Greenville County, South Carolina addresses overgrown lots and weedy properties through two complementary county ordinances enforced by the Codes Enforcement Division (864.467.7090): the County Environmental Ordinance, which gives property owners 20 days to improve an overgrown lot after notice, and the County Housing Code, which allows up to 60 days for yard cleanup at residential properties. Greenville County has not published a single numeric grass-height threshold in its public AnswerBook description; the standard applied in the field is whether vegetation has become a nuisance or health hazard. Complaints are received by phone, online, or in person at the Code Enforcement office at 301 University Ridge, Suite S-3100, Greenville, SC 29601.
Greenville County, South Carolina does not maintain a single "weed ordinance" in the way some other counties do. Instead, overgrown vegetation, tall grass, brush, and weedy lots are enforced through two separate but overlapping county codes administered by the Codes Enforcement Division (located at 301 University Ridge, Suite S-3100, Greenville, SC 29601; phone (864) 467-7090).
The first is the Greenville County Environmental Ordinance, under which a property owner who receives notice of an overgrown lot has 20 days to bring the property into compliance. The Environmental Ordinance is the principal tool used against vacant or non-residential parcels where vegetation, debris, or junk has accumulated. The county describes this 20-day window directly on its public-facing AnswerBook page for "Weeds."
The second tool is the Greenville County Housing Code, which applies primarily to occupied residential property and provides a longer 60-day window for yard cleanup. The longer window reflects that the Housing Code is intended to bring habitable properties up to maintenance standards rather than to abate a pure nuisance.
Unlike some property-maintenance codes nationwide, Greenville County does not publish a single numeric maximum grass height (such as the 10- or 12-inch thresholds common in other jurisdictions) on its public AnswerBook page. Enforcement instead turns on whether the vegetation has become a nuisance or a health hazard β for example by harboring rats or snakes, creating a fire risk, or impeding visibility at intersections. Codes Enforcement officers will inspect after receiving a complaint and use professional judgment to decide whether to issue a notice of violation.
These county ordinances apply only in unincorporated Greenville County. Inside the six municipalities β the City of Greenville, City of Greer, City of Mauldin, City of Simpsonville, City of Travelers Rest, and City of Fountain Inn β local property-maintenance and nuisance codes apply, and complaints should be directed to the municipal code enforcement office for each city. Bella Vista, Five Forks, Berea, Welcome, Wade Hampton, Taylors, Sans Souci, Gantt, Parker, and other unincorporated communities are covered by county enforcement.
A property owner who fails to abate an overgrown lot within the 20-day Environmental Ordinance window (or 60-day Housing Code window for residential property) may receive a citation, be ordered to appear before the County Magistrate, and be subject to county-performed abatement. When the county itself abates the nuisance β typically by hiring a contractor to mow, clear brush, or remove debris β the cost is billed to the property owner and, if unpaid, attached as a lien against the property that is collectible with the annual property tax bill. Repeat or willful offenders may face escalating fines and additional citations on a per-day basis. Specific fine amounts and abatement-cost schedules are set administratively and should be confirmed with Codes Enforcement at (864) 467-7090.
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See how Greenville County's weed ordinances rules stack up against other locations.
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