Pop. 21,146 Β· Bay County
Amplified outdoor music falls under Chapter 26 (Environment) nuisance provisions and the general penalty in Sec. 1-7. There is no separate decibel cap or amplified-music permit in the Code.
Lynn Haven does not publish a fixed decibel-cap schedule in its Code of Ordinances. Noise complaints are handled as public nuisances under Chapter 26 (Environment) and Sec. 1-7 general penalty, with Lynn Haven Police (850-265-4111) responding after-hours and Code Enforcement (850-740-8633) handling daytime complaints.
Animal control in Lynn Haven is delivered by the city's Animal Shelter (850-265-4699) at 1750 Recreation Drive, with public-nuisance and dangerous-dog enforcement layered on top of Bay County Chapter 4 (Animals). Persistent barking is treated as a public nuisance.
Lynn Haven does not impose a construction-noise time window in its Code of Ordinances. Construction noise is regulated through the same Chapter 26 nuisance provisions and the general penalty under Sec. 1-7.
Lynn Haven has no leaf-blower-specific ordinance. Gas and electric blowers are allowed citywide; operators must avoid creating a Chapter 26 nuisance and may not blow yard debris into streets or storm drains (NPDES violation).
Aircraft noise is preempted by FAA regulation (49 USC 40103). Lynn Haven cannot regulate aircraft. Northwest Florida Beaches International Airport (ECP) and Tyndall AFB are the primary sources of overflight noise in Bay County.
Lynn Haven enforces Florida Statute 553.883 - all residences sold or substantially remodeled after 2014 must have hardwired interconnected smoke alarms with battery backup. New construction requires alarms in every sleeping room, hallway leading to sleeping rooms, and every level including basements.
Lynn Haven Code Sec. 42-10 prohibits building any fire outside of a stove, grill, fireplace, or other place provided for that purpose. Burning yard waste or trash inside city limits is unlawful.
Sec. 42-10 allows fires only in stoves, grills, fireplaces, or purpose-built fire pits. The Lynn Haven Fire Department requires that the fire be continuously attended and fully extinguished before abandonment.
Fireworks in Lynn Haven follow Florida Statute Ch. 791 - consumer fireworks (aerial and exploding) are legal only on July 4, December 31, and January 1. Outside those three days, only 'sparklers' on the State Fire Marshal approved list are legal.
Lynn Haven Code Enforcement requires property owners to maintain vegetation under Chapter 26 nuisance rules. Overgrown grass, brush, and weeds are common citations. The city does NOT have a dedicated wildfire fuel-modification ordinance like California cities.
Lynn Haven's coastal humid subtropical climate has lower wildfire risk than interior Florida pine forests, but Bay County experiences periodic drought-driven burn bans. The Florida Forest Service categorizes the Panhandle as a high-risk wildland-urban interface region.
Fire pits in Lynn Haven qualify under Sec. 42-10 as 'places provided for such purpose' when purpose-built. They must be continuously attended and fully extinguished before abandonment.
Florida regulates propane (LP-gas) storage, transport, and installation uniformly under Chapter 527 and the Florida Fire Prevention Code, preempting inconsistent local rules.
Home occupations in Lynn Haven cannot install permanent commercial signage. ULDC Sec. 5.03.06 allows non-residential signage only on parcels with a permitted commercial use. Identification signs up to 2 sq ft are exempt under Sec. 5.03.03.
Lynn Haven requires a Business Tax Certificate (Receipt) for all businesses, professionals, independent contractors, and individuals accepting compensation for goods or services. Home-based businesses may require inspection. Certificates expire September 30.
Home occupations in Lynn Haven are governed by the Unified Land Development Code through the Future Land Use Map categories. Permitted uses include low-intensity professional services with no customer traffic, no employees beyond residents, no exterior signage beyond the temporary-sign rules, and no commercial vehicles parked overnight.
Florida's Cottage Food Operations Act preempts local regulation, allowing home production of non-potentially hazardous foods up to a statewide gross sales limit.
Florida regulates family and large family child care homes uniformly under Chapter 402, setting capacity limits, training, and inspection requirements applicable statewide.
Under ULDC Sec. 5.01.02, accessory structures (sheds, detached garages, carports, pole barns, hay sheds) must be on a parcel with a permitted principal structure, located in side or rear yards only, count toward impervious surface, and be securely anchored to resist flood and wind forces.
Lynn Haven's 2025 amendment to ULDC Sec. 5.02.04 limits portable storage units (PODS, steel shipping containers, moving containers) on residential property: only one per premises, max 10 days in any 60-day period, max 8 ft wide x 20 ft long x 9 ft tall, and at least 10 feet behind the front lot line.
Florida Statute 553.73 makes the Florida Building Code the single, uniform construction standard for all permanent dwellings statewide, including tiny homes, preempting cities from setting different structural, fire, or life-safety construction requirements.
Lynn Haven is within the Northwest Florida Water Management District (NWFWMD). The city operates a voluntary reclaimed water program and publishes irrigation conservation guidance - never more than 1 inch per irrigation, no irrigation in rain, install a rain shut-off device.
Lynn Haven regulates tree removal on developed parcels through the Land Clearing permit and ULDC landscape standards. The 2018 Comprehensive Plan establishes tree-canopy goals; removal of mature trees may trigger replacement requirements.
Lynn Haven Code Enforcement cites overgrown grass under Chapter 26 nuisance provisions. The standard cure period is typically 7-14 days after Notice of Violation; failure to cure triggers Special Magistrate fines and possible city abatement.
Routine tree trimming on residential property in Lynn Haven is unregulated by the city - F.S. 163.045 preempts local permitting of residential tree pruning. Trees in city right-of-way require coordination with Public Works.
Florida Statute 373.185 declares Florida-friendly landscaping a matter of state policy and prohibits any deed restriction, covenant, or local ordinance from preventing property owners from installing native, drought-tolerant plant landscapes.
A Lynn Haven residential pool must have at least one of four safety features per F.S. 515.27: (1) compliant barrier, (2) approved safety cover, (3) exit alarms on home doors/windows accessing the pool, or (4) self-closing self-latching pool gates.
All residential swimming pools in Lynn Haven require a Pool Permit through the Building Department (817 Ohio Ave). State pool barrier rules under Chapter 515 F.S. apply and must be inspected before certificate of completion.
Pool barriers in Lynn Haven follow Florida Statute 515.29: barrier must be at least 48 inches tall (measured from outside ground), placed far enough from the water to prevent immediate fall-in, and have no openings that allow passage of a 4-inch sphere.
Florida Statute 767.14 preempts municipal breed-specific dog regulation. Lynn Haven cannot ban or restrict any specific breed (pit bulls, Rottweilers, etc.). Dogs are regulated by behavior - the dangerous dog statute F.S. 767.12.
Lynn Haven Animal Control (850-265-4699) enforces leash and at-large rules under Lynn Haven Chapter 10 and Bay County Chapter 4. Dogs must be under direct control - on a leash or in a fenced enclosure - when off the owner's property.
Lynn Haven allows up to 6 chickens (no roosters) on residential property with a small per-bird registration fee. Roosters are prohibited. Coops have setback and maintenance requirements.
Lynn Haven prohibits feeding of nuisance wildlife under its Chapter 26 nuisance provisions. State law (F.S. 372 / FWC rules) bans feeding alligators, bears, foxes, raccoons, and sandhill cranes, with criminal penalties.
Florida Statute 586.10 preempts municipal beekeeping bans. Lynn Haven cannot prohibit beekeeping. Operators register with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) at no cost.
Florida Statute Ch. 379 and F.A.C. 68A-6 classify wildlife by Class I-III and require state permits for exotic pets. Lynn Haven defers to FWC enforcement. Class I (large predators) prohibited as pets; Class II and III require FWC license.
Lynn Haven STRs collect Florida 6% state sales tax plus the Bay County 4% Tourist Development Tax (bed tax). Bay County collects the TDT directly from operators or through marketplace facilitators like Airbnb/Vrbo.
Lynn Haven does not have a dedicated short-term rental registration ordinance and Florida's F.S. 509.032(7) preemption prevents new local ordinances regulating duration or frequency of STR. Operators need a Florida DBPR vacation rental license, a Florida Department of Revenue tourist tax account, and a Lynn Haven Business Tax Receipt.
Pool barrier fences in Lynn Haven follow F.S. 515.29: chain-link mesh diamond size no larger than 1.75 inches, vertical members at most 1.75 inches apart, horizontal members at least 45 inches apart (or on the pool side).
Lynn Haven residential fence heights typically follow the Florida residential norm: 4 ft maximum in front yards, 6 ft in side and rear yards. Heights over 6 ft require additional review and may need a variance under ULDC Ch. 9.
Lynn Haven requires a Building Department permit for new fences. Submit a fence application with sub-contractor information to 817 Ohio Ave (850-265-2121 ext. 2135). Pool barrier fences fall under the Pool Permit.
Retaining walls over 4 feet tall in Lynn Haven require engineered design and a Building Department permit. Walls under 4 ft from grade are typically exempt under the Florida Building Code but must still not redirect runoff onto neighbors.
Lynn Haven does not have a codified boundary fence sharing statute. Florida common law applies - the fence must be entirely on the building owner's property OR the neighbors must agree to share. Disputes resolve in Bay County small claims court.
Lynn Haven Code Enforcement (850-740-8633) handles abandoned and inoperative vehicles on private property under Chapter 26 nuisance provisions. State law F.S. 705.103 governs vehicles abandoned in the right-of-way after 48 hours.
Commercial vehicles (semis, dump trucks, equipment trailers) cannot be parked overnight in Lynn Haven residential FLU categories. Work vans and pickup trucks under typical class-1/2 limits are generally allowed if registered to a household member.
RVs, boats, and trailers in Lynn Haven residential areas must be stored on improved surfaces (driveway, side yard) - never in the front-yard setback or on the grass. Sec. 5.01.02(C) of the ULDC restricts accessory storage to side and rear yards.
Lynn Haven requires a Concrete, Stormwater, Driveway permit to construct or modify a driveway. The driveway apron must connect properly to the right-of-way and not redirect stormwater onto neighbors.
Lynn Haven enforces Florida Statute Ch. 316 (Florida Uniform Traffic Control Law) on city streets. Parking against traffic, blocking driveways, within 15 ft of a hydrant, or within 20 ft of a crosswalk is prohibited.
Residential Level 2 EV charging stations in Lynn Haven require an Electrical Sub-Contractor permit through the Building Department. The 2024 Florida Electric Vehicle Roadmap encourages EV adoption but does not preempt local permit requirements.
Lynn Haven operates a fully automated garbage collection system (Public Works 850-265-5989). Only City-furnished containers are accepted; an extra container costs $3.22 per month. No pickup on Thanksgiving or Christmas Day.
Lynn Haven Code Sec. 54-30 limits each yard waste pile to 2 cubic yards. Tree limbs must be under 4 inches diameter and 4 feet long. Bulk items require a Special Pick Up call to 850-265-5989; fees go on the water bill.
Containers must be no more than 2 feet from the road edge, 3 feet from any fixed object, 1 foot apart from each other, with openings facing the street and handles facing the house. Lids must close completely.
Lynn Haven does not operate a mandatory curbside recycling program. Bay County Solid Waste accepts drop-off recyclables at the Steelfield Landfill. Households may use private recycling services for cardboard, paper, glass, and plastics.
Lynn Haven ULDC Sec. 5.03.05 allows temporary signs (including political and real estate) without permits, subject to size, number, and duration limits in Tables 5.03.05(C) and 5.03.05(D). Residential lots can have 2 signs of up to 6 sq ft each, 8 ft tall.
Holiday lights and decorations are exempt from Lynn Haven's sign rules under ULDC Sec. 5.03.02(B). Religious displays are also exempt under Sec. 5.03.02(C). String lights used on commercial parcels for non-traditional purposes are prohibited under Sec. 5.03.04(A)(8).
Lynn Haven ULDC Sec. 5.03.04 expressly prohibits signs placed on public utility poles, on public right-of-way, on benches, bus shelters, or waste receptacles. Garage-sale signs on private property follow the temporary-sign rules in Sec. 5.03.05.
After a declared emergency, Lynn Haven extends the standard 10-day portable storage unit limit (ULDC Sec. 5.02.04) on written approval by the City Manager. Yard debris from storm damage is collected separately by Public Works (850-265-5989).
Hurricane shutters and impact-rated windows/doors in Lynn Haven require a Windows, Doors and Shutters Sub-Contractor permit through the Building Department. Installations must meet the Florida Building Code wind-load and product-approval requirements for the property's wind zone.
Lynn Haven Code Sec. 14-28 (Chapter 14 Buildings and Building Regulations, Art. II) requires that no floor be constructed less than 12 inches above the crown of the adjacent roadway. Florida Building Code Sec. R322 additionally controls flood elevation, with Florida's 1-foot freeboard above BFE.
Lynn Haven operates under federal NPDES MS4 permit obligations through Florida DEP. Discharges of pollutants (paint, oil, chemicals, sediment, yard waste) to storm drains are prohibited. Stormwater is currently funded by non-ad-valorem assessment, with the 2025 commission considering a return to monthly utility billing.
Mangroves along Lynn Haven's North Bay shoreline are protected under Florida's Mangrove Trimming and Preservation Act (F.S. 403.9321-9333). Trimming over 6 feet or any removal requires FDEP authorization or a Professional Mangrove Trimmer.
Lynn Haven is a voluntary participant in the National Flood Insurance Program. Significant areas of the city lie in Special Flood Hazard Areas adjacent to North Bay and Deer Point Lake. FBC R322 and Sec. 14-28 control construction elevation; substantial improvements (50%+) trigger new-build elevation rules.
Docks and seawalls in Lynn Haven require a Docks and Seawalls permit through the Building Department. Construction must conform to FDEP and ACOE waterway permitting plus city setback and material requirements.
While Lynn Haven sits on North Bay rather than the Gulf, all bayfront construction is subject to Lynn Haven's ULDC + FDEP authorization. The Florida Coastal Construction Control Line (CCCL) statewide rule does not directly apply to North Bay shorelines but DEP joint coastal permits do.
Existing seawall repair and replacement in Lynn Haven requires the same Docks and Seawalls permit from the Building Department, plus an FDEP Self-Certification (10-2 Letter) or full permit for any work waterward of the existing wall.
Lynn Haven requires a Land Clearing, Cleaning, Job Site Development permit for any lot clearing. Erosion-control measures (silt fence, hay bales) are required under the city's NPDES MS4 obligations and Chapter 26.
Lynn Haven's Concrete, Stormwater, Driveway permit covers driveway construction, grading, and stormwater modifications. Driveway slope must direct runoff away from neighboring properties.
Lynn Haven's ULDC Sec. 4.02.02 sets yard and setback standards by Future Land Use Map category. Accessory structures must conform to the same setbacks (ULDC Sec. 5.01.02(D)) except as varied under Sec. 5.01.03.
Lynn Haven structure heights are controlled by ULDC Sec. 4.02.02 and the Future Land Use Map category. Residential districts cap most principal structures at 35 ft; mixed-use and commercial areas allow higher with site-specific review.
Lynn Haven's ULDC Sec. 5.01.02(B) requires accessory structures to be included in all calculations of impervious surface and stormwater runoff. Lot coverage caps vary by FLU category in Sec. 4.02.02.
Lynn Haven Code does not impose a dedicated dark-sky ordinance. Excessive light spilling onto a neighbor is enforceable as a Chapter 26 nuisance under Sec. 1-7. The ULDC sign code (Sec. 5.03.04) bans signs causing glare to motorists.
Florida Statute 379.2431 and the Marine Turtle Protection Act require coastal property lighting to avoid illuminating nesting beaches during sea turtle nesting season. The rule applies statewide to oceanfront and beach-visible properties regardless of local sky ordinances and is enforced by FWC.
Lynn Haven Code Enforcement enforces a nuisance abatement program under Chapter 26 (Environment) of the Code and Chapter 2 Article III (Special Magistrate). Common violations include overgrown grass, junk accumulation, derelict structures, and graffiti.
Lynn Haven garbage containers must be removed from the curb by 9 a.m. the day after pickup. Day-to-day storage should be out of public view - in a garage, behind a fence, or behind the front-yard setback line.
Vacant lot owners in Lynn Haven are responsible for keeping grass and weeds cut, removing junk, and preventing public nuisance accumulation. Sec. 5.02.04 prohibits portable storage units on unimproved or vacant property.
Florida law (F.S. 893.13) controls cannabis - recreational use and home cultivation are illegal. Only Florida medical marijuana patients with a Florida-issued card can possess limited amounts of MMTC-purchased product. Home growing is illegal for everyone.
Florida Statute 381.986(11) preempts local zoning of Medical Marijuana Treatment Centers (MMTCs) to the same treatment as a pharmacy. Lynn Haven cannot ban MMTCs in commercial areas, but may regulate location only as it would a regular pharmacy.
Lynn Haven Solar Permit is a Residential Permit category through the Building Department (817 Ohio Ave). Submit with electrical sub-contractor permit, structural drawings, and Florida-licensed solar contractor information.
Florida Statute 163.04 preempts HOA solar restrictions - no homeowners association can prevent installation of solar collectors on a homeowner's property. Lynn Haven HOAs may dictate only the precise location/orientation that achieves materially the same goal as the homeowner.
Lynn Haven city parks (Sheffield Park, Cain Griffin Park, Sports Complex, Porter Park, A.L. Kinsaul Park) operate dawn to dusk unless extended by city use authorization. Alcohol is prohibited at all city parks and facilities.
Lynn Haven does not have a juvenile curfew ordinance. Florida law gives municipalities authority to enact juvenile curfews under F.S. 877.20, but Lynn Haven has not done so. Bay County also has no county-wide curfew.
Florida Statute 330.41 preempts local drone regulation. Lynn Haven cannot pass its own UAS ordinance. Drone operators follow FAA Part 107 / Section 44809 (recreational), F.S. 934.50 (surveillance privacy), and F.S. 330.41 (no operation over critical infrastructure).
Commercial drone operations in Florida are regulated by federal FAA Part 107 and state law; local governments cannot impose additional commercial operation restrictions.
Lynn Haven requires a Land Clearing permit for tree removal in connection with development. Residential hazard-tree removal is preempted by F.S. 163.045 (no permit required if documented by an ISA-certified arborist or licensed landscape architect).
Section 163.045 expressly applies regardless of any local heritage, specimen, or champion tree designation, preempting protective ordinances when an arborist documents danger.
Florida law prohibits local governments from requiring replacement plantings or mitigation when a residential tree is removed under documented danger conditions.
Florida Statute 125.0103 preempts municipal rent control in Florida. Lynn Haven cannot adopt rent stabilization, rent freeze, or just-cause eviction ordinances.
Lynn Haven does not have a residential rental registration ordinance. Florida Statute 83 (Florida Residential Landlord and Tenant Act) controls landlord-tenant relationships. Short-term rentals (under 30 days) follow F.S. 509.032 separately.
Florida has no just-cause eviction statute. F.S. 83.57 allows a landlord to terminate a month-to-month tenancy with 15 days written notice. Lynn Haven cannot adopt a just-cause eviction ordinance under state preemption.
Fla. Stat. Β§ 83.56 requires a 3-day notice to pay rent or vacate for nonpayment, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays from the count. For lease violations, the landlord serves a 7-day notice to cure (or a 7-day unconditional notice for repeat or non-curable violations). Only a court may order eviction through Florida's summary procedure.
Fla. Stat. Β§ 83.51 requires landlords to comply with applicable building, housing, and health codes or keep the structure, plumbing, and (for most multi-unit buildings) heat, running water, hot water, and pest control in working order. Tenants enforce these duties through the Β§ 83.56 seven-day written notice to cure before withholding rent or terminating.
Under Fla. Stat. Β§ 83.53, a Florida landlord must give at least 24 hours' notice to enter for repairs and may enter only at reasonable times, defined as between 7:30 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. No notice is required in an emergency or to preserve the premises, and access may not be used to harass the tenant.
Florida's Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (Ch. 83, Part II) has no late-fee statute and no cap on late-rent charges. Late fees are governed entirely by the written lease; if the lease is silent, the landlord cannot charge one. Courts will not enforce fees that are punitive rather than a reasonable estimate of damages.
For a month-to-month tenancy, Fla. Stat. Β§ 83.57 now requires at least 30 days' written notice (raised from 15 days by 2023's SB 102). Breaking a fixed-term lease triggers landlord remedies under Β§ 83.595, including a pre-agreed early-termination fee capped at two months' rent. Servicemembers may terminate early under Β§ 83.682.
Florida has no rent control and no statute that sets a maximum rent increase or a dedicated advance-notice period for raising rent. On a month-to-month tenancy, a new rent takes effect only through the termination/change notice in Fla. Stat. Β§ 83.57, which 2023's SB 102 (ch. 2023-314) lengthened from 15 to 30 days.
Florida places no dollar limit on residential security deposits, but it enforces tight deadlines. If the landlord makes no claim, the deposit must be returned within 15 days of move-out. If the landlord intends to keep any part, written certified-mail notice is due within 30 days, and the tenant then has 15 days to object.
Adverse possession in Florida requires 7 years of actual, continued, exclusive possession plus paying all taxes within a year and filing a return with the property appraiser (Fla. Stat. Β§ 95.18). Separately, the 2024 anti-squatter law HB 621 (Fla. Stat. Β§ 82.036) lets owners have a sheriff remove unauthorized occupants within hours, without a lawsuit.
Lynn Haven does not require a garage sale permit. Residents may hold garage sales subject to the sign rules in ULDC Sec. 5.03.04 (no signs on public property or poles) and Sec. 5.03.05 (residential temporary sign limits).
Lynn Haven does not cap the number of garage sales per year. However, continuous operation (more than occasional weekend sales) crosses the line into retail business and triggers Business Tax Receipt requirements.
Florida Statute 218.077 prohibits local governments from establishing a minimum wage other than the state or federal rate, preempting city and county living-wage ordinances except for direct local government employees.
Florida Statute 218.077 and 448.110 framework, combined with FS 125.01045 and 166.04151 limits, preempt local mandates requiring private employers to provide paid sick leave or other employment benefits beyond state law.
Florida Statute 509.032(7) and broader employment preemption framework prevent local governments from requiring private employers to follow predictive or fair-scheduling rules beyond state and federal law.
Florida allows permitless concealed carry of firearms by law-abiding adults under FS 790.01 and continues to issue concealed weapon licenses through FS 790.06, with both regimes preempting local concealed-carry restrictions.
Florida Statute 790.33 expressly preempts the entire field of firearm and ammunition regulation to the state, voiding all local ordinances and imposing personal civil penalties on local officials who knowingly enact or enforce conflicting rules.
Florida's open carry ban (FS 790.053) was struck down by the First District Court of Appeal in McDaniels v. State on September 10, 2025. The Florida Attorney General issued guidance on September 15, 2025 instructing law enforcement that the ban is no longer enforceable. Eligible adults may now openly carry firearms statewide.
Florida Statute 790.25(5) allows any law-abiding person 18 or older to possess a concealed firearm in a private vehicle for self-defense, provided the firearm is securely encased or not readily accessible for immediate use, regardless of any concealed-carry license.
Under Fla. Stat. Β§ 720.3085, unpaid assessments become a lien on a parcel, and the homeowners' association may foreclose like a mortgage. Before recording the lien the association must send a 45-day written notice by certified and first-class mail, and a second 45-day notice is required before foreclosure can begin.
Under Fla. Stat. Β§ 720.303(2), Florida HOA board meetings must be open to members with notice posted at least 48 hours ahead. Section 720.306 governs member meetings and elections, Β§ 720.303(4)-(5) gives members the right to inspect official records within 10 business days, and HB 1203 added website transparency rules for larger associations.
Under Fla. Stat. Β§Β§ 720.303 and 720.3035, a Florida HOA enforces its recorded covenants and architectural standards, but only where authority is stated or reasonably inferred in the governing documents, and standards must be applied reasonably and equitably to all owners. HB 1203 added new limits and written-denial transparency rules effective July 1, 2024.
Under Fla. Stat. Β§ 720.305, a Florida HOA may fine up to $100 per violation and $1,000 in the aggregate unless the governing documents allow more. The association must give at least 14 days' written notice and a hearing before a committee of at least three members, who must approve the fine by majority vote.
Florida law overrides HOA covenants on several fronts: Fla. Stat. Β§ 163.04 voids any deed restriction prohibiting solar collectors, Β§ 720.304(2) protects display of the U.S. flag, and HB 1203 protects vegetable gardens and other items not visible from the frontage. Section 604.71 separately bars cities and counties from regulating residential vegetable gardens.
Florida Statute 448.095 requires every private employer with 25 or more employees to use the federal E-Verify system to confirm work authorization for new hires beginning July 1, 2023, with public agencies and contractors subject to broader requirements.
Senate Bill 168 (2019), codified at FS 908.103 and 908.104, prohibits sanctuary policies in Florida and requires every state and local law enforcement agency to use best efforts to support federal immigration enforcement and honor ICE detainer requests.
Florida Statutes 823.14 and 163.3162 restrict local governments from adopting zoning rules that inhibit established farms on agriculturally classified land, preserving agricultural uses against incompatible local regulation.
Florida Statute 823.14, the Florida Right to Farm Act, protects established bona fide farm operations from nuisance suits and local ordinances that would inhibit standard agricultural practices conducted in good faith.
Florida Statute 403.7033 preempts the regulation of disposable plastic bags by local governments, prohibiting cities and counties from enacting bans or fees on retailers pending a legislative review that has not occurred.
Florida Statute 500.90 preempts the regulation of polystyrene products by local governments, blocking cities and counties from banning expanded polystyrene foam food containers, cups, and similar items.
Florida Statute 403.7033 and related law impose a moratorium on enforcement of municipal plastic straw bans, requiring DEP study before any local prohibition can take effect, effectively preempting current ordinances.
Florida Statute 569.101 prohibits the sale or delivery of tobacco and nicotine products to persons under 21, aligning with federal law and applying uniformly statewide with local preemption under FS 386.2125.
Florida Statute 386.2125 preempts local regulation of nicotine products and dispensing devices, blocking cities and counties from banning flavored e-cigarettes, menthol, or other flavored tobacco at the retail level.
Florida Statute 386.2125 expressly preempts the regulation of nicotine products, nicotine dispensing devices, and vape retailing to the state, voiding most municipal ordinances on electronic cigarettes and vape shops.