Massachusetts does not regulate residential artificial turf at the state level, but Boston's 2022 Green New Deal for the Environment (adopted by City Council) banned new artificial turf installations on Boston-owned property. Private residential turf is generally permitted in Suffolk County. Concerns about PFAS in turf infill have prompted state legislation and MassDEP review.
Artificial turf in Suffolk County is regulated primarily through local policy and product safety concerns. No statewide residential ban exists. Boston in September 2022 passed an ordinance (Boston Code §7-9) banning the use of artificial turf on City-owned property and in future Boston Parks and Recreation projects — this followed advocacy over PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) leaching, heat island effects (synthetic turf can reach 150-180°F in summer), and microplastic pollution. The ban does not apply to private residential property. The MA Legislature has considered bills (H.2192 and variants) proposing statewide PFAS restrictions in turf. MassDEP's 2022 PFAS action plan acknowledges turf as a contamination source. Chelsea, Revere, and Winthrop have no specific artificial turf regulations, though site plan review of large installations (schools, condos) may require consideration of runoff, heat, and drainage impacts. Installation on private residential property generally does not require a permit unless grading changes exceed permit thresholds (typically 50 cubic yards) or within 100 feet of wetlands (Conservation Commission jurisdiction under MGL c. 131, §40). Drainage base must be designed to pass water (not create runoff to neighbors) and weed-barrier fabric prevents vegetation invasion. Condo and HOA restrictions vary; reasonable aesthetic rules apply. Recycling or disposal of old turf must follow MassDEP solid waste rules.
Private residential: generally no penalty for installation. Conservation Commission violations: up to $25,000/day. Disposal violations: MassDEP solid waste penalties. City projects on Boston land: banned.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Revere, MA
Revere's noise ordinance prohibits construction before 7 AM (9 AM on Saturdays and holidays) and after 6 PM. No construction on Sundays. Confirmed by Revere ...
Revere, MA
Revere enforces noise complaints under Title 9 (Public Peace, Safety & Welfare) of its Code of Ordinances. No published single decibel limit; enforcement use...
Revere, MA
Barking dogs addressed under Revere Code Title 6 (Animals) and general nuisance provisions. Excessive barking complaints handled by Revere Animal Control. Do...
Revere, MA
Revere is adjacent to Boston Logan International Airport (directly across the harbor). Aircraft noise is governed by FAA regulations and Massport; the city h...
Revere, MA
Revere has a city-wide electronic residential parking permit program under Code Ch. 10.34. As of March 1, 2025, no physical sticker required — registration i...
Revere, MA
Commercial vehicles require a separate Commercial Vehicle Parking Permit to park overnight on public ways in Revere. Cost: $420/year. Vehicle must be under 1...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Suffolk County.
See how Revere's artificial turf rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.