104 local rules on file Β· Pop. 5,177 Β· Monroe County
Showing ordinances that apply to Hamlin, NY
Hamlin is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 5,177 in Monroe County, New York. Because Hamlin is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Monroe County ordinances apply directly to residential and commercial properties here. The rules below are the county-level regulations that govern your area. Nearby incorporated cities in Monroe County may have different rules.
Home occupation signage is heavily restricted in Monroe County. Most residential zones prohibit or strictly limit exterior signs for home-based businesses to preserve neighborhood character.
NY Home Processor Exemption (20 NYCRR Β§276) permits home-baked non-hazardous foods without commercial kitchen. No revenue cap but sales must be direct-to-consumer. NYS Dept of Ag & Markets registration required; $400 annual fee for commercial operations exempt.
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Monroe County ordinances.
NY OCFS licenses family (up to 6 children) and group family (7-12) daycare homes. Monroe County zoning typically permits licensed family daycares in residential zones. Group family daycares may require special use permit in some towns.
Monroe County jurisdictions regulate amplified music under local noise codes. Rochester City Code Ch. 75 sets dBA limits and requires a sound permit for outdoor events. SLA license conditions apply to East End and Park Ave bars.
Monroe County towns regulate leaf blowers through local noise codes. Rochester City Code Ch. 75 and town codes (Brighton, Irondequoit, Pittsford) restrict gas blower hours. No county-wide ban; gas blowers widely used for fall leaf pickup before lakeshore snow.
Monroe County does not have a countywide noise ordinance governing quiet hours β individual towns and the City of Rochester set their own. Unincorporated areas default to New York State nuisance law.
Construction noise hours are set by individual municipalities within Monroe County. There is no countywide standard. Most towns follow general daytime hours (roughly 7 AMβ9 PM on weekdays).
Dog noise in Monroe County is addressed under New York Agriculture & Markets Law and individual municipal codes. Chronic barking that constitutes a nuisance can trigger enforcement action.
Monroe County towns specify approved fence materials in zoning codes. Wood, vinyl, chain-link, and wrought iron standard. Barbed wire banned in residential zones. Rochester Preservation Board reviews historic districts.
NY State Uniform Code (Residential Code Β§R404) requires engineered design for retaining walls over 4 feet measured from bottom of footing. Monroe County municipalities require building permits. Setbacks apply near property lines.
NY State Residential Code Appendix G (effective May 12, 2020) requires pool barriers minimum 48 inches. Self-closing, self-latching gates with latch at least 40 inches above grade, opening away from pool. Mandatory pool alarms for pools built after Dec 14, 2006 per Exec Law Β§387(14).
Fence height limits in Monroe County are set by each town and village. No countywide fence height law exists. Typical residential standards are 4 feet in front yards and 6 feet in rear and side yards.
New York Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law governs shared fence disputes. NY has no statutory shared-cost fence law. Spite fences over 10 feet erected maliciously can be treated as a private nuisance.
Fence permit requirements vary by municipality within Monroe County. Many towns require permits for fences over 4β6 feet. Some municipalities exempt small fences. Contact your local building department.
NY ECL Β§11-0505 prohibits feeding white-tailed deer, elk, and moose statewide. NY ECL Β§11-0535 prohibits bear feeding. Monroe County deer populations (Mendon Ponds, Durand Eastman) make bans significant. No-feed orders issued by DEC in disease areas.
Monroe County allows hens in NYC but roosters are banned. Coops must meet health standards. Livestock prohibited in most residential zones. NYC Health Code governs.
New York State Agriculture & Markets Law focuses on behavior-based dangerous dog provisions rather than breed bans. Monroe County and most of its municipalities do not have breed-specific legislation.
New York State has no statewide leash law. Each municipality within Monroe County sets its own leash requirements. Most Monroe County towns require dogs to be on leash when off the owner's property.
Beekeeping in Monroe County is governed by New York State Agriculture & Markets Law and individual municipal zoning codes. All NY beekeepers must register their apiaries annually with the NYS Department of Agriculture & Markets at no cost.
New York State ECL Β§11-0512 prohibits keeping wild animals as pets statewide. This includes large cats, bears, wolves, primates, and venomous reptiles. No county exemption applies in Monroe County.
City of Rochester STR ordinance (Β§90-34, effective 2023) caps guest occupancy at 2 per bedroom + 2 additional, max 10 per unit. Monroe County towns (Pittsford, Brighton) set limits via zoning.
Rochester STR ordinance Β§90-34 requires $500,000 liability insurance. NY State STR platform law (2025) does not mandate host insurance but platforms often provide coverage. Standard homeowner policies typically exclude commercial STR activity.
Monroe County voted in December 2025 to opt out of New York State's new short-term rental registry. No county-level STR permit is required, but hosts must register with the Monroe County Treasurer for hotel room excise tax purposes.
Monroe County does not impose a countywide cap on the number of nights a short-term rental can be booked. On December 9, 2025 the Monroe County Legislature voted 21-8 to opt out of the optional county short-term rental registry created by New York's 2024 STR law (S.885C/A.4130C, signed December 21, 2024 and amended by Chapter 99 of the Laws of 2025). Without a county registry there is no county-level mechanism to enforce a nightly cap. Statewide, the New York Multiple Dwelling Law (MDL) Β§4(8) makes whole-unit short-term rentals (under 30 days) of dwellings in covered Class A multiple dwellings illegal unless a permanent occupant is present. Any night-cap or stay-length limits within Monroe County come from individual towns, villages, or the City of Rochester, not from the county.
Monroe County imposes a 6% hotel room occupancy tax on short-term rentals. Combined with state and county sales taxes, total tax burden is approximately 14% for Monroe County STR stays.
STR guests in Monroe County are subject to the same noise rules as permanent residents. There is no separate county noise code for STRs; individual town ordinances and NY State nuisance law apply.
No specific county STR parking rules exist. STR guests must follow the same parking regulations as residents, which vary by municipality. Town-level rules apply.
Monroe County municipalities generally permit artificial turf on residential property. Rochester and Brighton require drainage plans for larger installations. HOAs may restrict. PFAS concerns have prompted state-level scrutiny.
Rainwater harvesting is legal in Monroe County with no state restrictions. Rain barrels widely encouraged for Lake Ontario and Genesee River watershed protection. Monroe County distributes discounted barrels seasonally.
Monroe County towns enforce weed and overgrown vegetation rules. Rochester Property Conservation Code Ch. 90 requires grass under 10 inches. Vacant lots a priority. DEC regulates invasive species statewide.
Monroe County municipalities encourage native plantings for stormwater and pollinator habitat. NY DEC Native Plant list guides species selection. NY General Obligations Law Β§5-321-a does not preempt HOA aesthetic rules but reasonable native gardens typically allowed.
Tree trimming along county and state roads in Monroe County requires permits. Utility line clearance trimming is handled by utilities. Private property tree trimming is generally unregulated unless covered by local ordinance.
Tree removal permits in Monroe County are handled by individual municipalities. No countywide tree removal permit exists. Trees on county or state road rights-of-way require permits. Some towns have tree preservation ordinances for significant trees.
Monroe County and the greater Rochester area draw water from Lake Ontario, Hemlock Lake, and Canadice Lake. Unlike drought-prone western states, water restrictions are uncommon but can be declared during drought emergencies.
Grass height limits in Monroe County are set by individual municipalities. No countywide ordinance establishes a maximum grass height. Most Monroe County towns enforce 8β10 inch maximum grass height limits as a property maintenance standard.
Monroe County follows NY DEC Part 215 seasonal burn ban (March 16 to May 14). Property owners must keep lots clear under town property maintenance codes. No wildfire-zone clearance requirement.
Monroe County is not designated a high wildfire hazard area. No defensible space requirements. NY DEC Part 215 brush burn ban (March 16 β May 14) is the primary wildfire-season rule. Rochester metro dominated by urban/suburban land cover.
Monroe County does not have a separate countywide smoke-alarm ordinance; smoke-alarm requirements come from the New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code, including 19 NYCRR Part 1225 (which incorporates the 2020 Fire Code of New York State) and 19 NYCRR Part 1226 (Property Maintenance Code). State law requires smoke alarms inside every sleeping room, outside each separate sleeping area, and on every story including basements. Since April 1, 2019, all new battery-powered smoke alarms sold in New York must use sealed 10-year non-removable batteries (NY Executive Law Β§378(5-a)). In unincorporated Monroe County and in towns that do not maintain their own building department, code enforcement is handled by Monroe County under the Monroe County Code of Ordinances Chapter 156 (Uniform Code Enforcement). Cities, villages, and most towns within the county enforce the same state code through their own building departments.
Consumer fireworks remain illegal statewide under NY Penal Law Β§270.00. Monroe County has opted into the 2017 state law permitting the sale of certain sparkling devices (sparklers, ground-based devices) during defined seasonal windows.
Outdoor burning in Monroe County is regulated by Monroe County Sanitary Code Article V and NY State DEC Part 215. Burning trash and leaves is prohibited statewide. Small recreational fires with clean dry wood are generally allowed with conditions.
Recreational fire pits using clean dry wood are generally permitted in Monroe County with proper clearances. Gas fire pits are typically exempt from burn permit requirements. Permanent structures may require a building permit.
City of Rochester prohibits on-street parking 2 AM to 6 AM year-round under Municipal Code Β§111-5 (alternate side not in effect; blanket overnight ban). Residents can request overnight exemption permits. Towns vary.
NY Vehicle and Traffic Law Β§1224 governs abandoned vehicle removal. Rochester Municipal Code Β§111-12 allows 48-hour notice then tow. Vehicles on private property must be registered, inspected, and operable or stored inside per Β§39-10.
NY State Energy Conservation Construction Code (2020) requires new construction to include EV-ready parking. Residential Level 2 chargers require electrical permit. RG&E offers SmartRate EV charging incentive.
Driveway rules in Monroe County are set at the municipal level. No countywide regulations govern residential driveways. Most towns require paved or gravel surfaces for driveways and regulate curb cuts near county roads.
RV and trailer parking on public streets is restricted in most Monroe County municipalities. Many towns limit on-street RV parking to 24-hour periods. Driveway storage rules vary by town zoning code.
Street parking rules in Monroe County are set by each municipality. Most towns impose seasonal overnight parking bans, especially from November through April, to allow snow plowing. No countywide overnight parking ordinance exists.
Parking of commercial vehicles in residential neighborhoods is regulated by individual towns within Monroe County. Many municipalities restrict overnight parking of heavy trucks or vehicles with commercial advertising on residential streets.
NY Residential Code Appendix G applies to hot tubs and spas β barrier requirements met if equipped with ASTM F1346-compliant lockable safety cover. Electrical permit required for 240V wiring. Monroe County towns require building permit.
Monroe County requires building permits for all pools under NYS Residential Code Appendix G. Town building departments review setbacks, electrical, and barriers. Pool alarms mandatory on post-2006 installs.
All swimming pools capable of holding more than 24 inches of water in Monroe County must be surrounded by a barrier at least 48 inches high under New York State Residential Code. Self-closing, self-latching gates are required.
Above-ground pools over 24 inches deep in Monroe County require the same barrier requirements as in-ground pools. Pools 48 inches or taller with no deck need a locking or removable ladder. Building permits are required for most above-ground pools.
Monroe County follows New York State pool safety requirements including mandatory pool alarms, GFCI-protected electrical outlets, proper barrier construction, and permit requirements for all in-ground pools and pools over 24 inches deep.
NY State Residential Code Appendix Q allows tiny homes β€400 sq ft with reduced ceiling (6'8") and loft (6'2") requirements. Foundation-built tiny homes treated as dwellings. THOW (tiny on wheels) treated as RVs under NY VTL. Monroe County towns vary in ADU acceptance.
Monroe County municipalities require building permits for carports. Rochester Zoning Code Β§120-94 treats carports as accessory structures with rear/side yard placement. Setbacks typically 3-5 feet sides. Snow load design per NY RC (35 psf Monroe County).
Shed permit requirements in Monroe County are handled by each town or city. New York State Building Code requires permits for sheds over 144 square feet. Many Monroe County towns require permits for sheds of all sizes or set lower thresholds.
Garage conversions in Monroe County require building permits and must meet New York State Residential Code requirements for habitable space, egress, insulation, and ventilation. Zoning approval may also be needed.
ADU regulations in Monroe County are set by individual towns and the City of Rochester. No statewide ADU mandate exists in New York. Unincorporated Monroe County areas follow county zoning β ADUs typically require a special use permit or variance.
NY Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act (HSTPA, 2019) governs evictions statewide. Rochester has no local just-cause ordinance, but Good Cause Eviction (L.2024, Ch.56) took effect April 20, 2024 in NYC and allows opt-in by other cities β Rochester has not opted in as of 2025.
Monroe County is NOT covered by NY ETPA rent stabilization. Rochester considered opt-in after 2019 HSTPA but has not adopted. Good Cause Eviction Law applies statewide for certain buildings (2024).
City of Rochester requires Certificates of Occupancy and rental registration for all rental dwellings (1-4 units) under Municipal Code Chapter 90. Properties must pass inspection every 3-6 years. Town of Irondequoit, Greece, and Brighton have separate rental registries.
Rochester requires Big Blue and Big Green totes at curb with 3-foot spacing. Bins must be retrieved within 24 hours. Store out of public view between pickups per Property Code Ch. 90.
Rochester provides weekly curbside trash via DES using Big Blue/Green totes. Monroe County towns contract private haulers (Waste Management, Suburban Disposal). Bins out by 7 AM on collection day.
Rochester DES offers weekly curbside bulk pickup same day as trash. Monroe County ecopark in Brighton accepts hazmat, electronics, appliances. Refrigerant must be removed before curbside.
Rochester Big Blue single-stream recycling accepts paper, cardboard, glass, metal, plastics 1-2. Monroe County MRF on Lee Road processes city and suburban recyclables. NY bottle bill 5-cent deposit applies.
Rochester does not require garage sale permits. Monroe County towns vary: Irondequoit and Greece require free registration. Brighton and Pittsford generally exempt for 2 to 4 sales per year.
Monroe County garage sales typically 8 AM to 6 PM, Thursday through Sunday. Cleanup same day. Signs removed within 24 hours. Residential character must be preserved.
Monroe County towns limit garage sales to 2 to 4 per household per year. Irondequoit allows 3. Pittsford and Brighton typically 2. Exceeding triggers home business zoning review.
Rochester permits garage sale signs under general temporary sign rules (Β§120-173). Signs limited to private property with owner permission. Utility poles and rights-of-way prohibited. Irondequoit, Greece, and Brighton have similar 2-day posting windows.
Monroe County municipalities permit holiday decorations on residential property without permits. Rochester Zoning Code Β§120-173 exempts holiday displays from sign regulations. Must not obstruct sight lines or create electrical hazards.
Political signs allowed on private property in Monroe County municipalities. Rochester Zoning Code Β§120-173 permits temporary signs up to 16 sq ft. Right-of-way placement prohibited. Post Reed v. Gilbert (2015), content-neutral rules apply β no election-period timers.
Rochester Municipal Code Β§47 and suburban town codes require trash bins stored out of public view between collections. Bins placed curbside evening before or morning of pickup. Waste Management and Feher Rubbish collect throughout county.
Rochester Property Conservation Code (Chapter 90) enforces maintenance standards. Vacant Foreclosed Property Registry requires registration and maintenance by mortgagees. Monroe County towns have similar codes. Fines accumulate daily.
Monroe County averages 100+ inches of lake-effect snow. Rochester Code Ch. 104 requires sidewalks cleared 24 hours after snowfall. Towns vary 24 to 48 hours. City may clear and bill owners.
Rochester Property Conservation Code Ch. 90 applies to garage sales to prevent blight. Items must be removed daily. Signs off within 24 hours of sale end. Repeated visible clutter triggers NET citations.
Rochester Β§39-10 and suburban codes require vacant lots to be maintained β grass under 10 inches, debris removed, secured against dumping. Vacant Foreclosed Registry applies to mortgaged abandoned parcels. Abatement with property lien for non-compliance.
Rochester requires permits for street tree removal under Code Ch. 105. Private trees generally unregulated in city. Pittsford and Brighton have stricter private tree codes. Emerald ash borer regulated by DEC.
Monroe County has no formal heritage tree registry. Rochester Parks manages notable trees in Highland Park, Durand Eastman, and Mt. Hope Cemetery. Pittsford nominates significant specimens through town tree program.
Rochester requires 1:1 replacement for approved street tree removals under Ch. 105. Pittsford requires 2:1 for permitted private removals. Fee-in-lieu options fund town tree programs.
Monroe County commercial drones require FAA Part 107 certificate. ROC Class C airspace requires LAANC. Rochester Film Commission handles commercial filming permits in city limits.
Monroe County drone use follows FAA rules. ROC Greater Rochester International Airport Class C airspace covers most of the county - LAANC authorization required. No drone launches in Monroe County parks.
Monroe County Parks close dusk to dawn under Β§260 County Code. Rochester city parks close 11 PM to 6 AM under Ch. 80. After-hours use is trespass; enforced by park rangers and police.
Monroe County enforces a juvenile curfew for minors under 17. Nighttime curfew hours typically run 11 PM to 6 AM on school nights with later weekend hours.
Monroe County Department of Public Health permits mobile food vendors under 10 NYCRR Part 14. Rochester requires city vendor license (Code Ch. 95). Annual inspection, commissary, insurance required.
Rochester restricts mobile vendors to approved zones under Code Ch. 95. 100-foot buffer from brick-and-mortar restaurants. Suburban towns vary; Henrietta and Greece allow on private property with owner consent.
Monroe County towns require grading permits for significant earthwork. Rochester Ch. 104A at 100+ cubic yards. Drainage cannot be redirected onto neighbors. Retaining walls over 4 feet require engineering.
Monroe County requires erosion and sediment controls on all land disturbance. NY DEC SPDES mandates Erosion and Sediment Control plans for 1+ acre. Silt fence, stabilized entrances, vegetation standard.
Monroe County has 42 miles of Lake Ontario shoreline. NYS Coastal Erosion Hazard Area law applies. Rochester, Greece, Irondequoit, Webster, Hamlin have LWRPs. Post-2017/2019 flooding saw major armor projects.
Rochester and Monroe County towns are NYS MS4 permittees. NY DEC SPDES GP-0-20-001 requires SWPPP for 1+ acre disturbance. Strict Lake Ontario and Genesee River watershed protection.
Monroe County has significant flood risk, particularly along the Genesee River and its tributaries, Irondequoit Creek, and other waterways. All FEMA-mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas require a local floodplain development permit. Monroe County participates in the NFIP and Community Rating System (CRS).
Monroe County towns prohibit light trespass through zoning. Rochester Ch. 120 caps spillover at 0.5 fc at residential property lines. Complaint-driven enforcement by town code officers.
Monroe County has no county-wide dark-sky ordinance. Rochester Ch. 120 zoning requires shielded fixtures on commercial lighting. Pittsford Village and Mendon have stricter residential dark-sky rules.
NY MRTA allows 3 mature + 3 immature plants per adult (21+), 6 + 6 max per household. Must be enclosed, secure, out of public view. Landlords may prohibit. Monroe County follows state law.
Rochester did NOT opt out of retail cannabis; dispensaries permitted. Several Monroe County towns opted out (Greece, Webster, Penfield). OCM licenses required. 500 ft school / 200 ft house of worship buffers.
Posted "No Soliciting" signs enforceable under Rochester Ch. 44 and town codes. Violators cited. Irondequoit and Brighton maintain informal registries. Religious and political canvassers exempt.
Rochester requires door-to-door solicitor permits under City Code Ch. 44 (Peddlers). Background check and ID badge required. Suburban towns each maintain peddler registrations. 9 AM to sunset hours.
Monroe County municipalities require building and electrical permits for solar installations. Rochester, Brighton, Irondequoit use NY State Unified Solar Permit for expedited review. NYSERDA NY-Sun rebates available. RG&E net metering standard.
NY Real Property Law Β§335-b prohibits HOAs and condominium boards from banning solar installations. HOAs may impose reasonable aesthetic guidelines but cannot effectively prohibit solar. Applies to Monroe County HOAs in Pittsford, Fairport, Webster subdivisions.
Monroe County town zoning sets setbacks. Rochester Zoning Code Ch. 120: 25 ft front, 6 ft side, 20 ft rear in R-1. Brighton and Pittsford have similar standards. ZBA variance required to encroach.
Monroe County town zoning limits residential heights. Rochester Ch. 120 caps R-1 at 35 feet / 2.5 stories. Pittsford Village 30 feet. Commercial downtown Rochester allows high-rise via form-based code.
Monroe County town zoning limits impervious coverage. Rochester Ch. 120 R-1 typically 40% building coverage. Brighton and Pittsford 30 to 35% in low-density zones. Stormwater plan required at thresholds.