Structure Height Limits
Some RestrictionsRogers caps building height by transect zone, measured in stories rather than a single citywide foot limit. Lower-intensity transects allow about 2 to 2.5 stories; mid transects allow 3 to 4 stories; urban transects allow much taller buildings. Stories are limited to 16 feet floor-to-floor. Confirm your zone's limit with Community Development.
Lot Coverage Limits
Some RestrictionsRogers limits lot coverage through its form-based Unified Development Code, setting separate maximums for building coverage and total impervious surface that increase with transect intensity. Lower-intensity transects allow about 30 percent building coverage; urban transects allow up to 90 to 100 percent. Confirm your zone's figures with Community Development.
๐ณ Tree ProtectionFull tree protection guide โ
Overall: What to Expect in Rogers
Rogers has 100 ordinances on file across 18 categories. Of these, 30 are rated permissive, 62 moderate, and 8 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Rogers 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.