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Moving to Washington, DC?

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 Washington across 45 categories and 196 specific rules we track.

35 Permissive77 Moderate84 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

Heavy Restrictions

DC bans all gas-powered leaf blowers citywide as of January 1 2022 under the Leaf Blower Regulation Amendment Act (DC Law 22-286). Only electric and battery units are legal. Violations carry $500 fines.

Law: DC Law 22-286 (effective 2022)Gas Blowers: Banned citywide

Decibel Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Washington DC sets strict decibel caps under DCMR Title 20 Chapter 27. Residential daytime limit is 60 dBA and nighttime drops to 55 dBA, measured at the receiving property line. DC uses both meter-based and plainly audible enforcement standards.

Code: DCMR Title 20 Chapter 27Residential Day: 60 dBA

Outdoor Music

Heavy Restrictions

DC requires a Public Space permit and noise variance for outdoor amplified music. Rooftop bars and restaurants on 14th Street, U Street, and H Street NE operate under ABRA entertainment endorsements with strict sound controls.

Permit: ABRA endorsement or special eventWeekday Cutoff: 10 PM

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

DC treats excessive dog barking as a noise disturbance under 20 DCMR Chapters 27-28 and as a potential animal control issue under DC Code 8-1808. Dogs causing persistent noise that disturbs neighbors may result in citations from Animal Care and Control or DOEE noise enforcement.

Noise Code: 20 DCMR Ch. 27-28Animal Code: DC Code Β§ 8-1808

Quiet Hours

Heavy Restrictions

Washington DC enforces noise control under 20 DCMR Chapters 27-28, with residential limits of 60 dBA daytime and 55 dBA nighttime measured at the property line. Quiet hours run 10 PM to 7 AM, during which enforcement may rely on subjective disturbance assessment rather than decibel readings.

Code: 20 DCMR Chapters 27-28Daytime Limit: 60 dBA residential

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

DC regulates construction noise under 20 DCMR 2803, with specific decibel limits for construction activities in residential zones. Construction work generating excessive noise is generally restricted during nighttime quiet hours (10 PM to 7 AM) and requires DOB permits.

Code: 20 DCMR Β§ 2803Restricted Hours: 10 PM–7 AM

🏠 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.

Registration Rules

Heavy Restrictions

The DC Short-Term Rental Regulation Act (DC Law 22-307) requires hosts to register, obtain a Basic Business License, and limit non-hosted bookings to 90 nights per year. Unhosted whole-home rentals beyond 90 nights are prohibited.

Law: DC Law 22-307 (STR Act)License: Required via DOB

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Heavy Restrictions

Under DC's Short-Term Rental Regulation Act of 2018, a unit listed on Airbnb, VRBO, or similar platforms must be the host's primary residence β€” investor-owned ghost listings are flatly prohibited.

Statute: DC Code 36-301.01 et seq.Residency threshold: 183+ days/year

Host Presence Rule

Heavy Restrictions

DC distinguishes hosted stays (host on-site) from unhosted whole-unit rentals; unhosted rentals from a primary residence are capped at 90 nights per calendar year, while hosted stays face no night cap.

Unhosted cap: 90 nights/yearHosted cap: No night limit

Host Platform Liability

Heavy Restrictions

DC's STR Act imposes platform-side compliance: booking platforms must verify each listing has a valid DLCP license number, remove non-compliant listings, and report booking data to the District quarterly.

Statute: DC Code 36-303.01Reporting frequency: Quarterly to DLCP

Occupancy Limits

Some Restrictions

DC short-term rental licensees must comply with DC Housing Code occupancy ceilings, generally two adults per bedroom plus two, and must disclose maximum guest capacity on every listing.

Standard formula: 2 per bedroom + 2Code source: 14 DCMR housing regs

Insurance Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

DC's STR Act requires every licensed host to maintain at least $250,000 in liability insurance covering each rental transaction, either personally or through the booking platform's host protection program.

Minimum coverage: $250,000 liabilityStatute: DC Code 36-302.01

Repeat Violator Strikes

Heavy Restrictions

DLCP applies a progressive enforcement ladder for STR violations: first offense generates a warning or fine, second a suspension, and a third confirmed violation triggers automatic license revocation.

Strikes to revocation: 3 confirmed violationsStatute: DC Code 36-304.01

Night Caps

Heavy Restrictions

DC caps unhosted short-term rentals at 90 nights per calendar year. Hosted stays where the owner remains on-site have no night limit. The cap is enforced through platform data sharing with the DC Office of Short-Term Rentals.

Unhosted Cap: 90 nights/yearHosted Cap: None

Permit Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

DC requires a license to operate any short-term rental under the Short-Term Rental Regulation Act of 2018 (D.C. Law 22-307, DC Code 30-201.01 et seq.). Two license types exist: Short-Term Rental (host present, unlimited nights) and Vacation Rental (host absent, max 90 nights per year). Only primary residences eligible for the Homestead Tax Deduction qualify.

Law: D.C. Law 22-307Host Present: Unlimited nights

Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

DC does not impose specific off-street parking requirements for short-term rentals. STR guests must follow standard street parking rules, including the Residential Permit Parking (RPP) program under 18 DCMR 2411-2413. Non-RPP vehicles face a 2-hour limit on permit blocks.

RPP Code: 18 DCMR Β§Β§ 2411-2413Non-Permit Limit: 2 hours on RPP blocks

Noise Rules

Heavy Restrictions

DC short-term rental hosts are responsible for guest noise under the STR Act and DCMR Title 20 Chapter 27. Repeated complaints can trigger license revocation by the Office of Short-Term Rentals.

Host Response Time: 1 hourComplaint Threshold: 3 per 12 months

Taxes & Fees

Heavy Restrictions

DC imposes a 15.95% transient accommodations tax on all short-term rental stays, effective through March 30, 2027. Hosts must collect and remit this tax. The two-year STR license costs $104.50 through DLCP.

Transient Tax: 15.95%Tax Period: Through March 30, 2027

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

DC prohibits open burning of yard waste, trash, and recreational bonfires citywide under DCMR Title 20 Chapter 6. Only small contained cooking fires (grills, chimineas on noncombustible surfaces) are allowed on private property.

Code: DCMR Title 20 Chapter 6Leaf Burning: Banned

Smoke Detectors

Heavy Restrictions

DC requires interconnected smoke alarms on every level and outside each sleeping area under the DC Construction Codes. Rentals must have 10-year sealed lithium-battery alarms per DC Law 20-206.

Locations: Every bedroom + outside + every levelRental Batteries: 10-year sealed or hardwired

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

Washington DC has no formal wildfire hazard zones. The District is fully urbanized with limited wildland interface, and fire risk is governed by standard International Fire Code adoption rather than wildland-urban interface rules.

Hazard Zones: None designatedCode: IFC 2018 via DCMR Title 12-I

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

DC limits propane cylinder storage on residential properties under the DC Fire Code, generally allowing two 20-pound grill cylinders outdoors and prohibiting indoor storage of LPG except for very small permitted appliances.

Outdoor cylinders allowed: Two 20-poundIndoor storage: Prohibited

Brush Clearance

Some Restrictions

DC does not have wildfire defensible-space rules but requires owners to keep grass and weeds under ten inches and to remove dead vegetation that could spread fire, under DC Code 8-1308 property maintenance provisions.

Grass max height: Ten inchesCode: DC Code 8-1308

Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

Most fireworks are illegal in Washington DC under 12-H DCMR 5601/5609. Only limited novelty items such as sparklers under 20 inches, fountains, and paper caps are permitted. Possession of illegal fireworks carries a minimum $2,000 fine.

Code: 12-H DCMR Β§Β§ 5601/5609Legal Items: Sparklers <20", fountains, caps

Fire Pit Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Residential fire pits in DC are heavily restricted due to the open burning prohibition under 20 DCMR 604.1. Only recreational cooking fires at ground level with proper clearance from buildings are permitted. Open-flame devices must be at least 10 feet from any building under 12-H DCMR 308.1.4.

Code: 20 DCMR Β§ 604.1; 12-H DCMR Β§ 308Open Fire Pits: Generally prohibited

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Open burning is prohibited in DC under 20 DCMR 604.1. Exceptions exist only for firefighter training, recreational cooking, and approved worker heating devices. Charcoal grills are banned on balconies and within 10 feet of buildings under 12-H DCMR 308.1.4.

Code: 20 DCMR Β§ 604.1Open Burning: Prohibited

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.

EV Charging

Few Restrictions

DC encourages EV charging with rebates through DOEE and allows public right-of-way charging via DDOT's curbside EV pilot. Multifamily buildings over 50 units built after 2022 must provide EV-ready parking under the Green Building Act.

New Single-Family: 100% EV-readyNew Multifamily: 20% EV-ready

Overnight Parking

Some Restrictions

DC requires a Residential Permit Parking (RPP) sticker for overnight street parking in most residential zones. Non-residents are generally limited to 2 hours during restricted periods, with some zones enforcing 24/7.

Permit: RPP (Zones 1-8)Non-Resident Limit: 2 hours

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

DC operates a Residential Permit Parking (RPP) program under 18 DCMR 2411-2413 covering over 4,100 blocks. Non-permit vehicles face a 2-hour limit during enforcement hours. RPP fees start at $50/year for the first vehicle, increasing for additional vehicles.

Code: 18 DCMR Β§Β§ 2411-2413RPP Blocks: 4,100+ citywide

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

DC requires DDOT permits for curb cuts and driveway access under 24 DCMR. Driveways connecting to public space need public space permits. Blocking a sidewalk or crosswalk when parking in a driveway is prohibited. Driveway width and design must meet DDOT standards.

Permit Authority: DDOTCurb Cut Permit: Required for new/modified

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

DC restricts parking of oversized vehicles on residential streets. Vehicles over 22 feet are ineligible for RPP permits under 18 DCMR 2411-2413. RVs and boats parked on streets are subject to the same time limits and may be tagged as abandoned if left for more than 72 hours.

Max Vehicle Length (RPP): 22 feetTime Limit (No Permit): 2 hours on RPP blocks

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Commercial vehicles, vehicles over 22 feet, and buses are ineligible for residential parking permits under 18 DCMR 2411-2413. Commercial vehicles face additional parking restrictions in residential zones and may not be stored long-term on residential streets.

Code: 18 DCMR Β§Β§ 2411-2413RPP Eligibility: Not eligible

🧱 Fence Regulations

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

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

DC requires a 4-foot self-closing self-latching barrier around all private pools under the DC Construction Code adopting IRC Appendix G. Hot tubs with lockable covers may be exempt from full fencing.

Barrier Height: 48 inchesGate: Self-closing self-latching

Retaining Walls

Some Restrictions

Retaining walls over 4 feet in DC require a building permit from the Department of Buildings and must meet the DC Construction Code. Walls on property lines require both neighbor notification and engineered drawings.

Permit Threshold: 4 feet or any surchargeEngineer Required: Over 4 ft or surcharge

Neighbor Fence Rules

Some Restrictions

DC requires written agreements for party line fences exceeding standard height limits (7 ft residential, 10 ft commercial) under 12-A DCMR 3112. The agreement must be filed with the code official. Standard property line fences require proper setback from the public right-of-way.

Code: 12-A DCMR Β§ 3112Party Line Agreement: Required over 7/10 ft

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

DC fence heights are regulated under 12-A DCMR 3112. Residential zones allow fences up to 7 feet abutting a street. Commercial and mixed-use zones permit up to 10 feet. Historic districts limit front fences to 3 feet 6 inches between the front facade and front lot line.

Code: 12-A DCMR Β§ 3112Residential Max: 7 feet

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

DC requires a permit application with an official building plat showing the proposed fence location. Zoning Administrator approval is needed under 12-A DCMR 3112. An exception exists for replacing an existing lawful fence of the same extent, location, height, and grade.

Permit Authority: DOB / Zoning AdministratorCode: 12-A DCMR Β§ 3112

πŸ” Animal Ordinances

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

Wildlife Feeding

Heavy Restrictions

DC prohibits feeding wildlife including deer, raccoons, foxes, and feral cats under DCMR Title 19 Chapter 20. The rule aims to reduce nuisance habituation and rabies risk. Songbird feeding is generally allowed.

Code: DCMR Title 19 Ch. 20Banned: Deer, raccoons, foxes, feral cats (non-TNR)

Animal Hoarding

Heavy Restrictions

DC prosecutes animal hoarding under the Animal Protection Amendment Act, allowing seizure when an owner keeps more animals than they can humanely care for, causing neglect or unsanitary conditions.

Code: DC Code 22-1001Seizing agency: Humane Rescue Alliance

Cat Rules

Few Restrictions

Washington DC does not require cat licensing but mandates rabies vaccination at four months and discourages free-roaming. Community cats are managed through trap-neuter-return coordinated with the Humane Rescue Alliance.

Vaccination age: Four monthsLicense required: No

Chickens & Livestock

Heavy Restrictions

Washington DC generally prohibits keeping chickens, roosters, and farm livestock in residential zones under DCMR Title 24 Chapter 9. Limited exceptions exist for educational programs and properties zoned for agriculture, which are rare.

Backyard chickens: ProhibitedRoosters: Prohibited

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Some Restrictions

DC does not mandate spay or neuter for all pets, but every dog or cat adopted from a DC shelter or rescue must be sterilized before release under DC Code 8-1808 and DOH animal-control regulations.

Citywide mandate: NoShelter mandate: Yes

Microchipping

Few Restrictions

DC strongly encourages but does not legally require microchipping pets. All licensed DC dogs receive a license tag, and shelters typically microchip animals before adoption to support return-to-owner programs.

Microchip mandate: NoDog license required: Yes

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

DC residential zoning generally allows up to four dogs or cats over four months old per household without a kennel license. Exceeding the limit triggers a multi-pet permit through DOH and zoning review.

Pet limit: Four totalCounted age: Over four months

Exotic Pets

Some Restrictions

DC regulates exotic pet ownership under DC Code 8-1801 through 8-1814 and the DC Health Department. Certain wild and dangerous animals are prohibited. The Animal Care and Control Omnibus Amendment Act of 2022 requires pet stores to sell only shelter or rescue animals.

Code: DC Code Β§Β§ 8-1801–8-1814Big Cats/Bears: Prohibited

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

DC requires all dogs to be on a leash in public areas under DC Code 8-1808, with designated off-leash dog parks as the exception. All dogs over 4 months must be licensed annually with proof of rabies and distemper vaccination under DC Code 8-1804.

Leash Law: DC Code Β§ 8-1808License Required: DC Code Β§ 8-1804

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Washington DC has no breed-specific legislation. DC Code Chapter 19 (8-1901 et seq.) uses a behavior-based approach to dangerous dogs, focusing on individual animal conduct rather than breed. No breeds are banned or subject to special requirements.

Breed Bans: NoneApproach: Behavior-based

Beekeeping

Few Restrictions

Beekeeping is permitted in Washington DC. DOEE oversees urban beekeeping with standard practices for hive placement and colony numbers based on lot size. No specific license is required for small-scale residential beekeeping.

Status: PermittedOversight: DOEE

🌿 Landscaping Rules

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

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

DC encourages rainwater harvesting through DOEE's RiverSmart Homes program, which offers rebates up to $1,000 per rain barrel and cost-share for cisterns. Captured water may be used for irrigation but not potable use.

Program: DOEE RiverSmart HomesRebate: Up to $1,000 per barrel

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

DC limits grass and weeds to 8 inches under the Property Maintenance Code (12-G DCMR 302). The Housing Code (14 DCMR 800.10) prohibits untended vegetation over 10 inches. Enforcement season runs May through October, with fines of $500 or more for violations.

Max Height: 8 inches (12-G DCMR Β§ 302)Housing Code: 10 inches (14 DCMR Β§ 800.10)

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Heavy Restrictions

DC has strong tree removal protections. Trees 44-100 inches in circumference require a removal permit from DDOT's Urban Forestry Division. Heritage Trees over 100 inches cannot be removed. The Urban Forest Preservation Act mandates replacement planting for removed trees.

Permit Required: Trees 44–100 inch circumferenceHeritage Trees: 100+ inches, cannot remove

Tree Trimming

Heavy Restrictions

DC strongly protects its urban forest under the Urban Forest Preservation Act and Tree Canopy Protection Act. A permit from DDOT's Urban Forestry Division is required to prune or remove any street tree. Heritage Trees (100+ inch circumference) cannot be removed.

Law: Urban Forest Preservation ActHeritage Trees: 100+ inch circumference

Water Restrictions

Few Restrictions

DC does not have a permanent outdoor watering ban. DC Water may impose seasonal restrictions during drought conditions. DOEE promotes water conservation through voluntary programs and incentives. The District encourages rain gardens and permeable surfaces.

Permanent Ban: NoneDrought Restrictions: DC Water may impose

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.

Pool Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Washington DC requires a combined building, plumbing, and electrical permit from the Department of Buildings (DOB) for any in-ground or above-ground swimming pool. Pools must comply with the DC Construction Codes (Title 12-A DCMR), which adopt the 2015 IRC including Appendix G (swimming pool barriers).

Permit Required: Yes, combined building/plumbing/electricalAuthority: DOB (residential); DC Health (public)

Hot Tub Rules

Some Restrictions

Washington DC requires a permit from the Department of Buildings (DOB) for hot tubs and spas, including electrical permits for hardwired units. Spas are regulated as pools under the DC Construction Codes. A locked safety cover meeting ASTM F1346 may substitute for a full pool barrier on some small spas.

Permit Required: Yes - building and electricalAuthority: DC Department of Buildings

Above-Ground Pools

Some Restrictions

Above-ground pools in DC with water over 24 inches deep are subject to the same barrier and safety requirements as in-ground pools. DOB permits may be required depending on size and permanent installation. Temporary inflatable pools under 24 inches deep are generally exempt from barrier requirements.

Barrier Trigger: Water over 24 inches deepBarrier Height: 48 inches minimum

Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

DC requires a minimum 48-inch barrier around residential pools with water over 24 inches deep under the Property Maintenance Code. Public and semi-public pools require 72-inch barriers under 25-C DCMR 6439. Gates must be self-closing and self-latching.

Residential Barrier: 48 inches minimumPublic Pool Barrier: 72 inches (25-C DCMR Β§ 6439)

Safety Rules

Heavy Restrictions

DC pools must comply with the Swimming Pool and Spa Code (12-L DCMR) and the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act (VGB Act). Anti-entrapment drain covers are required. New construction associated with pool structures requires fire sprinklers.

Code: 12-L DCMRAnti-Entrapment: VGB Act compliant drains

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.

Tiny Homes

Heavy Restrictions

DC does not recognize tiny homes on wheels as legal dwellings. Permanent tiny homes on foundations must meet full DC Construction Code and zoning minimum lot and setback rules. Accessory dwelling units are allowed as a separate pathway.

Tiny on Wheels: Not legal as dwellingMin Ceiling: 7 feet

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Washington DC requires a building permit for carports through the Department of Buildings (DOB). Carports are regulated as accessory structures under the DC Zoning Regulations (Title 11 DCMR) and must comply with rear yard, side yard, and lot occupancy limits for the applicable residential zone (R-1 through R-5).

Permit Required: Yes, DOB building permitAuthority: DOB; HPO in historic districts

ADU Permits

Few Restrictions

Washington DC allows accessory apartments (the District's term for ADUs) by-right in most residential zones (R-1 through R-5) under DC Zoning Regulations Subtitle U Β§ 253. Applicants file a building permit with the Department of Buildings (DOB, formerly DCRA's permitting division). Most R-1 lots can add an internal or detached accessory apartment without zoning relief, though external accessory apartments in R-1 require special exception review by the Board of Zoning Adjustment (BZA).

Authority: DC Zoning Subtitle U Β§ 253Process: By-right in R-1 to R-5 (internal)

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Washington DC does not charge traditional development impact fees on residential construction, so accessory apartments are not subject to the impact, school, or transportation fees common in California, Colorado, and many suburban jurisdictions. The principal costs are DOB building-permit fees (scaled to construction value), DC Water meter and account fees if a separate meter is added, and standard utility connection charges. Historic district properties pay HPRB review fees.

Impact Fees: None (DC does not assess)Permit Fees: Based on construction value

ADU Rental Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

DC accessory apartments can be rented long-term with a Basic Business License. Short-term rentals (under 31 days) are heavily restricted under the Short-Term Rental Regulation Act of 2018 (D.C. Law 22-307, codified at D.C. Code Β§ 47-2829(j)): STRs are allowed only at the host's primary residence, capped at 90 days per year when the host is not present, and require a separate STR license. An accessory apartment cannot be operated as an Airbnb if the owner does not live in the primary unit, because it is not the host's primary residence.

Long-Term (31+ days): Allowed with BBLSTR Law: D.C. Law 22-307

ADU Owner Occupancy

Few Restrictions

Washington DC does not require owner-occupancy as a general condition for accessory apartments under Zoning Subtitle U Β§ 253. The principal dwelling and accessory apartment may both be rented, subject to standard DC rental licensing through the Department of Buildings (DOB) Rental Accommodations Division and the Office of Tax and Revenue Clean Hands certification. This places DC among the more permissive jurisdictions nationally, similar to California after AB 881 (2019).

Owner-Occupancy: Not requiredDeed Restriction: None

Shed Rules

Few Restrictions

DC exempts a single storage shed up to 10 feet high and 6x8 feet from building permits. Sheds over 50 sq ft are classified as accessory buildings with additional requirements. Sheds may be placed in required rear and side yards under 11 DCMR.

Exempt Size: 10 ft high, 6x8 ftPermit Threshold: Over 50 sq ft

ADU Rules

Some Restrictions

DC allows accessory dwelling units (called 'Accessory Apartments') in most residential zones under 11 DCMR. Detached ADUs have a max footprint of 450 sq ft or 30% of rear yard. Attached ADUs are limited to 35% of the principal residence's gross floor area. Maximum 3 occupants per unit.

Code: 11 DCMR (2016 Zoning Regs)Detached Max: 450 sq ft or 30% rear yard

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Garage conversions in DC require DOB building permits and must comply with 11 DCMR zoning regulations. Converting a garage to habitable space triggers building code requirements including fire sprinklers for new construction, egress, electrical, and plumbing upgrades.

Permit: DOB building permit requiredCode: 11 DCMR + DC Building Code

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

BBQ & Propane Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Washington DC adopts the International Fire Code (IFC) as the DC Fire Code (12-G DCMR). IFC Section 308.1.4 prohibits charcoal and other open-flame cooking devices (including propane grills) on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction in apartment buildings, condos, rowhouses, and similar R-2 residential occupancies. The DC Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department (FEMS) Fire Prevention Division enforces. Sprinklered buildings have an exception; single-family rowhouses are also exempted.

Code: DCMR 12-G adopting IFC 308Multi-family Balcony: Open-flame banned

Outdoor Kitchen Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Washington DC requires Department of Buildings (DOB) permits for built-in outdoor kitchens that involve gas line installation, electrical work, plumbing, or permanent structures. The applicable codes are the DC Construction Codes (DCMR 12) and the DC Fuel Gas Code. In any of DC's 65+ historic districts (Georgetown, Capitol Hill, Logan Circle, Mount Vernon Square, etc.), the Historic Preservation Review Board (HPRB) must approve the design before DOB issues a permit.

Permitting: DOB (DCMR 12)Gas Permit: Required (Washington Gas final)

Smoker Rules

Some Restrictions

Washington DC has no smoker-specific ordinance, but smokers and wood-fired ovens are open-flame cooking devices subject to IFC Section 308.1.4 in multi-family buildings. In single-family rowhouses and yards, smoker use is governed by general DC nuisance law and the DC Department of Energy and Environment air-quality rules. Persistent wood-smoke complaints can be enforced as a public nuisance, and historic-district HPRB review applies to any permanent installation.

Multi-family: IFC 308 appliesSingle-family Yards: Allowed (nuisance limits)

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

Inflatable Display Rules

Few Restrictions

Washington DC has no city ordinance specifically regulating inflatable holiday displays on private property. The primary city concerns are (1) public-space encroachment if inflatables extend into sidewalks or tree boxes, (2) noise from compressors during quiet hours, and (3) HPRB review for inflatables anchored to historic structures. The actual regulators are condominium associations, cooperative boards, and HOAs, which commonly prohibit or restrict inflatables in common areas.

City Permit: Not required (private property)Right-of-Way: Prohibited without permit

Holiday Light Rules

Few Restrictions

The District of Columbia does not impose specific install-by or take-down-by dates for holiday lights on private property. City-wide regulation is limited to general nuisance law, the residential noise ordinance for amplified audio displays, and Historic Preservation Review Board (HPRB) jurisdiction over permanent fixtures in historic districts. The primary regulators are condominium associations, cooperative boards, and HOAs in newer developments such as The Yards, NoMa, and CityCenterDC.

Install/Removal Dates: Not city-regulatedRight-of-Way: DDOT permit required

Lawn Ornament Rules

Few Restrictions

Washington DC does not regulate lawn ornaments on private property through a specific ordinance. Statuary, religious displays, and decorative landscape elements are generally allowed without permits. The principal restrictions are Historic Preservation Review Board (HPRB) review for ornaments visible in a historic district and the public-space rules that prohibit ornaments in the DDOT-controlled right-of-way (sidewalks and tree boxes). Most multi-unit buildings have condo or co-op rules governing balconies and rooftops.

City Permit: Not required on private propertyHistoric District: HPRB may apply

🌍 Environmental Rules

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Heavy Restrictions

DC declared a climate emergency in 2019 and committed to carbon neutrality by 2050 through Sustainable DC 2.0, the Clean Energy DC Act, and the Carbon-Free DC plan administered by DOEE.

Net-zero target: 2050100% renewable electric: by 2032

Gas Leaf Blower Ban

Heavy Restrictions

DC banned the sale and use of gasoline-powered leaf blowers effective January 1, 2022 under the Leaf Blower Regulation Amendment Act of 2018, with enforcement led by DOEE and a $500 civil fine per violation.

Effective date: January 1, 2022Fine: $500 per violation

Vehicle Idling Restrictions

Some Restrictions

DC prohibits idling any motor vehicle for more than three minutes while parked, stopped, or standing under DCMR Title 20 Section 900, enforced by DOEE and MPD with civil fines starting at $1,000 for commercial vehicles.

Idle limit: 3 minutesResidential limit: 1 minute

Sustainable Procurement

Some Restrictions

The Procurement Practices Reform Act and Mayor's Order 2017-018 require District agencies to buy environmentally preferable products, including EPEAT electronics, ENERGY STAR appliances, and recycled-content paper as part of Sustainable DC 2.0 goals.

Recycled paper minimum: 30% post-consumerZEV fleet goal: 100% by 2045

Cool Roof Requirements

Some Restrictions

The DC Construction Codes (12 DCMR Title 12-A) require new and replacement low-slope roofs to meet ENERGY STAR cool-roof reflectance standards, reducing urban heat island effects and helping meet Carbon-Neutral 2050 targets.

Solar reflectance: 0.55 minimum agedSRI option: 64

Heat Island Mitigation

Some Restrictions

DC requires new buildings over 50,000 square feet to meet the Green Building Act, encouraging vegetated roofs, cool pavement, and tree canopy expansion to combat heat islands documented by DOEE in vulnerable wards.

Tree canopy target: 40% by 2032Green roof target: 6M sq ft

Erosion Control

Heavy Restrictions

DC requires erosion and sediment control plans for all land-disturbing activities under 21 DCMR Chapter 5. Construction sites must implement Best Management Practices (BMPs) to prevent sediment from leaving the site and entering the District's waterways.

Code Section: 21 DCMR Chapter 5Stabilization Deadline: Within 7 days of final grading

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

DC enforces comprehensive stormwater management regulations under 21 DCMR Chapter 5 (Sections 501-547), administered by the Department of Energy and Environment (DOEE). Projects disturbing 5,000+ sq ft of soil must submit a Stormwater Management Plan (SWMP) and retain stormwater on-site using green infrastructure.

Code Section: 21 DCMR Chapter 5 (Sections 501-547)Trigger Threshold: 5,000+ sq ft of soil disturbance

Coastal Development

Some Restrictions

While DC is not a coastal city, it regulates development along the Anacostia River, Potomac River, and Rock Creek through floodplain management rules and the Anacostia Waterfront Development Zone under DC Code Section 2-1226.36. Waterfront projects face enhanced stormwater and environmental review requirements.

Key Zone: Anacostia Waterfront Development ZoneCode Section: DC Code Section 2-1226.36

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

DC participates in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) and regulates construction in FEMA-designated flood zones under 20 DCMR Chapter 31. Buildings in the 100-year floodplain must be elevated or floodproofed, and substantial improvements trigger full compliance requirements.

Code Section: 20 DCMR Chapter 31Elevation Requirement: 1 foot above Base Flood Elevation

Grading & Drainage

Some Restrictions

DC regulates grading and drainage through the Department of Buildings (DOB) and DOEE. Grading permits are required for significant changes to site topography, and all drainage must be directed away from neighboring properties and toward approved stormwater infrastructure.

Grading Permit: Required for significant grade changesAuthority: DOB (grading) and DOEE (stormwater)

Shoreline Management

Heavy Restrictions

Washington DC regulates waterfront development along the Potomac and Anacostia rivers through Subtitle C of the 11 DCMR Zoning Regulations, the Anacostia Waterfront Development Zone (AWDZ), and the Comprehensive Plan's waterfront elements.

Code: 11 DCMR Subtitle C; AWDZ regulationsZones: W-1, W-2, W-3 waterfront zones

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Buffer Zones

Some Restrictions

Licensed DC medical cannabis dispensaries and cultivation centers must sit at least 300 feet from any pre-K, elementary, or secondary school, and may not cluster within 300 feet of another dispensary.

School buffer: 300 feetDispensary separation: 300 feet

Personal Cultivation Limits

Few Restrictions

DC Initiative 71 (2014) lets adults 21+ grow up to six cannabis plants at home, with no more than three mature flowering at one time, exclusively for personal use.

Plants per adult: Six total, three floweringHousehold cap: Twelve plants maximum

Cannabis Delivery Rules

Some Restrictions

Because the Harris Amendment blocks taxed retail sales, DC tolerates adult-to-adult gifting under Initiative 71, but commercial "I-71 gifting" delivery shops face crackdown under the 2022 Medical Cannabis Amendment Act.

Adult gift limit: One ounce, no paymentRetail sales: Blocked by Harris Amendment

Social Equity Licensing

Few Restrictions

The DC Medical Cannabis Amendment Act of 2022 created a social equity license tier reserving slots for residents with prior cannabis convictions or who lived in designated disproportionately impacted areas for at least five years.

Equity reservation: 50% of new licensesFee reduction: 75% off

Home Cultivation

Few Restrictions

Under Initiative 71 (effective February 2015) and DC Code Section 48-904.01, DC residents 21 and older may grow up to 6 cannabis plants at home, with no more than 3 being mature at any time. Home cultivation is for personal use only, and sales remain illegal.

Plant Limit: 6 plants total, max 3 matureAge Requirement: 21 years or older

Dispensary Zoning

Heavy Restrictions

DC's medical marijuana program regulates dispensary locations under DC Code Title 7, Chapter 16B and 22-C DCMR. Dispensaries must be at least 300 feet from schools, recreation centers, and youth-serving facilities. Commercial sales for recreational use remain prohibited due to Congressional interference.

Buffer Distance: 300 feet from schools and youth facilitiesLicensing Authority: ABCA (Alcoholic Beverage and Cannabis Administration)

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

🏚️ Property Maintenance

Snow & Sidewalk Clearing

Heavy Restrictions

DC law requires property owners and occupants to clear snow and ice from sidewalks adjacent to their property within 8 hours after snowfall ends, or by 8 hours after sunrise if snow falls overnight. This applies to both residential and commercial properties under DC Code Section 9-601 et seq.

Clearing Deadline: 8 hours after snowfall ends or 8 hours after sunriseMinimum Path Width: 36 inches

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

DC regulates trash container storage and placement under the DC Municipal Regulations and DPW guidelines. Trash bins must be stored out of public view when not set out for collection and placed curbside only during designated collection hours.

Set-Out Time: By 6:30 PM evening before or 6:30 AM day of collectionRetrieval Deadline: By 8:00 PM on collection day

Property Blight

Heavy Restrictions

DC has strong property maintenance and anti-blight laws under DC Code Title 42, Chapter 31C (Vacant and Blighted Property) and the housing code (14 DCMR). Vacant and blighted properties face increased tax rates and mandatory registration requirements.

Vacant Property Tax: Class 3 elevated rateBlighted Property Tax: Class 4 rate (up to $10/$100 assessed value)

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

DC requires vacant lot owners to maintain their properties free of trash, debris, and overgrown vegetation under the DC Housing Code (14 DCMR) and vacant property laws. Grass and weeds must be kept below 8 inches, and lots must be secured against unauthorized entry.

Vegetation Limit: Grass and weeds below 8 inchesRegistration: Mandatory vacant property registration

Garage Sale Rules

Few Restrictions

DC does not require a permit for residential garage or yard sales. Sales must be conducted on private property and should not obstruct sidewalks or public rights-of-way. Signs advertising sales are subject to DDOT public space rules.

Permit Required: No permit for occasional residential salesLocation: Private property only

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Heavy Restrictions

DC's Human Rights Act bans housing providers from discriminating against renters based on lawful source of income, including Housing Choice Vouchers, SSI, child support, veterans' benefits, and other lawful payment sources.

Statute: DC Code 2-1402.21Protected class: Source of income

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Heavy Restrictions

DC's Rental Housing Act prohibits landlords from threatening, intimidating, or constructively evicting tenants through utility shutoffs, false eviction notices, or sustained pressure aimed at forcing tenants out.

Statute: DC Code 42-3505.02Enforcement: OTA, RAD, AG

Section 8 Voucher Acceptance

Some Restrictions

The DC Housing Authority administers Housing Choice Vouchers and Local Rent Supplement Program subsidies; landlords accepting vouchers must pass DCHA inspection and use the agency's HAP contract for rent payments.

Administrator: DC Housing AuthorityPrograms: HCV + LRSP

Security Deposit Rules

Heavy Restrictions

DC limits residential security deposits to one month's rent, requires interest-bearing escrow, and obligates landlords to itemize deductions and return the balance within 45 days of move-out.

Maximum: 1 month's rentReturn window: 45 days

Relocation Assistance

Heavy Restrictions

When a DC landlord displaces tenants for substantial rehab, demolition, condo conversion, or owner-occupancy, the Rental Housing Act requires statutory relocation payments based on bedroom count and household status.

Statute: DC Code 42-3507.01Notice: 120-180 days

No-Fault Evictions

Heavy Restrictions

Under DC's just-cause regime, no-fault evictions are permitted only for narrowly defined reasons such as owner-occupancy, substantial rehab, demolition, change of use, or sale to a buyer who will occupy.

Statute: DC Code 42-3505.01Owner-use stay: 12 months minimum

Rental Registration

Heavy Restrictions

All rental properties in DC must be registered with the Department of Buildings (formerly DCRA) and comply with the Housing Code (14 DCMR). Landlords must obtain a Basic Business License with a Rental Housing endorsement and register rent-controlled units with the Rent Administrator.

License Required: Basic Business License with Rental Housing endorsementRent Registration: Required for rent-controlled units

Just Cause Eviction

Heavy Restrictions

DC provides strong just-cause eviction protections under the Rental Housing Act (DC Code Section 42-3505.01). Landlords may only evict tenants for specific enumerated reasons, and tenants have the right to cure most violations before eviction proceedings can begin.

Just-Cause Required: Yes, for all covered rental unitsCode Section: DC Code Section 42-3505.01

Rent Control

Heavy Restrictions

DC has one of the strongest rent control programs in the United States under the Rental Housing Act of 1985 (DC Code Section 42-3501.01 et seq.). Rent increases for covered units are capped at CPI + 2% annually (or CPI + 5% for units where the tenant is not elderly or disabled). The 2024 RENTAL Act modified some provisions.

Rent Increase Cap: CPI + 2% (elderly/disabled CPI only)Coverage: Most units in buildings built before 1976

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

DC regulates where and when trash and recycling bins can be placed at the curb. Bins must be at the curb during collection windows and stored on private property at all other times. Bins must not obstruct sidewalks or alleys.

Curbside Placement: At curb edge, not on sidewalkSet-Out Window: 6:30 PM night before to 6:30 AM day of

Recycling Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

DC mandates recycling for all residents and businesses under the Sustainable Solid Waste Management Amendment Act (DC Law 20-154). Single-stream recycling accepts paper, cardboard, glass, metal, and plastics #1-7. Contaminated recycling bins may be rejected.

Mandate: Recycling required for all residents and businessesCollection: Every other week in blue-lid SuperCans

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

DPW provides weekly trash and recycling collection for residential properties in DC. Trash is collected weekly and recycling every other week on designated days. All items must be in DPW-issued containers and placed at the curb during designated hours.

Trash Collection: Weekly on designated dayRecycling Collection: Every other week

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

DC provides scheduled bulk trash collection for residential properties through DPW. Residents must schedule pickups through 311 or online. Construction debris, hazardous materials, and electronics are excluded from bulk collection and require special disposal methods.

Scheduling: Via 311 or DPW websiteAccepted Items: Furniture, mattresses, carpet, large household items

🚁 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

DC's Urban Forestry Division and DOEE share a 40% citywide tree canopy goal under the Tree Canopy Protection Amendment Act, prioritizing planting in heat-vulnerable Wards 5, 7, and 8 documented at less than 25% canopy.

Canopy target: 40% by 2032Street trees managed: 170,000+

Heritage & Protected Trees

Heavy Restrictions

DC designates trees with a circumference of 100 inches or more as Heritage Trees under the Urban Forest Preservation Act. Heritage Trees have the highest level of protection and generally cannot be removed except when they pose an imminent safety hazard or are dead/dying.

Definition: 100+ inch circumference (approx. 32 inches diameter)Removal Allowed: Only if dead, diseased, or imminent hazard

Tree Replacement Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

DC requires replacement planting or payment into the DC Tree Fund when protected trees are removed. The number and size of replacement trees depends on the circumference of the removed tree. The Tree Canopy Protection Amendment Act of 2016 strengthened replacement requirements.

Replacement Ratio: 1 tree per 10 inches circumference removedTree Fund: Alternative to on-site planting

Tree Ordinances

Heavy Restrictions

The DC Tree Canopy Protection Amendment Act (DC Law 21-259) requires a permit to remove any Special Tree (44-100 inch circumference) and prohibits removal of Heritage Trees over 100 inches except for hazard. Fees and replacement are required.

Law: DC Law 21-259Special Tree: 44-99.9 in circ.

Tree Removal Permits

Heavy Restrictions

DC has strong tree protection under the Urban Forest Preservation Act of 2002 (DC Law 14-309) and the Tree Canopy Protection Amendment Act of 2016. Removing any tree with a circumference of 55 inches or more (Special Tree) requires a permit from DDOT's Urban Forestry Division.

Special Tree: 55+ inch circumference requires permitHeritage Tree: 100+ inch circumference; highest protection

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Elevator Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

Every elevator in DC must be inspected annually by a DCRA-licensed elevator inspector and maintained by a licensed elevator contractor under DC Code 6-1401 and DCMR Title 12-A Chapter 30.

Inspection frequency: AnnualCode basis: ASME A17.1

Lead Paint

Heavy Restrictions

The DC Lead Hazard Prevention and Elimination Act requires landlords of pre-1978 properties to disclose lead hazards, perform clearance inspections, and abate any identified lead paint when a child under six lives there.

Code: DC Code 8-231.01Pre-1978 housing: Covered

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

DC landlords must keep rental units free of rodents and insects under the housing code, DCMR Title 14 Chapter 8, and respond promptly to infestation reports. Repeated tenant complaints can trigger DCRA inspections and abatement orders.

Code: DCMR 14-805Bedbug response: Landlord pays

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Heavy Restrictions

Any scaffold, sidewalk shed, or supported access platform in DC requires a DCRA construction permit and must follow DC Construction Code Chapter 33, including pedestrian protection, lighting, and load ratings.

Permit threshold: Over 14 feetSidewalk clearance: Seven feet minimum

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

DC requires NFPA 13 or 13R sprinkler systems in all new multi-family buildings of three or more units and in many substantial renovations under the DC Construction Code, with DCRA permitting and DC Fire/EMS inspecting installations.

Multi-family threshold: Three unitsStandard: NFPA 13 or 13R

Childcare Center Rules

Heavy Restrictions

DC childcare centers must meet OSSE licensing rules, DCRA Certificate of Occupancy requirements, fire inspections, and lead and IPM standards before operating, with stricter ratios and exit requirements than ordinary residential or office uses.

Licensing agency: OSSECode chapter: DCMR 5-A 1

Green Building Code

Heavy Restrictions

DC adopted the IgCC-based Green Construction Code in DCMR Title 12-K, requiring most new commercial and large multi-family projects to meet enhanced energy, water, and material standards alongside the Building Energy Performance Standards program.

Code chapter: DCMR 12-KThreshold: Over 10,000 sq ft

πŸ“‹ Code Violation Reporting

πŸŽ‹ Invasive Plant Rules

πŸ“· Privacy & Surveillance

πŸ“ Permit Requirements

🚬 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

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

🚷 Public Conduct

πŸ’° Local Taxes & Fees

Overall: What to Expect in Washington

Washington has 196 ordinances on file across 45 categories. Of these, 35 are rated permissive, 77 moderate, and 84 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Washington 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.