Pop. 47,010 Β· Orange County
Exotic and wildlife species are regulated by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC). Class I animals (big cats, apes, bears) are prohibited as personal pets. Class II and III require FWC permits.
Ocoee limits households to 4 dogs and 4 cats over 4 months of age per residence. Kennel licenses required for more than 4 of either species. Orange County Animal Services issues licenses.
Ocoee cannot restrict dogs by breed. FL Β§767.14 preempts all breed-specific legislation statewide. Dangerous dog determinations are behavior-based under FL Β§767 regardless of breed.
Rainwater harvesting is legal and encouraged in Ocoee. Rain barrels and cisterns for irrigation do not require a permit when gravity-fed and not connected to the potable water system. Cross-connection with municipal plumbing is prohibited.
Ocoee requires residential and commercial properties to maintain lawn grass and weeds no taller than 12 inches. Overgrown vegetation is a code enforcement nuisance subject to abatement and liens. Vacant lots are held to the same standard.
Ocoee homeowners may install Florida-Friendly Landscaping using native and drought-tolerant plants. FL Β§373.185 preempts any local rule, HOA covenant, or deed restriction that prohibits FL-Friendly yards. The program is promoted by UF/IFAS Extension.
Ocoee enforces weed and noxious vegetation rules through its general nuisance code, treating unmaintained growth over 12 inches as a violation. Invasive species such as Brazilian pepper, air potato, and cogongrass should be removed to prevent spread.
Artificial turf is permitted in Ocoee front and back yards subject to HOA approval and zoning review. The city requires turf products to meet drainage and quality standards and generally discourages full-yard replacement of living landscape in highly visible areas.
Ocoee regulates trimming of protected trees through its landscape and tree preservation ordinance. Routine maintenance pruning that does not exceed 25 percent of the canopy generally does not require a permit. Heavy trimming or topping of specimen trees requires review by the city arborist.
Ocoee is within the St. Johns River Water Management District, which limits residential landscape irrigation to two days per week based on address, and prohibits watering between 10 AM and 4 PM. Eastern Standard Time schedules apply year-round.
Ocoee requires a tree removal permit for any protected tree 8 inches DBH or larger on private property. Replacement or mitigation fees apply unless the tree qualifies as dangerous under FL Β§163.045, which preempts local permits when an ISA-certified arborist documents the risk.
Ocoee applies its general noise ordinance to short-term rentals equally under FL Β§509.032 non-discrimination requirements. Quiet hours 10 PM to 7 AM enforced via Code Β§115 with warnings and escalating fines.
Under FL Β§509.032, Ocoee cannot ban short-term rentals but requires a Business Tax Receipt and compliance with state DBPR Vacation Rental licensing. Orange County also requires a Short-Term Rental Certificate.
Ocoee STR operators pay 6 percent FL sales tax, 0.5 percent Orange County surtax, and 6 percent Orange County Tourist Development Tax for a combined 12.5 percent on rentals under 6 months.
Ocoee requires STR guests to park on-site only, not on lawns or public streets overnight. FL Β§509.032 limits Ocoee to parking rules applied equally to all residences.
Ocoee requires a Business Tax Receipt for STR operation. FL Β§509.032 (as amended by SB 280, 2024) allows cities to require local STR registration alongside DBPR licensure.
Ocoee imposes no minimum-night stay cap on short-term rentals. FL Β§509.032 preempts local minimum-night requirements that would effectively ban STRs.
FL Β§509.032(7)(b) allows Ocoee to cap STR occupancy at 2 persons per bedroom plus 2 additional, or 2 persons per 50 sq ft of sleeping area, whichever is less, matching SB 280 (2024).
Ocoee has no local STR insurance mandate. Florida recommends 1 million dollars liability coverage, and Airbnb/Vrbo provide host protection programs (up to 1 million dollars) by default.
Persistent barking audible for more than 15 continuous minutes or intermittently for 30 minutes constitutes a nuisance under Ocoee Code. Orange County Animal Services handles enforcement jointly with Ocoee Code Enforcement.
Ocoee allows gas and electric leaf blowers year-round during general construction/landscaping hours of 7 AM to 7 PM. No decibel cap or equipment type restrictions apply, but the standard plainly-audible rule governs early-morning use.
Modified exhaust, loud stereos, and engine revving are prohibited under Ocoee Code and FL Β§316.272 which limits vehicle sound to levels under manufacturer specifications. Enforcement concentrated along SR-50 (West Colonial Drive) and Clarke Road corridors.
Aircraft noise is preempted by the FAA and federal law. Ocoee has no local aircraft noise ordinance. Orlando Executive Airport (ORL) and Orlando International (MCO) Class B airspace generate most overflight noise.
Ocoee enforces nighttime quiet hours from 11 PM to 7 AM on weekdays and 11 PM to 8 AM on weekends under the Ocoee Code of Ordinances Chapter 110 noise regulations. Plainly audible sound beyond 100 feet from the source is prohibited during these hours. FL Β§877.03 disorderly conduct applies as a secondary enforcement tool.
Construction noise in Ocoee is restricted to 7 AM to 7 PM Monday through Saturday with no Sunday or legal holiday work permitted without a special permit. The rule covers power tools, heavy equipment, and contractor activity within residential zones.
Amplified music audible beyond 100 feet from the property line is prohibited at any time in residential zones under Ocoee Code Chapter 110. Special event permits are available for West Orange Trail events and downtown gatherings.
Commercial properties in Ocoee must contain noise within property boundaries between 10 PM and 7 AM. Loading docks, HVAC units, and delivery activity near residential zones are regulated under Ocoee Code Chapter 110 and Land Development Code buffer requirements.
Fence permits are required in Ocoee for all new fence installations and replacements over 50% of existing length. Permit fees run approximately $75 to $150 depending on linear footage. HOA architectural review typically precedes city permit submittal.
Florida has no shared-cost fence law. Each Ocoee property owner is responsible for fencing on or within their property line. Spite fences erected maliciously are actionable under FL Β§823.11.
Ocoee permits fences up to 6 feet tall in side and rear yards, and 4 feet in front yards under the Land Development Code. Corner lots have additional visibility triangle requirements. Fences around pools must meet FL Building Code 48-inch minimum barrier standards.
Ocoee allows wood, vinyl, aluminum, chain link, and masonry fences. Barbed wire and electric fencing are prohibited in residential zones. Chain link is restricted in front yards of most subdivisions. Hurricane wind load (ASCE 7 / FL Building Code) applies to all fence construction.
Pool barriers in Ocoee must comply with FL Β§515 and FL Building Code: 48-inch minimum height, self-closing and self-latching gates, no gaps over 4 inches, and at least one additional safety feature (pool alarm, safety cover, or door alarm). Required on all residential pools.
Corner lots in Ocoee require a clear sight visibility triangle of 25 feet from the intersection. Fences, landscaping, and structures over 30 inches tall are prohibited within the triangle under Ocoee LDC.
Ocoee Land Development Code Β§5-4 allows home occupations as accessory uses in residential districts with a Business Tax Receipt. No external evidence of business, no non-resident employees, and no signage visible from the street are permitted.
Ocoee residents may operate a Florida Cottage Food Operation under FL Β§500.80, selling up to $250,000 per year in approved non-hazardous home-produced foods without a food license or commercial kitchen. Local governments cannot ban cottage food operations.
Home occupations in Ocoee must not generate customer or client traffic that disrupts the residential neighborhood. Occasional client visits by appointment are generally acceptable, but regular drop-in retail traffic and deliveries beyond normal residential levels are prohibited.
Ocoee allows home occupations as accessory uses in residential zoning districts with a home occupation permit. The business must be conducted entirely within the dwelling, occupy no more than 25 percent of the floor area, and not change the residential character of the property.
Ocoee permits family daycare homes in residential zones as accessory home occupations, but operators must obtain a Business Tax Receipt and comply with FL DCF licensing under FL Β§402.302 for homes caring for 5+ unrelated children.
Home-based businesses in Ocoee cannot display exterior signs advertising the business. This includes yard signs, window signs, and vehicle signage when the vehicle is parked at the residence during non-business hours. The residence must appear unchanged from any other home on the street.
Ocoee follows FL Building Code for EV charging installations. Residential Level 2 chargers require electrical permit. Public charging at Ocoee Lakeshore Center and shopping plazas. No mandatory EV-ready requirements for new single-family construction.
Ocoee requires all residential driveways to be paved (concrete, asphalt, or pavers). Maximum 40% front yard coverage. Driveway apron permits required for new curb cuts. Grass or gravel driveways prohibited in most residential zones.
Ocoee prohibits parking of commercial vehicles over 10,000 lbs GVW in residential zones. No semi-trucks, dump trucks, or construction equipment overnight. Small contractor vans with company signage allowed in driveway.
Ocoee permits overnight on-street parking in residential zones unless signs prohibit. Downtown and some commercial areas have 2 AM-6 AM restrictions. HOA streets may impose private overnight rules enforced by community associations.
Ocoee allows on-street parking on most residential streets but prohibits parking against traffic flow and within 15 feet of fire hydrants. No overnight commercial vehicle parking. Enforcement via Ocoee Police Department.
Ocoee regulates residential RV and boat parking through Chapter 168 (Vehicles and Traffic) and the Land Development Code Article V (Land Use and Density Regulations). Recreational vehicles, boats, and trailers may be parked on residential property only in side or rear yards, behind the front building line, and must not be used as a permanent residence. Parking on the public right-of-way is limited to short-term loading and unloading (typically 72 hours).
Ocoee defines abandoned vehicles as inoperable, unregistered, or parked over 72 hours on public property. FL Β§715.05 authorizes tow after notice. Code enforcement may cite owner and tow at owner expense.
Ocoee requires a building permit for all new in-ground and above-ground pools over 24 inches deep, per FL Building Code Chapter 4 and Ocoee Code Β§108. Plan review, setback compliance, and final inspection required.
Ocoee permits above-ground pools but requires the same FL Β§515 barrier compliance as in-ground pools when water depth exceeds 24 inches. Permit required, setbacks apply.
Florida has the strictest pool safety law in the US. Ocoee enforces FL Β§515 barrier, VGB Act anti-entrapment drain covers, and FL Building Code Chapter 4 equipment standards for all residential pools.
Ocoee enforces FL Β§515 Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act: 48-inch minimum barrier, self-closing self-latching gates, and openings less than 4 inches. Applies to all residential pools.
Hot tubs and spas in Ocoee require permits and are subject to FL Β§515 barriers unless equipped with a locking safety cover meeting ASTM F1346. Electrical permit required for 240V installations.
Small recreational backyard fires for warmth or cooking are allowed in Ocoee without a permit when contained in an approved fire pit, chiminea, or manufactured fireplace under 3 feet in diameter. Setbacks of 25 feet from structures and property lines apply, and only clean wood or charcoal is permitted.
Ocoee sits in a moderate wildfire exposure area in west Orange County, with wildland-urban interface zones along Lake Apopka, the West Orange Trail corridor, and undeveloped tracts near SR-429. Florida leads the nation in lightning-ignited wildfires, and the Ocoee Fire Department coordinates with the Florida Forest Service for mitigation.
All Ocoee dwellings must have working smoke alarms per the Florida Building Code and NFPA 72. New construction and substantial renovations require hardwired, interconnected alarms with battery backup in every sleeping room, outside each sleeping area, and on every level. Rentals must have functioning alarms at the start of each tenancy.
Open burning of yard waste, land-clearing debris, or trash in Ocoee requires authorization from the Florida Forest Service and compliance with FL Administrative Code 5I-2. Household trash burning is prohibited. Burn bans suspend all open burning.
Ocoee property owners must maintain vacant and improved lots free of dense undergrowth, dead vegetation, and accumulated yard debris that could fuel wildfire. Tall grass and weeds over 12 inches are treated as nuisance overgrowth. Code enforcement inspects on complaint and after drought advisories.
Ocoee permits recreational fire pits under 3 feet diameter on private residential property when placed at least 25 feet from structures, property lines, and combustible vegetation. Only seasoned wood or charcoal may be burned; trash, leaves, and yard waste are prohibited. Fires must be attended at all times and fully extinguished before leaving.
Consumer fireworks are prohibited in Ocoee year-round except on three state-preempted holidays: July 4, December 31, and January 1. Florida Β§791.08 blocks local bans on those dates. Sparklers and novelties remain legal year-round statewide.
Florida regulates propane (LP-gas) storage, transport, and installation uniformly under Chapter 527 and the Florida Fire Prevention Code, preempting inconsistent local rules.
Ocoee requires a building permit for sheds over 100 sq ft. Sheds up to 100 sq ft are exempt from building permits but must still meet zoning setbacks of 5 feet from side and rear property lines. All sheds must be anchored to resist hurricane wind loads.
Garage conversions into habitable space are allowed in Ocoee with a building permit and zoning review. Converted space must meet egress, ventilation, and energy code, and the property must retain required off-street parking or provide replacement parking.
Tiny homes on permanent foundations are allowed in Ocoee where zoning permits single-family dwellings and the structure meets FL Building Code. Tiny homes on wheels are treated as recreational vehicles and cannot be used as permanent dwellings outside licensed RV parks.
Carports in Ocoee require a building permit and must meet setback and design standards. Attached carports follow primary-structure setbacks, while detached carports follow accessory-structure setbacks of 5 feet side and rear. Carports must be engineered to 130 mph wind loads.
Ocoee allows accessory dwelling units in certain single-family zoning districts subject to lot size minimums, owner-occupancy of the primary dwelling, and setback compliance. ADUs must connect to city utilities and meet Florida Building Code wind load standards.
Vacant and undeveloped lots must be maintained with vegetation cut to under 12 inches and kept free of debris, trash, and illegal dumping. Owners of record are responsible for upkeep regardless of residency status.
Carts must be stored out of public view from the street between collection days. Ocoee Code Chapter 108 (Property Maintenance) requires screening behind the front building line, in a side yard, garage, or behind a visual barrier.
Ocoee permits residential garage sales without a permit requirement, but limits frequency and signage under City Code. Sales are restricted to 2 per calendar year per household, each not exceeding 3 consecutive days.
Ocoee enforces property maintenance standards under City Code Chapter 108 and the International Property Maintenance Code. Overgrown vegetation, accumulated debris, peeling paint, broken windows, and unsecured structures trigger code enforcement action.
Ocoee has no snow clearance ordinance due to its Central Florida climate. Property owners are, however, responsible for keeping sidewalks clear of vegetation, debris, and obstructions under City Code Chapter 108.
FL Β§720.311 requires pre-suit mediation for most HOA disputes in Ocoee communities. Covenant enforcement, amendments, and meeting procedure disputes go through a mandatory mediation process before court.
Ocoee HOA assessments are governed by FL Β§720.308: budgets approved annually, assessments due per declaration, late fees up to 25 dollars or 5 percent, and interest up to 18 percent on delinquent amounts.
Ocoee HOAs follow FL Β§720.303 governance rules: open board meetings with 48-hour posted notice, annual member meetings, and written minutes. Many Ocoee communities (Windermere Groves, Forest Lake) have active HOAs.
Ocoee HOAs enforce CC&Rs under FL Β§720.305. Fines capped at 100 dollars per day and 1,000 dollars total per violation, requiring 14-day notice and hearing before a committee of non-board members.
Ocoee HOAs typically enforce architectural review committees (ARC) for exterior changes. FL Β§720.3035 requires written approval standards and objective criteria, preventing arbitrary denials.
Ocoee participates in FEMA NFIP. Portions near Lake Apopka, Starke Lake, and Lake Johio lie in AE and A Zones. Base flood elevation plus 1 ft freeboard required. Elevation Certificates needed for construction in SFHA.
Ocoee requires erosion and sediment control BMPs on all construction sites. Silt fences, inlet protection, and stabilized entrances mandatory. SJRWMD enforces state erosion rules. Sites over 1 acre need NPDES construction permit and SWPPP.
Ocoee requires grading permits for earthwork over 50 cubic yards or disturbance exceeding 5,000 sq ft. Drainage must direct runoff to approved outlet without harming neighbors. SJRWMD ERP needed for significant work.
Ocoee enforces NPDES MS4 stormwater program under EPA and SJRWMD oversight. Illicit discharges prohibited. Construction sites over 1 acre require SJRWMD ERP permit and SWPPP. Ocoee Stormwater Utility funds Lake Apopka and Starke Lake protection.
Florida regulates construction seaward of the Coastal Construction Control Line through state permits, with uniform standards administered by the Department of Environmental Protection.
Ocoee follows FL Β§482 Structural Pest Control Act. Licensed applicators required for commercial pesticide use. Termite protection mandatory under FL Building Code for all new construction. Property maintenance code addresses rodent harborage.
Ocoee follows federal EPA RRP Rule (40 CFR 745) for lead-paint work on pre-1978 housing. Certified Renovator required for disturbance of painted surfaces over 6 sq ft interior or 20 sq ft exterior.
Florida preempts elevator safety statewide under FL Β§399. DBPR Bureau of Elevator Safety inspects and permits all elevators in Ocoee, with annual certification and 5-year load tests required.
Ocoee requires building permits for scaffolding over 6 feet under FL Building Code 7th Edition. Contractors must meet OSHA 1926.451 fall protection standards. Permits issued through Ocoee Building Division.
Recreational drone operation in Ocoee is governed primarily by FAA Part 107 and the FAA Recreational UAS Safety Test (TRUST). Florida preempts most local drone rules under FL Β§934.50 and Β§330.41, but Ocoee restricts drone launch/landing from city parks without permission.
Commercial drone operations require an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. Operators working in Ocoee must also obtain a city Business Tax Receipt if conducting ongoing commercial activity, and comply with FL Β§934.50 privacy limits.
Ocoee city parks are closed from dusk to dawn unless posted otherwise or under a special event permit. Typical operating hours are sunrise to sunset, with lighted facilities (tennis courts, sports fields) open until 10:00 PM.
Ocoee enforces a juvenile curfew under City Code Chapter 80. Minors under 18 are prohibited from being in public places between 11:00 PM and 6:00 AM Sunday-Thursday, and midnight to 6:00 AM Friday and Saturday.
Ocoee offers weekly bulk/bulky waste pickup on the regular yard waste day at no additional charge for most household items. Residents may set out furniture, mattresses, appliances, and large items up to a reasonable volume limit.
Ocoee provides curbside single-stream recycling weekly. Accepted materials include paper, cardboard, metal cans, glass bottles, and plastics #1 and #2. Participation is voluntary but encouraged; contamination may result in cart rejection.
Trash and recycling carts must be placed at the curb with wheels facing the house, at least 3 feet apart and clear of mailboxes, fire hydrants, and parked vehicles. Carts must be stored out of public view between collection days.
Ocoee provides weekly solid waste and recycling collection through the city Public Works Solid Waste Division. Residents receive once-weekly garbage, once-weekly recycling, and once-weekly yard waste pickup on designated routes.
Ocoee residential districts cap principal structures at 35 ft in R-1A/R-1, 40 ft in R-2. Accessory structures limited to 15 ft. Height measured from finished grade to roof midpoint. Variances available through Planning Commission.
Ocoee R-1A zoning requires 30 ft front, 7.5 ft side, 30 ft rear setbacks. R-1 allows 25 ft front, 7.5 ft side, 25 ft rear. Corner lots need 15 ft street-side setback. Variances require Planning and Zoning Commission review.
Ocoee caps lot coverage at 35% in R-1A, 40% in R-1, 50% in R-2. Impervious surface coverage limited to 60% citywide. Stormwater detention required above threshold to meet SJRWMD standards.
Ocoee requires full cutoff fixtures for commercial lighting. Residential exterior lighting must not create glare onto neighboring properties. No formal dark-sky ordinance, but light trespass enforced under nuisance code.
Ocoee treats excessive light spillover onto neighboring property as nuisance and code violation. Security floodlights must be aimed downward. Photocell-controlled lights encouraged. Commercial properties face stricter spill limits at property lines.
FL Β§163.04 preempts HOA solar bans statewide. Ocoee HOAs cannot prohibit solar but may require panels on less visible roof plane if performance is not substantially impaired. Deed restrictions attempting to ban solar are unenforceable.
Ocoee requires building and electrical permits for solar PV installations. FL Β§163.04 preempts HOA bans on solar. Typical permit fee $150-$300. Duke Energy net metering available. Inspections required before utility interconnection.
Ocoee does not have a just-cause eviction ordinance. Landlord-tenant relations are governed by the Florida Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (FL Statute Chapter 83, Part II), which preempts most local tenant protection measures in Florida.
Ocoee has no rent control. FL Β§125.0103 preempts rent control statewide except during declared housing emergency with strict findings. Landlord-tenant relations governed by FL Β§83 Residential Landlord and Tenant Act.
Ocoee requires a Business Tax Receipt (BTR) for rental property operators under City Code Chapter 22. Short-term rentals must also obtain a separate STR registration consistent with FL Β§509.032 amendments.
Residential holiday decorations and displays are permitted without a permit in Ocoee. Temporary seasonal displays (Christmas lights, inflatables, Halloween decor) are not regulated as signs under the Land Development Code.
Political signs are protected political speech and are permitted on private residential property in Ocoee without a permit. Consistent with Reed v. Town of Gilbert, content-neutral size and placement rules apply equally to all temporary signs.
Garage sale signs are permitted on the sale property but prohibited in the public right-of-way, attached to utility poles, traffic signs, or placed on other private property without permission. Signs must be removed within 24 hours after the sale ends.
Ocoee residents may post No Soliciting or No Trespassing signs at their door or property entrance to prohibit commercial solicitation. Solicitors who ignore posted signs commit a Chapter 115 violation and may be charged with trespass under FL Β§810.09.
Door-to-door solicitors in Ocoee must obtain a Solicitor Permit from the Ocoee Police Department before engaging in commercial solicitation. Permits require background check and photo ID, which must be displayed while soliciting.
Home cultivation of cannabis is prohibited in Florida, including Ocoee. Florida only permits medical marijuana through licensed Medical Marijuana Treatment Centers (MMTCs) under FL Β§381.986; patients cannot grow their own plants.
Medical Marijuana Treatment Center (MMTC) dispensaries in Ocoee are regulated consistent with FL Β§381.986(11), which requires cities to either ban all MMTC dispensaries or zone them identically to pharmacies. No recreational cannabis retail is permitted in Florida.
Ocoee food trucks need FL DBPR Mobile Food Dispensing Vehicle license plus local business tax receipt. FL Β§509.102 preempts local licensing beyond state MFDV. Operating hours and location rules remain local.
Ocoee restricts food truck operation in residential zones. Commercial and mixed-use districts allow by right with property owner consent. Public right-of-way vending prohibited without special event permit. Lakeshore Center hosts regular events.
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 Statute 790.053 generally bans the open carry of firearms by individuals, with limited exceptions for hunting, fishing, camping, target shooting, and lawful self-defense, and preempts any local variance.
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.
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.
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 permits or replacement trees for the removal of dangerous trees on residential property when supported by a qualified arborist's documentation.
Florida law prohibits local governments from requiring replacement plantings or mitigation when a residential tree is removed under documented danger conditions.