Rainwater harvesting is allowed in Suffolk County for residential non-potable use. Massachusetts has no restrictions on rain barrels for garden use. Boston Water & Sewer Commission encourages harvesting to reduce stormwater runoff.
Massachusetts does not restrict residential rainwater harvesting β unlike western states, collection for garden irrigation, lawn watering, and non-potable household use is permitted without special permits for small systems (rain barrels, small cisterns under ~2,500 gallons). Boston Water & Sewer Commission (BWSC) actively encourages rain-barrel use as part of its Green Infrastructure and combined-sewer-overflow reduction strategy β BWSC has historically offered rain barrel rebate programs and sells subsidized barrels. The Charles River Watershed Association, Neponset River Watershed Association, and other regional groups run workshops. Larger systems (over ~2,500 gallons or requiring plumbing integration) may trigger MA Plumbing Code (248 CMR) permit requirements plus Boston Inspectional Services plumbing review. Potable use of harvested rainwater is tightly regulated β requires treatment (filtration, UV, possibly chlorination), backflow prevention, and separate plumbing; Massachusetts Department of Public Health rarely approves potable residential rainwater systems. Condo associations and Boston's nine Local Historic Districts may restrict visible rain barrels for aesthetic reasons. Chelsea, Revere, and Winthrop follow state rules.
No penalties for standard residential rain-barrel use. Large cistern without plumbing permit: 248 CMR plumbing violation $100-$500 per Boston Municipal Code Β§9-1.3. Backflow connection to potable supply without approval: serious BWSC violation plus health risk citations. Unapproved potable use: Department of Public Health enforcement.
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See how Suffolk County's rainwater harvesting rules stack up against other locations.
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