Amplified music rules in Monterey County, CA — also called sound permit, PA system, or live music ordinances — set decibel limits, time-of-day restrictions, and when permits are required.
Amplified music is the County's top noise complaint, especially at large parties in North Monterey County. Under County Code Sec. 10.60.040, nighttime amplified sound that is loud and unreasonable, plainly audible at 50 feet, or above 45 Leq / 65 dBA is prohibited. Large events also require HCD special-event permits.
Amplified music at parties and special events drives most noise complaints in unincorporated Monterey County, with North Monterey County identified as the hotspot in the County's 2022-23 Civil Grand Jury report. Under Sec. 10.60.040 of the County Code, amplified sound during the protected nighttime period is restricted as a 'loud and unreasonable sound,' is subject to the 'plainly audible' detection standard added in 2019, and may not exceed the Table 1 exterior standards of 45 Leq dBA (hourly equivalent) and 65 dBA maximum measured at the property line. Separately, large gatherings that charge admission, serve food or alcohol, use amplified music, large tents, or stages require special-event permits coordinated through Housing and Community Development (HCD); the Grand Jury report describes amplified music as one of the permitted activities. There is a limited exemption in Sec. 10.60.040(C) for outdoor gatherings, dances, shows, and sporting/entertainment events conducted on commercial or institutional premises under applicable permits. Hosting an unpermitted event with amplified music can trigger both noise-ordinance citations and separate permit-violation enforcement, and repeat-offender properties (six to ten were known to the County) face escalating fines.
Amplified music that violates Sec. 10.60.040 can be cited by HCD code enforcement and the Sheriff as a misdemeanor, with fines up to $250 for a first offense and up to $1,000 for repeat offenses within 12 months, plus possible County Jail. Holding a special event without the required HCD permits is a separate violation; citations are mailed to the property owner and unpaid fines can become a lien on the property.
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