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Moving to Saint Paul, MN?

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 Saint Paul across 43 categories and 208 specific rules we track.

37 Permissive123 Moderate48 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

Saint Paul regulates leaf blowers and power tools under Chapter 293. Equipment noise restricted to 65 dBA daytime, 55 dBA nighttime in residential areas. No gas blower ban in effect.

Restricted Hours: 10 PM-7 AM in residential zonesDaytime Limit: 65 dBA averaged over one hour

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul restricts loud construction machinery between 10 PM and 7 AM under Chapter 293. Equipment must not exceed 85 dBA at 50 feet. Sound level variances available for extended hours.

Restricted Hours: 10 PM-7 AM for loud machineryEquipment Limit: 85 dBA at 50 feet from source

Outdoor Music

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul limits outdoor music to 65 dBA daytime and 55 dBA nighttime in residential areas. Amplified outdoor events need a $138 permit and must end by 10 PM Sun-Thu or 11 PM Fri-Sat.

Daytime Limit: 65 dBA in residential (7 AM-10 PM)Nighttime Limit: 55 dBA in residential (10 PM-7 AM)

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul considers excessive barking a nuisance. Animal control handles complaints. MN dangerous dog law (MN Stat. Β§347.50) is behavior-based.

Threshold: Continuous/excessiveAgency: Saint Paul Animal Control

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires an Amplified Sound Permit ($138) for events exceeding noise limits. Hours: 7 AM-10 PM Sun-Thu, 7 AM-11 PM Fri-Sat. Max 80 dBA residential, 90 dBA non-residential.

Permit Fee: $138 per applicationHours (Sun-Thu): 7 AM-10 PM

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul is near MSP International Airport (~8 miles south). FAA preempts local aircraft noise regulation. The Metropolitan Airports Commission offers sound insulation for eligible homes.

Nearest Airport: MSP International (~8 miles south)Authority: FAA preempts local regulation

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul sets industrial zone noise at 80 dBA and commercial at 70 dBA under Chapter 293. MPCA Rules Ch. 7030 adds state-level standards for industrial noise near residential areas.

Industrial Zones: 80 dBA at all hours (B3-B5, IT-I3)Commercial Zones: 70 dBA at all hours

Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul enforces zone-based decibel limits under Section 293.07. Residential: 65/55 dBA day/night. Commercial: 70 dBA. Industrial: 80 dBA. All measured as one-hour averages.

Residential Day: 65 dBA (7 AM-10 PM)Residential Night: 55 dBA (10 PM-7 AM)

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul enforces quiet hours in Minnesota's state capital (pop. 310,000). The Winter Carnival, State Fair, and Capitol campus events require noise management near dense residential neighborhoods.

Quiet Hours: 10 PM to 7 AMPopulation: ~310,000

🏠 Short-Term Rentals

If you plan to rent out your home on Airbnb or VRBO - even occasionally - you need to know the local STR rules before listing.

Occupancy Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul caps STR units per building by property type: 1 unit for single-family homes, up to 4 for owner-occupied fourplexes, and 50% (max 4) for larger buildings without a CUP.

Single-Family: 1 STR unit allowedDuplex (Owner-Occupied): Up to 2 STR units

Registration Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul STR hosts register through the PAULIE online system with proof of ownership, insurance, Workers Comp, and an Affidavit of Compliance. Listings are banned until licensed.

Registration Portal: PAULIE online systemRequired Documents: 5+ items including insurance and affidavit

Night Caps

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul imposes no annual night cap on short-term rentals. Licensed hosts may operate year-round regardless of owner occupancy status.

Night Cap: None - no annual limit on rental nightsYear-Round Operation: Allowed with valid license

Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul has no STR-specific parking rules. Guests follow standard residential parking regulations and must move vehicles during declared snow emergencies.

STR-Specific Parking: No special requirementsSnow Emergencies: Vehicles must move from plow routes

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul STRs must follow Chapter 293 noise limits: 65 dBA daytime (7 AM-10 PM) and 55 dBA nighttime (10 PM-7 AM). Events and parties are prohibited at STR properties.

Daytime Limit: 65 dBA (7 AM - 10 PM)Nighttime Limit: 55 dBA (10 PM - 7 AM)

Insurance Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul STR hosts need $300,000 aggregate liability insurance via ACORD certificate. Hosts using only Airbnb, VRBO, or HomeAway may rely on platform coverage instead.

Minimum Coverage: $300,000 aggregate liabilityDocumentation: ACORD Certificate required

Permit Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul requires an annual STR Host License ($42) under Chapter 379. Non-owner-occupied properties need a Fire Certificate of Occupancy. Operating unlicensed is a $300 fine.

License Fee: $42 annuallyEffective Date: December 2, 2017

Taxes & Fees

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul STR hosts must collect about 12.4% in combined taxes: 6.875% state sales tax, 1.5% city sales tax, 3% lodging tax, and 1% transit taxes. The annual license fee is $42.

State Sales Tax: 6.875%City Sales Tax: 1.5%

Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul treats stays of 30 nights or longer as long-term tenancies rather than short-term rentals, shifting them out of STR licensing and into the city's rental-licensing and rent-stabilization regime.

STR cutoff: 30 consecutive nightsLong-stay regime: Rental license + Ch. 193A

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul restricts most whole-home short-term rentals to the operator's primary residence, with limited exceptions for licensed investor-operated units, helping protect long-term housing stock under the city's rent-stabilization framework.

Default rule: Primary residence onlyVerification: Ramsey homestead records

Host Presence Rule

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul Legislative Code Chapter 65 (Zoning) and Chapter 376 distinguish between owner-occupied short-term rentals (host present during stay) and unhosted whole-home rentals, with stricter conditions on the latter.

Issuing agency: DSITiers: Hosted, unhosted

Host Platform Liability

Some Restrictions

Hosting platforms operating in Saint Paul must collect and remit Minnesota lodging tax and the city's transient lodging tax, and may be required to delist unlicensed properties when notified by the Department of Safety and Inspections.

Tax basis: Minn. Stat. Ch. 297A; Ch. 327Delisting authority: Saint Paul DSI

Repeat Violator Strikes

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul DSI tracks complaints and code violations against short-term rental licenses, and repeated substantiated complaints β€” typically noise, occupancy, or trash β€” can lead to license suspension or non-renewal under the city's nuisance framework.

Tracking: DSI substantiated complaintsTrigger threshold: Around three per year

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.

Brush Clearance

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul has no wildfire-style brush clearance rules. As a fully urban city, vegetation is managed through property maintenance codes requiring yards be free of overgrowth.

Brush Clearance Mandate: None (not a wildfire zone)Weed Height Limit: 8 inches

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Open burning of yard waste, leaves, brush, and debris is prohibited in Saint Paul under the fire code and MPCA rules. Only recreational fires with clean wood are allowed.

Open Burning: Prohibited in city limitsYard Waste Burning: Not allowed

Smoke Detectors

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul requires hard-wired smoke detectors with battery backup in all homes, per its 1988 ordinance. At least one unit is required outside each sleeping area.

Code Reference: 1988 Smoke Detector OrdinanceState Law: MN Statute 299F.362

Backyard Fires

Some Restrictions

Backyard recreational fires are allowed in Saint Paul without a permit. Fires must be under 3 feet wide by 2 feet high, 15-25 feet from structures, and constantly attended.

Permit Required: NoMax Fire Size: 3 ft diameter, 2 ft high

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul allows recreational fire pits without a permit. Fires must be under 3 feet wide by 2 feet high, set back 25 feet from structures, and burn only clean untreated wood.

Permit Required: NoMaximum Size: 3 ft diameter, 2 ft high

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul is not in a designated wildfire zone. As a fully urban city, it has no WUI classification. MN Statute 88.02 governs wildfire prevention statewide through the DNR.

WUI Designation: None - fully urbanState Authority: MN DNR under Stat. 88.02

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul Fire Department enforces Minnesota State Fire Code limits on propane storage at homes and businesses, capping residential aggregate liquefied petroleum gas and regulating outdoor cylinder placement.

Code chapter: Saint Paul Ch. 167State code: Minnesota State Fire Code

Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

Minnesota bans all aerial and explosive consumer fireworks. Only non-explosive types legal (sparklers, snakes, smoke devices). MN Stat. Β§624.20 to 624.25.

Aerial: All illegal for consumersLegal Types: Sparklers, snakes, smoke

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.

RV & Boat Parking

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul prohibits street parking of RVs 22+ ft long and 7+ ft wide for more than 30 minutes (Sec. 157.11). Unattached trailers limited to 48 hours on any street.

Large RV Limit: 30 minutes on-street (22+ ft long, 7+ ft wide)Trailer Limit: 48 hours unattached on same block

Overnight Parking

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul enforces critical overnight parking rules during Snow Emergencies. Night Plow Routes ban parking from 9 PM-7 AM. Downtown bans all overnight parking during emergencies.

Snow Emergency: Move from Night Plow Routes by 9 PMDowntown: No overnight parking during snow emergencies

EV Charging

Some Restrictions

Ordinance 24-5 requires new surface parking lots with 15+ spaces to be EV-ready. At least 80% of spaces must have conduit to electrical service, with 1 in 30 fully wired.

Ordinance: Ordinance 24-5 (April 2024)Applies To: New lots with 15+ spaces

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul manages extensive on-street parking with winter alternate-side rules for snow plowing. State Capitol and downtown government buildings create heavy weekday commuter demand.

Capitol: Government demandWinter: Alternate-side rules

Abandoned Vehicles

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul considers vehicles abandoned if parked on a public street for 48+ hours. Inoperable vehicles outdoors for 48+ hours also qualify. MN Stat. 168B governs towing and disposal.

Public Street Limit: 48 hours in same spotPrivate Property: 48 hours without owner consent

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul restricts commercial vehicle parking in residential zones. Weight, size, and signage limits apply. Overnight heavy truck storage prohibited.

Weight Limit: Typically 10,000 lbsOvernight: Heavy trucks prohibited

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires vehicles parked on improved surfaces. Front lawn parking prohibited. Driveway modifications require permits.

Surface: Paved/improved requiredFront Lawn: Parking prohibited

🧱 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.

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

All fences in Saint Paul require a plan review and permit from DSI. The base fee is $45 for the first 200 lineal feet. Inspections are required for fences over 7 feet, pool fences, and barbed wire.

Permit Fee: $45 for first 200 lineal feetAdditional Footage: $15 per additional 100 lineal feet

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul limits front-yard fences to 4 feet and side/rear-yard fences to 7 feet under Sec. 60.209. Corner lots have a 2-foot max in the sight-triangle area near intersections.

Code Section: Sec. 60.209Front Yard Max: 4 feet

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul requires all pools to be enclosed by an obscuring fence with self-closing, self-latching gates. Minimum height is 4 feet for 1-2 family homes and 5 feet for multi-family.

Code Section: Sec. 60.2091-2 Family Minimum: 4-foot obscuring fence

Fence Requirements

Some Restrictions

All fences in Saint Paul must be on the owner's property and kept in good repair. Sec. 60.209 sets zoning rules, historic district guidelines, and corner-lot visibility standards.

Code Section: Sec. 60.209Property Placement: Must be entirely on owner's land

Retaining Walls

Some Restrictions

Retaining walls over 4 feet tall in Saint Paul require a building permit and engineered plans. Only segmental block, CMU, or poured concrete walls are generally approved by the city.

Permit Threshold: Over 4 feet tallMeasurement: Footing bottom to wall top

Material Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul allows most standard fencing materials but prohibits barbed wire in residential districts. Barbed wire elsewhere is limited to 3 strands atop fences at least 6 feet tall.

Code Section: Sec. 60.209Barbed Wire Max: 3 strands, on fences 6 ft or taller

Neighbor Fence Rules

Some Restrictions

Minnesota has no shared fence cost statute. Each property owner responsible for their own fence. MN Stat. Β§561.02 prohibits spite fences.

Cost Sharing: No state requirementBoundary: Agree with neighbor

πŸ” Animal Ordinances

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

Chickens & Livestock

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul allows backyard chickens with a permit. Tier One: 1-6 hens ($26). Tier Two: 7-15 hens ($76, 75% neighbor approval). Roosters absolutely prohibited. Max 15 birds total.

Tier One: 1-6 hens, $26 initial / $16 renewalTier Two: 7-15 hens, $76 initial / $28 renewal

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul prohibits wolf hybrids, large cats, and roosters outright. Exotic and wild animals need a Keeping of Animals Permit ($76 initial, $28 annual). MN Stat. 346.155 also applies.

Prohibited: Wolf hybrids, large cats, roostersPermit Fee: $76 initial / $28 annual renewal

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires dogs on leash in public. Off-leash in designated parks only. License and rabies vaccination required. MN Stat. Β§347.50 covers dangerous dogs.

Leash: Required in publicOff-Leash: Designated parks only

Breed Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Minnesota does not preempt local breed-specific legislation. Some MN cities have breed bans. MN Stat. Β§347.50 covers dangerous dogs based on behavior.

Breed Bans: Some MN cities have themState Law: MN Stat. Β§347.50

Cat Rules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul Code Chapter 198 requires every cat over six months old to be licensed, vaccinated against rabies, and prohibits letting cats run at large outside the owner's property.

Code chapter: Saint Paul Ch. 198Limit per home: Three cats

Animal Hoarding

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul Legislative Code Chapter 198 caps household pets and authorizes Animal Control to intervene when conditions, sanitation, or animal welfare deteriorate into hoarding-level neglect within a dwelling.

Code chapter: Saint Paul Ch. 198Cruelty statute: Minn. Stat. 343.21

Bird Protection

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul protects migratory birds through bird-safe glass guidelines and the federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act; state statute Minn. Stat. Section 97A.015 also classifies most native birds as protected.

Federal law: Migratory Bird Treaty ActState statute: Minn. Stat. 97A.015

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul does not mandate spay or neuter but uses Chapter 198's tiered license fee, charging substantially less for sterilized dogs and cats and more for intact animals.

Mandate: Voluntary, not requiredCode chapter: Saint Paul Ch. 198

Microchipping

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul does not mandate microchipping but strongly encourages it; licensed pets returned to owners faster when chipped, and Ramsey County Animal Services scans every impounded animal.

Mandate: Voluntary in Saint PaulCity tag: Required, not chip

Coyote Management

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul prohibits feeding coyotes and other wildlife under Chapter 198; the Minnesota DNR retains primary authority over coyote management under Minn. Stat. Chapter 97B.

Code chapter: Saint Paul Ch. 198State authority: Minnesota DNR

Pet Store Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul restricts pet shops from selling commercially bred dogs, cats, and rabbits, requiring retail animals to come from shelters or rescues, aligning with Minnesota's growing humane sourcing trend.

Code chapter: Saint Paul Ch. 198Allowed source: Shelters and rescues

Pet Groomer Rules

Some Restrictions

Pet groomers operating in Saint Paul must hold a city business license under Chapter 310, comply with Chapter 198 animal care standards, and meet zoning rules in Title VIII Chapters 60-66.

Business license: Saint Paul Ch. 310Animal license: Saint Paul Ch. 198

Veterinary Clinic Zoning

Some Restrictions

Veterinary hospitals and clinics in Saint Paul are permitted in commercial zoning districts under Title VIII; clinics with overnight boarding face additional setback and noise standards under Chapter 65.

Zoning title: Saint Paul Title VIIIPermitted by right: B2 through B5 districts

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul Legislative Code Chapter 198 caps each dwelling at three dogs and three cats; multiple-animal permits are required for any household keeping more than the standard limit.

Code chapter: Saint Paul Ch. 198Standard limit: Three dogs, three cats

Livestock

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul allows goats, sheep, pigs, and rabbits with a Keeping of Animals Permit ($76 initial, $28 annual). All livestock must be confined by tether or pen on the owner's property.

Permit Fee: $76 initial / $28 annual renewalAllowed Animals: Goats, sheep, pigs, rabbits, hoofed animals

Wildlife Feeding

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul Section 201.01 prohibits intentionally feeding deer. Wildlife feeding is also banned in all city parks and natural areas. Trapping regulated under Chapter 196.

Deer Feeding: Prohibited under Sec. 201.01Parks: No wildlife feeding in any city park

Beekeeping

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul may allow residential beekeeping with hive limits and setbacks. Registration with MN Dept. of Agriculture required. MN Stat. Β§17.4982.

Hives: Check city limits (2 to 4 typical)Registration: MN Dept. of Agriculture

🌿 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

Saint Paul supports native plantings through its 2016 Pollinator Resolution. MN Stat. 561.19 requires cities to allow managed natural landscapes exempt from grass height limits.

Pollinator Resolution: Adopted 2016State Law: MN Stat. 561.19 protects managed natural landscapes

Tree Trimming

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires a free Forestry permit for trimming or pruning public boulevard trees. Licensed contractors must perform the work. Private trees need no permit outside the Tree Preservation District.

Boulevard Tree Permit: Required and free of chargeContractor Requirement: Must be licensed and insured

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul allows rainwater harvesting without a permit for outdoor use. Minnesota has no restrictions on rain barrels. The Capitol Region Watershed District offers cost-share grants.

Rain Barrels: No permit required for outdoor useIndoor Plumbing: Plumbing permit required under MN 4714

Artificial Turf

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul does not prohibit artificial turf on residential properties. The zoning code requires ground cover that controls erosion and dust, which artificial turf generally satisfies.

City Prohibition: None - artificial turf is not bannedPermit Required: No, unless grading is altered

Water Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul enforces odd-even outdoor watering during droughts. Watering is limited to before noon or after 6 PM. Hand-held hoses and tree watering bags are exempt.

Schedule: Odd addresses on odd days, even on evenAllowed Hours: Before noon or after 6 PM

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul enforces weed abatement under local and state law. MN Stat. Β§18.75 (Noxious Weed Law) enforced by county agricultural inspectors.

State Law: MN Stat. Β§18.75Enforcement: City + county inspectors

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul requires a Forestry permit for boulevard tree removal. In the Tree Preservation District, removing trees 12+ inches in diameter needs a $273 plan with 1:1 to 3:1 replacement ratios.

Boulevard Removal: Free permit, may owe tree valuePreservation District: South of Lower Afton Road

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires grass and weeds below 8 inches under Chapter 45. The city may mow non-compliant properties and bill the owner. Managed natural landscapes are exempt under MN Stat. 561.19.

Maximum Height: 8 inches (Chapter 45)Noxious Weeds: Must be destroyed regardless of height

πŸ’Ό Home Business

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

🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas

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

πŸ—οΈ Accessory Structures

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

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul regulates carports as accessory structures under its zoning code. Building permits are required and carports must meet setback, height, and lot coverage standards.

Permit: Building permit requiredSetbacks: 4 ft from side and rear lot lines

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul allows garage conversions to livable space or ADUs with a building permit. Off-street parking replacement may be required depending on transit proximity.

Permit: Building permit from DSI requiredCeiling Height: Minimum 7 ft for habitable space

Tiny Homes

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul permits tiny homes as ADUs when built on a foundation and meeting state building code standards. Tiny homes on wheels are classified as recreational vehicles.

Foundation Required: Permanent tiny homes must be on foundationTHOWs: Classified as RVs, not for permanent dwelling

ADU Rules

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul allows ADUs by right in all residential zoning districts. Both internal and detached ADUs are permitted with size limits. Owner occupancy is not required.

Zoning: Allowed in all residential districts by rightMax Size (Detached): 1,000 sq ft or 50% of primary dwelling

Shed Rules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul regulates sheds under its zoning code. Sheds up to 120 sq ft generally do not require a building permit but must comply with setback and height requirements.

Permit Threshold: 120 sq ft or less typically exemptSetbacks: 4 ft minimum from side and rear lines

ADU Permits

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul permits accessory dwelling units in single-family and two-family residential zoning districts under Chapter 65 of the Legislative Code (Title VIII Zoning Code, Ch. 60-69). The City adopted ADUs in 2016 (Ordinance 16-26) and is currently re-evaluating standards under the 2025 1A Zoning Study. Minnesota HF 4029 (2024) requires all cities of population 10,000 or more to permit ADUs by-right in single-family zones beginning January 1, 2025.

Authority: Saint Paul Code Ch. 65; HF 4029 (2024)Adopted: 2016 (Ord. 16-26)

ADU Rental Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

ADUs in Saint Paul can be rented long-term subject to Certificate of Occupancy under Legislative Code Chapter 40 AND the Saint Paul Rent Stabilization Ordinance (Code Ch. 193A) β€” a 3% annual rent cap adopted by ballot in 2021 and amended in 2022 with new-construction and small-landlord exemptions. Short-term rentals require a Chapter 331A lodging license and platform compliance.

Rental License: Required (Code Ch. 40)Rent Cap: 3% annually (Code Ch. 193A)

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul does not charge general residential impact fees on ADUs because Minnesota Statutes Β§462.358 limits municipal impact-fee authority. Costs are limited to DSI building permit fees, plan review fees, sewer availability charges (SAC) from the Metropolitan Council, and Saint Paul Regional Water Services connection fees.

Impact Fees: None (Minn. Stat. Β§462.358)Building Permit: DSI fee schedule

ADU Owner Occupancy

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul's 2016 ADU ordinance (Chapter 65 of the Legislative Code) historically required owner-occupancy of either the principal dwelling or the ADU. Minnesota HF 4029 (2024) effective January 1, 2025 prohibits cities from imposing owner-occupancy as a precondition to ADU approval, overriding any remaining local requirement. Both units must comply with Saint Paul Rental Licensing under Chapter 40 if rented to non-owners.

Local Rule: Required 2016-2024State Preemption: HF 4029 - no owner-occ Jan 1, 2025

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

BBQ & Propane Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul enforces the Minnesota State Fire Code (Minn. Rules Ch. 7511), which adopts the International Fire Code. IFC Β§308.1.4 prohibits open-flame cooking devices and LP-gas grills on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction in any building with 3 or more dwelling units. The Saint Paul Fire Department Fire Marshal Division enforces strictly given dense rental housing in neighborhoods like Frogtown, the West Side, and University Avenue.

Code: Minn. Rules Ch. 7511; IFC Β§308.1.4Multi-Unit: Prohibited <10 ft combustibles

Outdoor Kitchen Permits

Some Restrictions

Outdoor kitchens in Saint Paul require separate trade permits from the Department of Safety and Inspections (DSI): building permit for structural elements, mechanical permit for gas lines, plumbing permit for water/sinks, and electrical permit for outdoor outlets. Saint Paul enforces the 2020 Minnesota State Building Code with frost-depth and energy-code requirements.

Trade Permits: Building, mech, plumb, elecGas Line: IFGC + MN amendments

Smoker Rules

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul has no specific ordinance regulating residential offset smokers or pellet grills at single-family homes. Multi-unit balcony smokers face the same IFC Β§308.1.4 prohibition as other open-flame cooking. Smoke crossing property lines can be addressed under Legislative Code Ch. 45 (Property Maintenance) and Ch. 56 (Public Nuisances). The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency air-quality alerts are advisory.

Specific Rule: None for single-family smokersMulti-Unit: IFC Β§308 applies

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

🌍 Environmental Rules

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul declared a climate emergency and adopted CARP in 2019, setting carbon-neutrality by 2050 and shaping building, transportation, and energy rules citywide.

Adopted: 2019Carbon neutral by: 2050

Cool Roof Requirements

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul encourages cool roofs and reflective surfaces through CARP and city building policy, but does not yet mandate them on private residential construction citywide.

Mandatory for: City buildings onlyResidential rule: Encouraged, not required

Sustainable Procurement

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires city departments and contractors to favor sustainable products, energy-efficient equipment, and low-carbon construction materials when procuring goods or building city facilities.

Building standard: MN B3 or LEED SilverApplies to: City projects only

Heat Island Mitigation

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul addresses urban heat through tree canopy expansion, cool pavements in pilot zones, green stormwater infrastructure, and cooling-center activation during dangerous heat waves.

Canopy goal: 40% citywideCooling centers: Libraries and rec centers

Gas Leaf Blower Ban

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul does not ban gas-powered leaf blowers citywide, though noise ordinance Ch. 293 limits operating hours and CARP encourages voluntary transition to electric equipment for emissions reduction.

Citywide ban: NoNoise hours: 7am-10pm typical

Erosion Control

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires erosion and sediment control on all construction sites. Projects disturbing one acre or more must obtain coverage under Minnesota's NPDES Construction Stormwater Permit and implement a Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan. The Capitol Region Watershed District and Ramsey County Soil and Water Conservation District provide review and oversight.

Threshold: 1 acre triggers state permitState Permit: MN NPDES Construction Stormwater Permit

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul participates in the National Flood Insurance Program and regulates development in FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Areas. The Mississippi River and its tributaries present the primary 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 ProgramPrimary Flood Source: Mississippi River and tributaries

Grading & Drainage

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires grading permits for earthwork and land-disturbing activities through the Department of Safety and Inspections. Projects must maintain existing drainage patterns and prevent adverse impacts on neighboring properties. Grading plans must be submitted for review for projects exceeding specified thresholds.

Permit Required: Grading permit from DSIReview: Department of Safety and Inspections

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul enforces stormwater management regulations through its municipal code and the Capitol Region Watershed District. New development and redevelopment must implement post-construction stormwater controls. The city operates under an NPDES MS4 permit and requires stormwater management plans for qualifying projects. The Mississippi River and its tributaries drive strict water quality requirements.

Permit Type: NPDES MS4 permitWatershed District: Capitol Region Watershed District

Coastal Development

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul is an inland city on the Mississippi River with no ocean coastline. Coastal development regulations do not apply. Development along the Mississippi River is regulated through the Mississippi River Corridor Critical Area program and the city's floodplain and zoning ordinances.

Applicability: Not applicable β€” inland river cityRiver: Mississippi River runs through city

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Commercial Cannabis Zoning

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul Title 7 and Title VIII zoning code restrict cannabis retail, manufacturing, cultivation, and testing facilities to specific commercial and industrial zoning districts, consistent with Minnesota's local-control framework under Minn. Stat. Β§342.13.

Retail districts: Commercial, traditional neighborhoodCultivation districts: Industrial only

Buffer Zones

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul Title 7 limits cannabis retailers, lower-potency hemp edible retailers, and cannabis cultivation to specific zoning districts and requires minimum buffer distances from schools, daycares, and residential treatment facilities, consistent with Minn. Stat. Β§342.13.

Statute basis: Minn. Stat. Β§342.13School buffer max: 1,000 feet

Cannabis Delivery Rules

Some Restrictions

Cannabis delivery in Saint Paul is governed by state rules under Minn. Stat. Β§342 and Office of Cannabis Management licensing. Local Title 7 registration is required, and deliveries must comply with state limits on quantity, hours, and recipient verification.

State statute: Minn. Stat. Β§342.34Minimum age: 21 with valid ID

Personal Cultivation Limits

Few Restrictions

Adults 21 and older in Saint Paul may grow up to eight cannabis plants per residence, with a maximum of four flowering at a time, under Minn. Stat. Β§342.09. Plants must be at the grower's primary residence, in a secure, non-public space.

Statute: Minn. Stat. Β§342.09Max plants: 8 per household

Home Cultivation

Some Restrictions

Minnesota legalized recreational cannabis in 2023. Adults 21 and older may cultivate up to 8 plants at home, with no more than 4 being mature flowering plants. Plants must be in an enclosed, locked space not visible from a public place and not accessible to persons under 21. Saint Paul follows state law on home cultivation.

Legal Status: Legal β€” MN legalized 2023Plant Limit: 8 plants, max 4 flowering

Dispensary Zoning

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul adopted cannabis zoning amendments in September 2024 establishing where cannabis businesses may locate. Cannabis retail requires a 300-foot separation from schools, with downtown exempt from the buffer. Limited production and cultivation under 15,000 square feet is allowed in mixed-use and commercial districts. Industrial-scale operations over 15,000 square feet are restricted to industrial districts.

Zoning Adopted: September 2024School Buffer: 300-foot separation required

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

🏚️ Property Maintenance

Property Blight

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul enforces property maintenance standards through the Department of Safety and Inspections. Properties must be maintained free of rubbish, debris, overgrown vegetation, and structural deterioration. The city actively addresses blighted properties through code enforcement, administrative citations, and nuisance abatement proceedings.

Enforcement: Department of Safety and InspectionsProhibited: Rubbish, debris, overgrown vegetation

Snow & Sidewalk Clearing

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul requires property owners to clear snow and ice from sidewalks adjacent to their property within 24 hours after snowfall ends. This is a significant obligation given the city's heavy annual snowfall averaging over 50 inches. Failure to clear sidewalks may result in the city clearing the walk and assessing the cost to the property owner.

Timeframe: Within 24 hours after snowfall endsResponsibility: Property owners

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul provides organized trash collection through a city-coordinated hauler system. Residents must use the assigned hauler for their area. Bins must be stored in a non-visible location when not set out for collection and placed at the curb on the designated collection day.

System: City-coordinated organized collectionHauler: Assigned by area

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul requires owners of vacant lots to maintain their properties free of weeds, rubbish, and debris. Vegetation must be kept below 8 inches. The city may abate nuisance conditions and bill the property owner, with costs potentially becoming a special assessment against the property.

Vegetation Height: Must be below 8 inchesMaintenance: Clear of weeds, rubbish, debris

Garage Sale Rules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul 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 extend into the public right-of-way. Frequent sales may be treated as commercial activity in residential zones.

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

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

Relocation Assistance

Some Restrictions

When Saint Paul DSI condemns a rental unit or displaces tenants for code violations, landlords are generally required to provide relocation assistance under Minnesota Statutes Chapter 504B and city housing-code provisions.

State trigger: Minn. Stat. Β§ 504B.178City trigger: DSI vacate orders

Security Deposit Rules

Some Restrictions

Minnesota Statutes Chapter 504B controls security deposits for Saint Paul rentals, requiring interest at 1% per year, return within 21 days of move-out, and itemized written deductions for any withholding.

Statute: Minn. Stat. Β§ 504B.178Interest: 1% per year

No-Fault Evictions

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul's rent-stabilization framework and Minnesota landlord-tenant law together limit no-fault evictions; landlords must rely on enumerated grounds such as owner move-in, substantial rehab, or removal from the rental market.

Local frame: Ch. 193A rent stabilizationState frame: Minn. Stat. Ch. 504B

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul prohibits discrimination by housing providers against applicants using lawful sources of income, including Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers, under city civil-rights rules and the broader Minnesota Human Rights Act framework.

City enforcer: Saint Paul HREEOState backstop: MN Human Rights Act

Pass-Through Charges

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul Chapter 193A allows limited pass-through of certain documented costs β€” capital improvements, government fees, and property-tax shifts β€” but only above the 3% base cap when approved through the city's rent-stabilization petition process.

Base cap: 3% per yearVacancy rule: Decontrol on turnover

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul tenants are protected from landlord harassment by Minnesota Statutes Chapter 504B, the Minnesota Human Rights Act, and city rental-licensing rules requiring landlords to provide quiet enjoyment and avoid retaliatory conduct.

State retaliation rule: Minn. Stat. Β§ 504B.441Local enforcement: DSI license action

Section 8 Voucher Acceptance

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul Public Housing Agency administers federal Housing Choice Vouchers, and city civil-rights rules combined with HUD program requirements bar landlords from refusing applicants solely because they hold a voucher.

Administrator: Saint Paul PHATenant share: About 30% of income

Rent Control

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul voters approved a rent stabilization ordinance in November 2021, making it one of few U.S. cities with rent control outside of California and New York. The ordinance limits annual rent increases to 3% for most residential rental units. Exemptions and implementation details have been refined through subsequent amendments by the City Council.

Ordinance: Rent Stabilization β€” approved Nov 2021Cap: 3% annual rent increase limit

Rental Registration

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires rental property registration through the Department of Safety and Inspections. Landlords must register their rental units and properties are subject to periodic inspections for code compliance. The registration program helps enforce housing standards and the rent stabilization ordinance.

Registration: Required for rental propertiesAuthority: Department of Safety and Inspections

Just Cause Eviction

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul adopted tenant protections alongside its rent stabilization ordinance. Minnesota law requires landlords to follow the formal judicial eviction process. While Saint Paul's specific just cause provisions complement the rent stabilization framework, landlords must provide valid reasons for eviction of tenants in rent-stabilized units to prevent circumvention of rent caps.

Protections: Complement rent stabilization frameworkEviction Process: Must follow judicial process

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul 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 collection, bins must be returned to their storage location.

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

Recycling Requirements

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul provides curbside single-stream recycling collection as part of its organized collection program. Minnesota's SCORE program supports recycling. Residents should separate recyclable materials including paper, cardboard, plastics, glass, and metal cans into the recycling container.

Service: Curbside single-stream recyclingState Program: MN SCORE recycling program

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul offers bulk item pickup through its organized collection haulers. Residents can schedule collection of large items such as furniture, appliances, and mattresses. Contact your assigned hauler to arrange pickup. Illegal dumping is a violation subject to fines.

Service: Bulk pickup through assigned haulerItems: Furniture, appliances, mattresses

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul provides organized trash and recycling collection through a city-coordinated system with assigned haulers by area. Collection is weekly. Residents must use the designated hauler and follow placement guidelines for their collection day. The city also provides yard waste collection seasonally.

System: City-coordinated organized collectionFrequency: Weekly collection

🚁 Drone Rules

πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors

πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door

πŸŒ™ Curfew Laws

πŸ“ Building Setbacks & Zoning

🌳 Tree Protection

Urban Forest Equity

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul targets tree planting toward neighborhoods with low canopy cover and historical disinvestment, using equity scoring tied to CARP and Tree Code Ch. 175 to address heat-island disparities.

Canopy goal: 40% by 2040Lead: City Forestry

Tree Removal Permits

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul regulates tree removal through its forestry program. Boulevard and street tree removal requires city approval through the Parks and Recreation Department. Private property tree removal may require a permit for significant trees. The city manages an extensive urban tree canopy and replaces lost boulevard trees.

Street Trees: City approval required for removalPrivate Trees: Significant trees may need permits

Heritage & Protected Trees

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul recognizes significant trees through its urban forestry program. The city has heritage and landmark trees that receive special protection. Trees of certain size, species, or historical significance may be designated for preservation. Removal of designated trees requires special approval.

Program: Heritage tree recognitionCriteria: Size, species, or historical significance

Tree Replacement Requirements

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires replacement of boulevard trees removed during development or construction. The forestry division determines replacement species and timing. Developers may be conditioned to plant replacement trees as part of project approvals. The city actively plants boulevard trees to maintain the urban canopy.

Requirement: Required for removed boulevard treesAuthority: Forestry division

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

🏘️ HOA Rules

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Lead Paint

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul enforces strict lead paint rules due to its older housing stock. The city follows EPA RRP rules and MN Stat. 144.9501-9512 lead poisoning prevention requirements.

Housing Stock: Approximately 80% built before 1978State Law: MN Stat. 144.9501-144.9512

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul requires property owners to maintain buildings pest-free under Leg. Code Ch. 34. Landlords bear primary responsibility for pest control in rentals.

City Code: Leg. Code Ch. 34 (Housing Maintenance)Landlord Duty: Primary responsibility for pest control

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Heavy Restrictions

Scaffold safety in Saint Paul is regulated under Minnesota OSHA (MNOSHA) workplace safety standards and the Minnesota State Building Code. Construction scaffolding on public right-of-way requires additional city permits.

Standard: Federal OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart L via MNOSHACompetent Person: Required for erection and oversight

Elevator Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Elevator maintenance in Saint Paul is regulated under MN Stat. Ch. 326B, administered by the MN Dept. of Labor and Industry. Annual inspections are required.

State Authority: MN Dept. of Labor and Industry (DLI)Inspections: Annual inspections required

Door Locking Hardware

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul building and fire codes require egress doors to operate with a single motion from the inside; thumb-turn deadbolts and panic hardware standards follow the Minnesota State Building and Fire Codes.

Code chapters: Saint Paul Chs. 33-34State statute: Minn. Stat. 326B.02

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Saint Paul follows the Minnesota State Building Code's adoption of NFPA 13 and 13R, mandating automatic sprinklers in most new multifamily buildings and many substantial renovations.

Code chapters: Saint Paul Chs. 33-34State statute: Minn. Stat. 326B.106

Childcare Center Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Licensed child care centers in Saint Paul must meet Minnesota State Building Code occupancy standards, fire code egress and sprinkler rules, and DHS licensing requirements before opening or expanding.

Building code: Saint Paul Chs. 33-34Occupancy class: Group E or I-4

Green Building Code

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul's Sustainable Building Policy under the Climate Action and Resilience Plan requires city-funded projects to meet enhanced energy, water, and emissions standards beyond Minnesota State Building Code minimums.

Policy: Sustainable Building PolicyPlan: Climate Action Resilience Plan

🚢 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

Saint Paul food establishments are inspected by Ramsey County Public Health under the Minnesota Food Code. Inspection reports are public, but Saint Paul does not use a letter-grade placard system like Los Angeles or New York City.

Inspector: Ramsey County Public HealthCode basis: Minn. Rules Ch. 4626

Food Handler Certification

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul food establishments must have at least one Certified Food Protection Manager on staff under the Minnesota Food Code. There is no separate Saint Paul food handler card requirement, unlike some other jurisdictions.

Code basis: Minn. Rules 4626.0033Required per site: At least one CFPM

Rodent Control

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul property owners must keep premises free of rats and other rodents under the Legislative Code's nuisance and property maintenance chapters. The Department of Safety and Inspections (DSI) responds to complaints and can order abatement.

Lead agency: Saint Paul DSICode basis: Ch. 45, Ch. 274.05

Bed-Bug Rules

Some Restrictions

Saint Paul rental property owners are responsible for eliminating bed bug infestations as a habitability matter under DSI's housing code enforcement. Tenants must cooperate with treatment but cannot be charged for landlord-side abatement.

Landlord pays: Yes, default ruleTenant must: Cooperate with prep

Syringe Disposal

Few Restrictions

Saint Paul residents must dispose of used syringes in rigid puncture-resistant containers, not loose in trash or recycling. Ramsey County operates household sharps collection sites and supports community syringe-services programs for harm reduction.

Lead agency: Ramsey County Public HealthCurbside disposal: Prohibited loose

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

🚷 Public Conduct

πŸ’° Local Taxes & Fees

Overall: What to Expect in Saint Paul

Saint Paul has 208 ordinances on file across 43 categories. Of these, 37 are rated permissive, 123 moderate, and 48 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Saint Paul 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.