Showing ordinances that apply to Port Monmouth, NJ
Port Monmouth is an unincorporated community (population 3,745) in Monmouth County, New Jersey. Because Port Monmouth is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Monmouth County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The amplified music & events rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Monmouth County's boardwalk towns (Asbury Park, Long Branch, Belmar, Point Pleasant Beach) heavily regulate amplified music due to dense beachfront entertainment districts. Permits are required for outdoor amplification, and sound limits of 65 dBA day / 50 dBA night under N.J.A.C. 7:29 apply at residential property lines. Venues along the Asbury Park boardwalk (Stone Pony, Wonder Bar) operate under specific site-plan sound conditions.
Amplified music in Monmouth County is regulated at the municipal level with NJ Noise Control Code (N.J.A.C. 7:29) as the floor. Asbury Park Code Ch. 250 specifically governs amplified sound in the Waterfront Redevelopment Area and requires special event permits for outdoor concerts. Long Branch (Pier Village), Red Bank (Count Basie Center), and Belmar require 30-day advance permit applications for amplified public events. Residential amplified music must keep noise below 65 dBA daytime and 50 dBA nighttime measured at the nearest residential property line. ABC-licensed bars in Monmouth (particularly Asbury Park, Bradley Beach, and Belmar) must comply with both ABC license conditions and local noise rules — violations can trigger ABC sanctions. Outdoor municipal events like Asbury Park's Sea.Hear.Now festival operate under negotiated sound management plans. Monmouth Park Racetrack concerts require similar planning. Private parties with DJs or bands are generally limited to 10 PM curfew on weekdays and 11 PM weekends.
Unpermitted amplified sound: $250 to $1,000 (first offense) in most Monmouth municipalities. N.J.A.C. 7:29 decibel violations: NJDEP can assess $3,000 to $10,000 per day. Event permit violations: immediate shutdown and future permit denial. ABC licensees face separate Alcoholic Beverage Control review.
See how Port Monmouth's amplified music & events rules stack up against other locations.
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