100 local rules on file Β· Pop. 1,739 Β· Chester County
Showing ordinances that apply to Lincoln University, PA
Lincoln University is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 1,739 in Chester County, Pennsylvania. Because Lincoln University is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Chester County ordinances apply directly to residential and commercial properties here. The rules below are the county-level regulations that govern your area. Nearby incorporated cities in Chester County may have different rules.
Chester County places no cap on how many nights a year you can rent short-term. Any limit on rental nights is imposed by your borough or township zoning ordinance under the PA Municipalities Planning Code, if adopted at all.
Chester County does not require that a short-term rental be the host's primary residence. Whether investor-owned or non-owner-occupied rentals are allowed is decided by each borough or township zoning ordinance under the PA Municipalities Planning Code.
Chester County has no noise ordinance for short-term rentals. Noise and quiet-hours rules that apply to guests come from your borough or township ordinance, enforced by local police, under the municipality's PA Municipalities Planning Code police power.
Chester County does not require short-term-rental hosts to carry liability insurance. Any insurance requirement comes from your municipality's rental ordinance or your platform and lease, not from the county or Pennsylvania statute.
Short-term rentals in Chester County owe a 5% county Hotel Room Rental Tax under Ordinance #2019-2, on top of Pennsylvania's 6% state hotel occupancy tax β about 11% combined on stays under 30 nights. This is the genuine county-level rule.
Chester County does not issue short-term-rental permits. Whether an Airbnb or VRBO needs a use permit, zoning approval, or license is decided by your borough, city, or township under Pennsylvania's Municipalities Planning Code. Ask your municipal zoning office.
Chester County imposes no parking requirements on short-term rentals. Off-street-parking minimums and on-street restrictions for rentals are set by your borough or township zoning code under the PA Municipalities Planning Code, not the county.
Chester County has no rule requiring a host to be present during a stay. Any host-presence or on-site-manager requirement is set by individual boroughs and townships in their zoning ordinances under the PA Municipalities Planning Code.
Chester County does not run a short-term-rental registry, but every operator renting rooms for under 30 nights must register with the county for the Hotel Room Rental Tax. Separate registration or licensing of the rental itself is a municipal matter.
Chester County sets no maximum-guest limit for short-term rentals. Occupancy caps β often tied to bedrooms or parking β are imposed by individual boroughs and townships through zoning ordinances under the PA Municipalities Planning Code, if at all.
Chester County sets no leaf-blower rule and Pennsylvania has no statewide leaf-blower law. Your borough or township controls it. West Chester bars electrically powered lawn and garden tools used outdoors, including blowers, between 9:00 PM and 7:00 AM if they create unreasonable noise.
Neither Chester County nor Pennsylvania regulates aircraft noise; airspace and aircraft operations are governed exclusively by the Federal Aviation Administration under federal law. Local governments are preempted from setting flight-noise rules. Complaints go to the FAA or the operating airport, such as Brandywine Airport.
Chester County has no countywide barking-dog noise ordinance; it is enforced by your borough or township. West Chester Borough bars any animal that howls or barks continuously for 10 minutes, or intermittently for a half hour or more, to the disturbance of any person at any time.
Chester County has no countywide decibel ordinance. Pennsylvania sets vehicle sound limits statewide in 67 Pa. Code Chapter 157: measured at 50 feet, most cars may not exceed 76 dBA at 35 mph or less, motorcycles 82 dBA, and heavy vehicles 86 dBA. General noise decibel limits, if any, are
Chester County does not zone or set industrial-noise limits. Industrial and commercial noise is controlled by your borough or township through zoning performance standards under the PA Municipalities Planning Code. Most municipal codes cap noise crossing a property line into residential districts.
Chester County has no countywide quiet-hours ordinance. Noise is regulated by your borough, city or township under the PA Municipalities Planning Code, so quiet hours vary by municipality. West Chester, for example, bars unreasonable noise, with outdoor tools and construction restricted 9:00 PM to 7:00 AM.
Chester County directly regulates amplified sound on its own property: no person may use a loudspeaker, public address system, amplified musical instruments or amplifier on county park property without a permit. Off county land, amplified music is governed by your borough or township noise code.
Chester County only regulates outdoor music on its own park property, where a permit is required for amplified sound and no radio or instrument may be played to disturb visitors. Elsewhere, outdoor music is governed by your borough or township noise code, such as West Chester's unreasonable-noise standard.
Chester County sets no countywide construction-hours rule; it is governed by your borough or township. West Chester Borough, the county seat, bars construction, demolition and lot-sweeping noise between 9:00 PM and 7:00 AM on weekdays and Saturdays, and at any time on Sundays and legal holidays.
Vehicle noise is set by state law, which applies throughout Chester County. Under 75 Pa.C.S. section 4523, every motor vehicle must have a working muffler with no cutout or bypass, and no one may modify an exhaust to amplify noise above the state limit. Local police enforce it.
On-street parking is regulated by your borough or township and PennDOT, not by Chester County. The county owns no residential streets, so parking limits, permit zones and meters are set locallyβfor example, West Chester Borough runs a residential permit-parking program.
Abandoned vehicles are governed by Pennsylvania state law. A vehicle is presumed abandoned after 48 hours illegally on a highway or public property, or after 24 hours on private property without the owner's consent. Report abandoned vehicles to your local or state police.
Chester County has no countywide overnight on-street parking banβyour borough or township decides. Many municipalities restrict overnight parking; West Chester Borough, for example, prohibits overnight parking in permit lots from 7 p.m. to 6 a.m. except emergencies.
Chester County sets no countywide rule for parking an RV, boat or trailer at your homeβthat is decided by your borough or township under Pennsylvania's zoning powers. In county parks, sleeping in a personal vehicle is treated as camping and is not allowed outside designated areas.
Chester County has no countywide curb-marking rule. Painted curb colors (red no-parking, yellow loading, etc.) and any resident curb-marking are controlled by your borough or township under the PA Vehicle Code. Do not paint a public curb without municipal approval.
Chester County has no countywide rule on parking commercial trucks or work vehicles at a residenceβthat is set by your borough or township zoning ordinance. Local codes often limit weight, size or hours; West Chester Borough restricts oversized vehicles on public streets.
Chester County has no countywide oversized-vehicle parking rule. Your borough or township controls parking of large trucks, buses, campers and trailers on public streets. West Chester Borough, for example, bans oversized vehicles and unattached trailers on public streets without prior approval.
Chester County sets no countywide rule on driveway parking, driveway aprons or curb cutsβthese are handled by your borough or township, with PennDOT permitting driveways onto state routes. Check your municipal code for surface, setback and blocking-the-sidewalk rules.
Loading zones on public streets are designated and enforced by your borough or township, not by Chester County. On county park property, the Parks Rules bar stopping or parking in a marked passenger or loading zone except for prompt loading and unloading.
Chester County sets no countywide rule on EV chargers or EV-only parking spaces at homes or businesses. Installation follows the state electrical/building code and your municipality's permits and zoning. Pennsylvania has no statewide ICE-in-EV-space ban.
Pennsylvania's consumer fireworks law (Act 74 of 2022) governs Chester County. Adults 18 and older may buy and use 1.4G consumer fireworks, but may not discharge them within 150 feet of an occupied building or vehicle, on public property, on another's property without permission, or while intoxicated. Boroughs and townships
Chester County does not regulate residential fire pits; rules are set by your borough or township, which enforce fire safety through the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code (34 Pa Code, adopting the International Fire Code). Small recreational and cooking fires are permitted statewide under 25 Pa Code 129.14, subject to local
Smoke- and carbon-monoxide-alarm rules in Chester County come from Pennsylvania law, not a county ordinance. The PA Uniform Construction Code (34 Pa Code) requires smoke alarms in dwellings, and the Carbon Monoxide Alarm Standards Act (Act 121 of 2013, 35 P.S. 7221-7227) requires CO alarms in homes and rentals with
Outdoor burning in Chester County is governed by Pennsylvania DEP air-quality rules at 25 Pa Code 129.14, not a county ordinance. Recreational, ceremonial, and cooking fires are allowed, as is limited domestic refuse burning at single- or dual-family homes, but no fire may create off-property smoke that harms health or
Propane storage in Chester County is regulated by the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code (34 Pa Code), which adopts the International Fire Code, and enforced by your borough or township, not the county. Small household grill cylinders (typically 20 pounds) are exempt, while larger tanks trigger code separation-distance rules and, in
Pennsylvania has no statewide defensible-space or brush-clearance mandate like Western wildfire states, and Chester County sets no county-wide rule. Overgrown brush, tall grass, and weeds are handled as nuisances by your borough or township under its property-maintenance ordinance, and the Chester County Conservation District regulates earth disturbance and erosion under
Pennsylvania does not designate residential Fire Hazard Severity Zones the way Western states do, and Chester County has no wildfire-zone ordinance or defensible-space mandate. Wildfire risk in this suburban county is low; the state DCNR Bureau of Forestry handles wildfire suppression and issues seasonal fire-danger and burn-ban advisories rather than
Backyard recreational and cooking fires are allowed in Chester County under Pennsylvania rule 25 Pa Code 129.14; there is no county ban. Fires must not create off-property smoke that harms or unreasonably disturbs neighbors, and your borough or township may limit size, setbacks, and fuel or ban open burning entirely.
Chester County PA does not cap fence height countywide. Limits are set by your borough or township under the PA Municipalities Planning Code. Typical local rule: 4 feet in the front yard and 6 feet in side or rear yards for a residence.
Chester County PA issues no fence permit. Your borough or township does. Many now require a zoning permit for any fence, plus a building permit for taller fences. West Goshen Township requires a zoning permit for all fences and a building permit at 8 feet or more.
Chester County PA has no county fence-line law. Placement, spite fences and shared costs are governed by your municipality's zoning ordinance and Pennsylvania common law. Fences generally may not encroach on a neighbor's land or block a required sight triangle at intersections.
Chester County PA does not restrict fence materials. Municipalities do. Some boroughs and townships prohibit barbed wire, electrified or razor-wire fences in residential districts and limit height for solid materials. Check your township's zoning ordinance for allowed materials.
Chester County PA imposes no general fence requirements; each borough or township does. Common rules include a zoning permit, an open front-yard fence, no obstruction of the sight triangle, and no blocking of drainage swales or utility easements.
Chester County PA sets no retaining-wall standard. Your borough or township regulates them through its zoning and building codes. Many require a permit and cap wall height near the street. West Goshen Township limits a retaining wall in the front setback area to 4 feet and requires a permit.
Chester County PA does not specify fence materials. Wood, vinyl, metal, chain link, masonry and composite are generally allowed, subject to your borough or township's zoning ordinance, which may limit solid materials in front yards and ban wire types.
Pennsylvania has no statewide tree-removal permit, and Chester County does not require one for private yards. But clearing more than 5,000 square feet of ground triggers a mandatory Conservation District erosion plan, and many Chesco townships have their own tree ordinances.
Chester County sets no artificial-turf rule. Whether synthetic lawn is allowed, and any stormwater/impervious-surface conditions, is decided by your borough or township zoning and stormwater code.
There are no permanent county watering rules. During a Governor-declared drought emergency, Pennsylvania law bans watering lawns statewide. Your public water utility may also impose its own conservation limits.
Chester County has no tree-trimming ordinance for private yards. Street ('shade') trees in the public right-of-way are controlled by your borough or township shade tree commission, which requires a permit before major pruning.
Chester County has no county weed ordinance. Noxious-weed and overgrowth nuisance rules are set and enforced by your borough, city, or township, which usually declare tall weeds a public nuisance and order removal.
Chester County sets no grass-height limit. Overgrown-grass and weed ordinances are enacted by your borough, township, or city under the PA Municipalities Planning Code, with most caps between 6 and 12 inches.
Rainwater harvesting is legal in Chester County and across Pennsylvania. The state DEP has no permit program for private rain barrels or cisterns used for non-potable uses like watering gardens.
Chester County does not restrict native-plant or meadow landscaping. Native gardens are encouraged countywide, but a municipal weed-height ordinance can still apply, so keep plantings tidy and set back from streets.
Backyard composting is legal in Chester County and needs no county permit. The county encourages it through its Solid Waste Authority. Nuisance-style limits (odor, rodents, setbacks) come from your municipality.
Chester County has no general wildlife-feeding ban, but feeding is discouraged and restricted in county parks. Statewide, the PA Game Commission prohibits feeding deer, elk, and bears, and can order feeding stopped when it spreads disease or draws bears.
Chester County has no breed-specific ban, and Pennsylvania law prohibits municipalities from banning dogs by breed. Regulation is by behavior: the state Dangerous Dog law (3 P.S. 459-502-A) governs individual dogs that attack, regardless of breed.
Chester County does not regulate backyard chickens or livestock. Whether you may keep hens, roosters, or farm animals is decided by your borough or township zoning under the PA Municipalities Planning Code. Rural agricultural townships allow it; denser boroughs often restrict or ban it.
Chester County does not zone for livestock. Cattle, horses, goats, sheep, and pigs are permitted or restricted by your borough or township under PA zoning. Rural agricultural districts allow farm animals; suburban and borough lots typically do not.
Pennsylvania's Dog Law (3 P.S. 459-305) requires every dog to be confined, secured, or under reasonable control statewide. In Chester County parks, dogs must be on a leash no longer than 6 feet. Day-to-day leash rules are set by your borough or township.
Chester County restricts high-risk exotic animals. Under Health Department Β§202, wolves, bats, skunks, foxes, raccoons, and bobcats may not be sold, imported, or housed in the county, and no high-risk wild animal may be kept without PA Game Commission permission.
Chester County sets no beekeeping ordinance. Hive placement, setbacks, and hive counts are governed by your borough or township zoning. Statewide, beekeepers must register their colonies with the PA Department of Agriculture under the Bee Law (3 Pa.C.S. Ch. 21).
Chester County requires all cats three months or older to be vaccinated against rabies. Under Health Department Β§202.8, a cat residing in the county for ten days or more must be immunized by a licensed veterinarian. There is no county cat-leash or licensing rule.
Chester County sets no limit on how many pets you may own. Numeric limits on dogs and cats are set by your borough or township. Owning a kennel of many dogs triggers a state kennel license from the PA Department of Agriculture.
Pennsylvania made animal hoarding a specific crime in 2023. A person who houses more animals than they can properly care for, causing bodily injury or death, commits an offense under Title 18. Chester County SPCA and Health Department enforce animal-welfare and rabies rules.
A family child care home caring for four, five, or six unrelated children is licensed by the PA Department of Human Services under 55 Pa. Code Chapter 3290, not by Chester County. It needs a Certificate of Compliance and passes annual unannounced inspections. Municipal zoning may also apply.
Chester County does not zone - your borough or township does, under the PA Municipalities Planning Code. Most allow a home occupation as an accessory use if it stays incidental to the residence. In West Chester, the county seat, a home occupation may use no more than 25% of the
Home business signs are regulated by your municipality, not Chester County. Rules differ by borough and township. In West Chester Borough, a home occupation sign may show only the resident's name or profession and may not exceed two square feet, and it requires a sign permit.
Pennsylvania has no classic cottage food law and Chester County does not license home food producers. Instead you register a Limited Food Establishment with the PA Department of Agriculture, pay a $35 annual fee, and pass a home inspection. Only non-hazardous foods that need no refrigeration are allowed.
Home occupation permits are issued by your municipality, not Chester County. In West Chester Borough you must obtain a home occupation permit before starting, and everyone working in the home must live there - off-site employees who never report to or park at the house are allowed.
Chester County has no carport ordinance. Whether a carport is permitted, its setbacks, and whether a permit is needed are governed by your borough or township zoning ordinance under Pennsylvania's planning code.
Chester County does not regulate accessory dwelling units. Whether an ADU or in-law suite is allowed, and its size and setbacks, is decided by your borough or township zoning ordinance under the PA Municipalities Planning Code.
Chester County does not regulate garage conversions. Converting a garage to living space requires a building permit and zoning compliance from your borough or township, plus adherence to the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code.
Chester County sets no countywide shed rule. Size thresholds for a permit, side and rear setbacks, and maximum height for a backyard shed are all controlled by your borough or township zoning ordinance.
Chester County does not have tiny-home rules. Whether a tiny house on a foundation or on wheels is allowed depends on your borough or township zoning ordinance and the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code.
A backyard pool at a single-family home needs only a municipal building permit under the PA Uniform Construction Code. A public or semi-public pool (HOA, club, apartment, motel) additionally needs a state Public Bathing Place Permit and a Certificate of Registration from the Chester County Health Department.
Public pools in Chester County must follow county Health Department safety rules: certified lifeguards at recreational swimming establishments (one per 4,000 sq ft of water), plus lifesaving equipment. A pool without a lifeguard must post 'WARNING - NO LIFEGUARD ON DUTY' signs. Home pools follow the barrier rule only.
Every residential pool, spa, or hot tub in Chester County must be enclosed by a barrier at least 48 inches high, with self-closing, self-latching gates that open outward. This comes from the International Swimming Pool and Spa Code adopted statewide in the PA Uniform Construction Code and is enforced by
An above-ground pool in Chester County that can hold 24 inches or more of water needs a municipal building permit and the same 48-inch barrier as an in-ground pool. Where the pool wall itself serves as the barrier, any ladder or steps must be removable, lockable, or secured against child
A spa or hot tub is defined by Chester County as a structure up to 48 inches deep with recirculation or air injection that is not emptied after each use. Backyard spas normally need only a municipal permit; a spa with a lockable safety cover meeting ASTM F1346 is exempt
Backyard smokers are allowed in Chester County as cooking devices; there is no county rule. State air rule 25 Pa Code 129.14 permits fires solely for cooking food, and the International Fire Code (adopted via the PA UCC) restricts charcoal and open-flame cooking devices on apartment balconies near combustibles. No
Backyard grilling is allowed in Chester County; the county sets no rule. Statewide air rules (25 Pa Code 129.14) permit cooking fires, and the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code adopts the International Fire Code, which restricts charcoal and larger LP-gas grills on the balconies of apartment buildings near combustible construction. Household
Chester County PA does not set lot-coverage limits. Your borough or township caps building and impervious coverage by zoning district under the PA Municipalities Planning Code. County involvement is limited to stormwater and erosion review, not coverage percentages.
Chester County PA sets no building height limit. Your borough or township caps building height by zoning district under the PA Municipalities Planning Code. Suburban districts often allow about 35 feet; boroughs and commercial districts may differ.
Chester County PA does not set building setbacks. Under the PA Municipalities Planning Code, your borough or township fixes front, side and rear yard setbacks by zoning district. Requirements differ greatly between rural townships and dense boroughs like West Chester.
Chester County sets no countywide rule for how or where you store trash cans. Bin storage, screening, and set-out times are governed by your borough or township property maintenance code and by your hauler's contract.
Chester County does not regulate garage or yard sales. Whether you need a permit, how many sales per year you may hold, and duration and signage limits are set by your borough, city, or township ordinance.
Chester County does not run a countywide blight code. Property maintenance and blight are enforced by your borough, city, or township code enforcement office. Where no local office exists, the County Health Department (610-344-6225) can take a complaint.
Chester County does not regulate vacant-lot maintenance. Overgrowth, dumping, and nuisance conditions on empty lots are enforced by your borough or township. The County Health Department addresses vacant lots only for vector and public-health hazards.
Chester County has no countywide grass-height or weed ordinance. Maximum lawn height and weed removal are enforced by your borough, city, or township. Typical Pennsylvania municipal limits are 6 to 12 inches, but check your local code.
Chester County does not run curbside trash collection. Each borough, city, or township either contracts a hauler or licenses private ones, and most county waste goes to the county-owned Lanchester Landfill under a state-mandated waste plan.
Dumping trash on roads, another's land, or waters of Pennsylvania is a summary offense under 18 Pa.C.S. Section 6501 (scattering rubbish). A first offense carries a $50 to $300 fine plus mandatory litter cleanup; repeat offenses are misdemeanors.
Chester County residents can drop off bulky trash, appliances, and electronics at the county-owned Lanchester Landfill and Reclamation Center in Narvon. Fees apply. Curbside bulky pickup, if offered, is arranged through your municipal hauler.
Chester County sets no countywide bin-placement rule. Curb set-out timing, placement, and container type are governed by your borough or township ordinance and your hauler's contract, not the county.
Under Pennsylvania Act 101, larger Chester County municipalities must run mandatory recycling programs. The county Solid Waste Authority uses a single-stream system accepting cans, cartons, glass jars, cardboard, newspaper, and #1 and #2 plastics.
Chester County sets no rule for garage or yard sale signs. Where you may post them, their size, and how long they can stay up are governed by your borough or township sign ordinance, and public right-of-way postings are usually prohibited.
Chester County does not regulate yard signs. Political signs are constitutionally protected speech, and municipal sign ordinances that restrict them by content have been struck down. Your borough or township sets any remaining time, place, and manner limits.
Chester County has no countywide dark-sky ordinance, but the county Planning Commission promotes model outdoor-lighting standards, and many Chester County townships have adopted dark-sky ordinances to limit skyglow and glare.
Chester County does not regulate light spilling onto a neighbor's property. Light-trespass limits are set in municipal lighting ordinances, where many Chester County townships cap illumination at property lines using shielded, full-cutoff fixtures.
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Chester County ordinances.