Front yard vegetable and edible gardens are permitted in unincorporated King County. The county zoning code (KCC Title 21A) does not prohibit edible landscaping. King County actively promotes food gardening through its Local Food Initiative and partnership with programs like Tilth Alliance. Raised beds and food forests are common throughout the area.
Unincorporated King County does not restrict front yard edible gardens. King County Code Title 21A (Zoning) does not contain provisions prohibiting vegetables, herbs, fruit trees, or other edible plants in front yards of residential properties. The Pacific Northwest's mild, rainy climate makes the region exceptionally productive for gardening, and vegetable gardens β including front yard installations β are common and culturally accepted throughout King County. King County actively promotes urban and suburban food production through its Local Food Initiative and partnerships with organizations like Tilth Alliance (formerly Seattle Tilth), which provides gardening education and community garden support throughout the county. In rural unincorporated areas, the King County zoning code allows agricultural uses on many properties, further supporting food production. In urban unincorporated areas (White Center, Skyway, Fairwood), front yard gardens serve both aesthetic and food security purposes. Raised beds are particularly popular due to the region's heavy clay soils. Front yard food forests β layered plantings of fruit and nut trees, berry bushes, and ground cover edibles β are a distinctive Pacific Northwest gardening trend. King County's critical areas regulations (KCC 21A.24) may restrict garden installation in wetland or stream buffers, where native vegetation must be maintained. Additionally, gardens should not obstruct sight lines at intersections or encroach on public right-of-way.
No penalty for maintaining a front yard garden. Gardens must not create nuisance conditions (pest attraction, standing water) or obstruct public right-of-way. Gardens in critical areas (wetlands, stream buffers) must comply with KCC 21A.24.
Kent, WA
Kent decibel limits follow WAC 173-60 and KCC 8.05 using EDNA zones. Residential receiving limit is 55 dBA day and 45 dBA night. Commercial sources are cappe...
Kent, WA
Kent industrial sources are capped at 70 dBA day and 65 dBA night at another industrial property, but only 60 dBA day and 50 dBA night when received at a res...
Kent, WA
Commercial trucks over 10,000 pounds GVWR generally cannot park on Kent residential streets except for active loading. Warehouse districts and truck routes h...
Kent, WA
Kent follows Washington State Building Code EV-ready requirements for new multifamily and commercial buildings. Public chargers exist at Kent Station and sev...
Kent, WA
Kent driveway aprons require Public Works approval under KCC Title 6. New or widened driveways need a right-of-way construction permit, and vehicles must not...
Kent, WA
Kent has no city requirement to split shared fence costs with a neighbor. Washington common law controls boundary fences. Survey the property line before bui...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in King County.
See how Kent's front yard gardens rules stack up against other locations.
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