Mililani Mauka homeowners must keep yards from becoming a weed nuisance under ROH Chapter 16A; the Mauka community association imposes stricter lawn standards.
Mililani Mauka homeowners need an Urban Forestry permit before trimming street trees along Meheula Parkway and Mauka loop streets under ROH Sec. 10-1.4.
Mililani Mauka homeowners may install rain barrels without a Honolulu permit; small outdoor catchment up to 360 gallons is exempt under state plumbing code.
Mililani Mauka residents face strict on-street RV and boat trailer storage limits under ROH 15-16.6, layered with Mililani Town Association and subassociation covenants that routinely prohibit visible recreational vehicle storage.
ROH 15-16.6 bans on-street storage of commercial vehicles in Mililani Mauka without signs, and LUO 21-6.20 regulates off-street commercial vehicle parking on residential lots where HOAs typically add tighter covenant limits.
ROH 15-14.1 prohibits stopping or parking in front of any Mililani Mauka driveway or within four feet on either side, enforced alongside HOA guest-parking rules across the community's cul-de-sac heavy layout.
LUO 21-6.60 requires EV-ready stalls in new Mililani Mauka multi-family projects of eight or more stalls and commercial developments of twelve or more, while HOA approval shapes private home charger installs.
Mililani Mauka has no blanket overnight parking ban under ROH 15-14.6, but Mililani Town Association covenants and subassociation rules commonly restrict on-street overnight parking for residents and guests.
ROH 15-13.8 classifies any vehicle left on Mililani Mauka streets more than 24 hours as abandoned, authorizing HPD and the customer services director to tow, store, and ultimately dispose of the vehicle.
ROH 15-14.5 and Schedule XXII enforce posted no-parking zones across Mililani Mauka collector streets, while ROH 15-13.5 requires vehicles to park within twelve inches of the curb throughout the hillside subdivisions.
Mililani Mauka STR registrants must submit a parking plan under ROH Sec. 21-5.730 showing on-site stalls consistent with LUO Article 6, with HOA rules often adding further restrictions on guest parking.
ROH Sec. 41-6.1 prohibits unreasonable STR noise in Mililani Mauka, and operators must post house rules referencing city noise standards under ROH Sec. 21-5.730.
Mililani Mauka owners must register any bed and breakfast or transient vacation unit with the Department of Planning and Permitting under ROH Sec. 21-5.730 before hosting stays under 180 days.
Mililani Mauka STR operators must collect and remit the 3% Oahu transient accommodations tax under ROH Sec. 8A-1.1 on gross rental proceeds for stays under 180 days.
Mililani Mauka STRs must document maximum occupancy per bedroom in a floor plan submitted under ROH Sec. 21-5.730, with B&Bs and TVUs subject to bedroom count caps under the same provision.
Mililani Mauka STR operators must carry at least $1,000,000 in commercial general liability insurance or an endorsed homeowner's policy under ROH Sec. 21-5.730 to maintain DPP registration.
Mililani Mauka owners with lots bordering gulches or open brush must keep firebreaks under ROH Chapter 20's adoption of NFPA 1, commonly 30 to 100 feet from structures.
Mililani Mauka fire pits are governed by Honolulu Chapter 20's adoption of NFPA 1, requiring property-owner permission, a 14-day HFD letter, and a 15-minute pre-ignition call.
Mililani Mauka's gulch-edged layout frequently falls within HFD hazardous fire area designations under NFPA 1, which trigger stricter defensible-space and ignition rules.
Mililani Mauka enforces ROH Chapter 20, Article 6, which prohibits consumer aerial fireworks and restricts firecrackers to HFD-permitted cultural events.
Outdoor burning in Mililani Mauka is strictly regulated by Honolulu's Fire Code, with advance HFD notice required and most agricultural burns also needing a State DOH permit.
Mililani Mauka propane storage follows NFPA 58 via Honolulu Chapter 20, with permits and plan review triggered at 125 gallons aggregate capacity and vehicle barrier rules near roads.
ROH Sec. 21-4.60 defines fences to include wrought iron, wire, wood, vinyl, and plastic, but the Mililani Mauka HOA design code narrows the palette considerably.
ROH Sec. 21-4.40 limits fill-retaining walls in Mililani Mauka yards to six feet and combines terraced wall heights, important on the community's sloped Central Oahu grades.
Mililani Mauka fences follow ROH Sec. 21-4.60, which triggers added setback or landscaping rules once a front-yard fence, wall, or hedge exceeds 36 inches in height.
ROH Sec. 18-3.1 sets the city permit thresholds for Mililani Mauka fences and walls, with narrow exemptions for retaining and riprap walls under 30 inches.
ROH Sec. 21-4.30 governs what Mililani Mauka neighbors can build in required yards along shared property lines, with the city relying on yard and height sections rather than a spite-fence statute.
ROH Sec. 16-6.2 requires Mililani Mauka residential pools to be fully enclosed by a compliant fence or protective device to prevent unsupervised access by young children.
Mililani Mauka residents running a business from a home in neighborhoods above the freeway must follow ROH Sec. 21-5.350, allowing home occupations only when incidental and subordinate to residential use.
Home business signs in Mililani Mauka are tightly restricted by ROH Chapter 21, Article 7, and by HOA covenants, with residential zones typically allowing only a modest nameplate.
ROH Sec. 21-5.350 limits customer and client traffic to Mililani Mauka home occupations so the activity stays incidental and does not alter the residential character of HOA-governed streets.
Mililani Mauka family child care homes caring for three to six unrelated children are defined and licensed under HRS Sec. 346-151 by the Hawaii Department of Human Services, with support from ROH Sec. 21-5.350.
Mililani Mauka cottage food producers operate under Hawaii state law in HRS Chapter 321, which governs homemade food permitting through the Department of Health rather than city ordinance.
Outdoor amplified music and PA systems in Mililani Mauka are restricted by ROH Β§21-4.80 near residential zones and ROH Β§41-6.1 for audibility beyond 30 feet on public property, reinforced by strong MTA covenants.
Construction in Mililani Mauka follows Hawaii Administrative Rules Title 11 Chapter 46, limiting loud equipment to weekdays 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturdays 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. without a state noise permit.
Mililani Mauka residents follow ROH Chapter 41 Article 6, which prohibits sound-reproducing devices audible at 30 feet or more, with strong Mililani Town Association covenant enforcement layered on top of city law.
Mililani Mauka dog owners are subject to ROH Β§7-2.3, which treats continuous or repeated barking, howling, or whining that disturbs neighbors as a civil animal nuisance enforced by the Hawaiian Humane Society.
Leaf blowers and powered yard equipment in Mililani Mauka residential areas are limited to 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sundays and holidays under HAR 11-46.
Aircraft noise over Mililani Mauka is preempted by federal FAA rules, with state authority limited to HRS Β§261-12 tour-aircraft permit conditions; ROH Β§41-6 explicitly exempts aircraft in flight.
Industrial and stationary-source noise in Mililani Mauka is capped by Hawaii HAR 11-46 dBA limits tied to zoning class, with ROH Chapter 41 Article 6 supplementing local enforcement for commercial facilities.
Mililani Mauka households may keep up to two hens under county code, but the Mililani Mauka Association's covenants prohibit backyard poultry and livestock across all tracts.
Dogs in Mililani Mauka must be restrained on an eight-foot or shorter leash in public, including the extensive MMA trail, path, and recreation center network.
Mililani Mauka follows Honolulu's behavior-based dangerous dog rules with no breed ban, though MMA covenants and rental leases commonly restrict specific breeds or sizes.
Mililani Mauka residents are subject to Hawaii's statewide exotic animal quarantine rules prohibiting hamsters, gerbils, ferrets, snakes, and many other mainland pets.
Mililani Mauka's residential zoning does not permit beekeeping as an accessory use, and MMA covenants further prohibit hives across all yards and common spaces.
Mililani Mauka households face a ten-dog or ten-cat nuisance trigger under county code and a state misdemeanor for hoarding more than fifteen dogs and cats with neglect.
Mililani Mauka has no blanket wildlife-feeding ban, but feeding feral chickens, cats, or pigs often triggers county nuisance enforcement and MMA covenant complaints.
Mililani Mauka hot tubs and spas fall under ROH Chapter 16 Article 6, with locked safety covers, permitted electrical work, and bonding requirements to ensure user safety.
Mililani Mauka residents must secure a Honolulu DPP building permit under ROH Chapter 18 before building or altering a residential swimming pool, plus electrical and plumbing permits.
ROH Section 16-6.2 requires compliant barriers around Mililani Mauka residential pools, with self-closing gates and openings that cannot pass a four-inch sphere.
Mililani Mauka pools fall under ROH Chapter 16 Article 6, which sets safety standards for construction, modifications, drain covers, and enforcement of residential pool rules.
Above-ground pools in Mililani Mauka are regulated under the same ROH Chapter 16 Article 6 framework as in-ground pools once depth thresholds are crossed.
Sheds in Mililani Mauka must satisfy both ROH Sec. 21-4.30 yard setbacks and Mililani Mauka Community Association design rules, which commonly govern size, color, and location.
Mililani Mauka homeowners may build one ADU per zoning lot under ROH Sec. 21-5.720 if city rules and the Mililani Mauka Community Association covenants allow, with parking and 30-day rental minimums required.
Garage conversions in Mililani Mauka follow ADU rules under ROH Sec. 21-5.720 and permit rules under Sec. 18-3.2, plus separate Mililani Mauka Community Association design approval.
Carports in Mililani Mauka are limited to 20 ft by 20 ft horizontally under ROH Sec. 21-2.140-1, with setbacks from Sec. 21-4.30 and height from Sec. 21-4.60 also applying.
Tiny homes in Mililani Mauka are regulated as ADUs under ROH Sec. 21-5.720 when on a foundation, but the Mililani Mauka Community Association often prohibits them outright; tiny homes on wheels are not permitted as dwellings.
The Mililani Mauka Community Association cannot block solar PV on single-family or townhouse homes under HRS Sec. 196-7 state preemption.
Mililani Mauka rooftop solar follows ROH Sec. 18-5.10 expedited clean-energy permits with Building and Electrical Code review and solar-ready new-construction rules.
Mililani Mauka trees designated under ROH Chapter 40 Article 8 as Exceptional Trees cannot be removed without City Council approval, and any alteration requires a Department of Parks and Recreation permit.
Mililani Mauka tree replacement obligations flow from ROH Chapter 40 Article 8 for Exceptional Trees, ROH Β§10-1.4 for street trees, and Land Use Ordinance landscaping rules, with Mililani Town Association replanting standards often layered on top.
Mililani Mauka homeowners must obtain a Department of Facility Maintenance permit under ROH Β§10-1.4 before planting, pruning, or removing trees in the public right-of-way, with additional Mililani Town Association approvals often required.
Honolulu requires no garage sale permit; Mililani Mauka residents may hold occasional sales as accessory residential use under LUO 21-5.350, subject to MTA notice, signage rules, and subassociation covenants.
ROH sets no numeric cap on garage sale frequency, but LUO 21-5.350 requires sales to remain occasional; MTA and subassociations in Mililani Mauka commonly limit households to one or two sales per year.
Honolulu ordinances set no hours for garage sales, but ROH Chapter 41 noise rules apply, and Mililani Mauka HOAs typically restrict sales to daytime weekend windows with strict signage and parking controls.
Medical cannabis dispensaries in Mililani Mauka must meet county zoning and stay at least 750 feet from schools and playgrounds, leaving few viable sites in the residential core.
Only Hawaii 329 cardholders may cultivate up to ten cannabis plants in Mililani Mauka, with MMA covenants and most rental leases further constraining or prohibiting grows.
Mililani Mauka follows HRS Sec. 521-71, requiring 45 days' landlord notice to end a month-to-month lease and 120 days for demolitions, condo conversions, or STR conversions.
Mililani Mauka has no rent control because neither Honolulu nor Hawaii caps residential rent; HRS Chapter 521 governs rentals without limiting increases.
Mililani Mauka long-term rentals are not registered, and new short-term rentals under 90 days are largely prohibited by zoning and subject to strict DPP registration under LUO Sec. 21-5.730.
Garage sale signs in Mililani Mauka are regulated as temporary signs under ROH Sec. 21-7.20, exempt from permits but subject to Sec. 21-7.30 prohibitions and strict MTA sub-association rules.
Mililani Mauka residents may display political campaign signs on private property under ROH Sec. 21-7.20 temporary sign rules, subject to Sec. 21-7.30 prohibitions on rights-of-way and HOA design guidelines.
Mililani Mauka holiday and seasonal displays are governed by ROH Sec. 21-7.20 general temporary sign standards, with Chapter 10 park rules applying to installations in public parks.
Mililani Mauka has no formal city no-knock registry; solicitation is regulated through ROH Sec. 13-6.2 peddler rules, Hawaii trespass law, and MTA covenants.
ROH Chapter 13, Article 6 requires door-to-door sellers in Mililani Mauka to hold a city peddler license, with Sec. 13-6.1 setting the $27.50 annual fee.
Mililani Mauka sits well inland of the shoreline and is generally outside Special Management Area boundaries, though ROH Chapter 25 still governs any SMA work elsewhere on Oahu.
Mililani Mauka properties connected to the city's separate storm sewer system fall under ROH Chapter 43, Article 11, which bars non-stormwater discharges and enforces MS4 water quality rules.
ROH Sec. 18A-1.6 requires approved erosion and sediment control plans for Mililani Mauka land-disturbing activities that need building, grading, stockpiling, or trenching permits.
Most Mililani Mauka parcels sit on elevated terrain outside special flood hazard areas, but ROH Chapter 21A still governs any properties mapped within FEMA flood zones.
Mililani Mauka grading, grubbing, stockpiling, and drainage work is regulated under ROH Chapter 18A, which requires permits, bonds, and inspections for qualifying land-disturbing activity.
Vacant lots in Mililani Mauka must be kept clear of weeds, trash, and nuisance conditions under ROH Section 40-7.4, with the same 30-day notice and lien process as occupied properties.
Mililani Mauka residents must follow ROH Section 42-1.4 placement, timing, and weight limits for city-issued refuse, recycling, and green-waste carts.
Mililani Mauka property owners must clear weeds, garbage, and waste within 30 days of a DPP notice under ROH Section 40-7.4 or face city abatement with a 7% interest lien.
Honolulu has no snow, but Mililani Mauka owners must maintain abutting sidewalks free of obstructions and keep them in safe condition under ROH Chapter 13.
Occasional garage sales are allowed in Mililani Mauka residential zones under ROH Chapter 21 as accessory uses, but HOA covenants often add stricter limits on frequency.
Bulky-item pickup in Mililani Mauka is appointment-based under ROH Sec. 42-4.8; items unremoved within 7 days of written notice are a public nuisance, and HOA rules forbid curbside staging without appointment.
Mililani Mauka residents must prepare refuse and recyclables per ROH Sec. 42-1.4, including 9-inch branch limits, 3-foot green-waste lengths, and 50-pound bundle maximums.
Mililani Mauka residents must place carts curbside with clearance per ROH Sec. 42-1.4 and retrieve them same-day to comply with city rules and Community Association storage covenants.
Mililani Mauka single-family homes are served by Honolulu's islandwide curbside recycling program under ROH Sec. 42-1.12, collecting at least two recyclable categories on a rotating schedule.
Mililani Mauka's commercial and recreational lighting must use full cut-off shielded fixtures to protect residential zones and preserve Central Oahu's darker skies.
Mililani Mauka addresses light trespass through LUO shielding requirements and strong MMA architectural rules rather than a dedicated foot-candle property-line ordinance.
Mililani Mauka commercial drone operators must comply with FAA Part 107, with ROH aerial advertising and park-use provisions supplying limited city-level restrictions and HOA rules adding private limits.
Under ROH Sec. 10-1.2, recreational drones and model aircraft are restricted to designated parks, so Mililani Mauka's neighborhood parks generally do not allow drone flight without prior authorization.
Food trucks serving Mililani Mauka require a Honolulu Peddler's License under ROH Chapter 13, Article 6, plus State Health and tax licenses.
Mililani Mauka is not within Sec. 13-6.2's prohibited vending zones, but operators working in Waikiki, downtown malls, Chinatown, or parks still face strict no-vend rules.
ROH Sec. 21-3.70-1 imposes impervious-surface caps on Mililani Mauka lots, including a 75 percent impervious limit for dwellings permitted after May 1, 2019.
ROH Sec. 21-4.30 sets the baseline yard and street setbacks for Mililani Mauka, with 21-3.70-1 supplying district-specific minimums for the community's residential zones.
ROH Sec. 21-4.60 sets maximum structure heights for Mililani Mauka, with residential districts typically capping homes at 25 to 30 feet and applying sloped envelope planes.
Mililani Mauka is covered by HRS Sec. 577-16, which prohibits children under 16 from public places between 10 p.m. and 4 a.m. unaccompanied; Honolulu has no stricter local ordinance.
Public parks in Mililani Mauka close during posted night hours under ROH Sec. 10-1.2, and the Community Association's recreation centers have their own separate after-hours rules.
Hawaii Revised Statutes Chapter 387 sets the statewide minimum wage and governs employer wage obligations. The statute establishes a uniform statewide floor that scheduled increases apply to all counties equally.
Hawaii has no general statewide paid sick leave mandate, but HRS Chapter 392 requires employers to provide temporary disability insurance for non-work injuries, and family leave is governed by HRS Chapter 398.
Hawaii has not enacted a statewide predictive scheduling or fair workweek law. Wage-and-hour rules under HRS Chapter 387 govern overtime and reporting time, but advance scheduling notice is not generally required.
HRS 134-9 governs Hawaii concealed carry licensing. Following the U.S. Supreme Court's Bruen decision, Hawaii revised standards but maintains stringent training, application, and sensitive-place requirements administered by county police chiefs.
Hawaii Revised Statutes Chapter 134 establishes statewide firearms regulations, but unlike many states, Hawaii does not broadly preempt counties from enacting local firearms ordinances on certain matters.
Hawaii prohibits open carry of firearms in public without a license issued under HRS 134-9. Unlicensed open carry is a felony, making Hawaii one of the most restrictive states for visible firearm carrying.
Hawaii imposes some of the nation's strictest rules on carrying firearms in vehicles. HRS 134-25 and HRS 134-26 prohibit carrying a loaded or unloaded pistol, revolver, or long gun in a motor vehicle except under narrow license and transport exceptions.
Hawaii does not require private or public employers to use the federal E-Verify system to confirm employee work authorization. Use of E-Verify in Hawaii is voluntary, except where federal contracts independently require it.
Hawaii has not enacted a statewide sanctuary law nor a statewide preemption forbidding sanctuary policies. Counties and city governments such as Honolulu have adopted their own policies governing local cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.
Hawaii uniquely classifies all land statewide into four state land use districts under HRS Chapter 205, with the Agricultural District protecting farmland and limiting non-agricultural uses across the state.
HRS Chapter 165, Hawaii's Right to Farm Act, protects farming operations from nuisance lawsuits when they have operated for at least one year and were not nuisances at their inception, supporting agricultural land use across the state.
Hawaii has no statewide plastic bag preemption law, but all four counties have enacted bans on non-recyclable plastic checkout bags, making Hawaii the first U.S. state with a de facto statewide ban on single-use plastic bags.
Hawaii has no statewide polystyrene ban, but Honolulu, Hawaii County, Maui County, and Kauai County have adopted ordinances prohibiting food vendors from using polystyrene foam containers for prepared foods.
Hawaii does not regulate plastic straws at the state level, but Maui County and other county ordinances restrict food vendors from automatically providing single-use plastic straws and stirrers to customers.
Hawaii was the first U.S. state to raise the tobacco purchase age to 21 in 2016. HRS 712-1258 prohibits the sale, furnishing, or purchase of tobacco and electronic smoking devices by anyone under 21.
Hawaii has no statewide ban on flavored tobacco or vape products, but the City and County of Honolulu and other county governments have considered or adopted local restrictions, leaving a regulatory patchwork across the islands.
Hawaii regulates retail sales of electronic smoking devices and e-liquid under HRS Chapter 245 and 712-1258, requiring retailer permits, age verification, and packaging standards for all vape products sold in the state.