Clark County Code 40.260.100 allows one home-business sign of 2 square feet or less in urban areas, or 6 square feet or less in rural areas. A separate sign permit is not required if the sign is included with the home business permit application.
Home business signage in unincorporated Clark County is limited by CCC 40.260.100(D)(4). Only one sign related to the home business is allowed, and its size depends on location: no larger than 2 square feet inside an urban growth boundary, or no larger than 6 square feet in rural areas. If the sign is included with the home business permit application, a separate sign permit is not needed. Because home businesses must remain compatible with the residential neighborhood, illuminated, flashing, or off-premises signs are not part of the allowance. Incorporated cities set their own sign rules.
Oversized or additional signs violate the home business standards and can be cited under Clark County code enforcement, and may jeopardize the home business permit.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
clark-county-wa
Clark County encourages backyard composting and runs free workshops, We Compost community food-waste hubs, and a Composter Recycler program. Optional every-o...
clark-county-wa
Clark County has no ordinance banning residential artificial turf, and homeowners may install it in their yards. In development-regulated landscaping, county...
clark-county-wa
Clark County actively encourages native landscaping. Its development code favors compatibility with existing native vegetation and drought-resistant planting...
clark-county-wa
Rainwater harvesting is legal in Clark County and statewide. Washington's Department of Ecology exempts on-site rooftop rainwater collection from water-right...
clark-county-wa
Clark County itself imposes no countywide lawn-watering schedule. Water is delivered by local utilities and districts, chiefly Clark Public Utilities, which ...
clark-county-wa
Washington's RCW 17.10 requires every property owner to eradicate Class A noxious weeds and control designated Class B and listed Class C weeds. The Clark Co...
See how Clark County's signage rules rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.