Frisco has no specific ordinance regulating residential offset smokers, pellet grills, or wood-fired pizza ovens at single-family homes. Multi-family balcony smokers face the same IFC Β§308.1.4 prohibition as other open-flame cooking devices. Excessive smoke crossing property lines can be addressed under Frisco's general nuisance and property maintenance provisions.
There is no provision in the Frisco Code of Ordinances specifically addressing residential smokers, pellet grills, offset pits, or wood-fired ovens at single-family or two-family homes. Standard backyard smoking is treated as ordinary residential cooking and is not regulated. At multi-family buildings (3+ dwelling units), IFC Β§308.1.4 β adopted via the Frisco Fire Code β extends to smokers because pellet grills, offset pits, and wood-fired ovens are all 'open-flame' or solid-fuel cooking devices and are prohibited on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction. Smoke that substantially and unreasonably crosses property lines may be addressed under the Frisco Code of Ordinances Health and Nuisance provisions, with enforcement by Frisco Code Enforcement. The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) regulates outdoor air quality but only for industrial and commercial sources, not residential cookers. TCEQ Ozone Action Days in the Dallas-Fort Worth nonattainment area β which includes Collin and Denton counties β are advisory only and do not impose binding restrictions on residential smokers, though TCEQ encourages voluntary reductions on high-ozone days. HOA covenants under Texas Property Code Ch. 209 may impose private rules on smoke or cooking equipment in Frisco's many master-planned communities.
Single-family: rare. Persistent nuisance smoke can draw a citation under the Frisco Code of Ordinances nuisance provisions enforced by Code Enforcement. Multi-family balcony: IFC Β§308 enforcement and removal order by Frisco Fire Department. Fines up to $500 per day under Texas LGC Β§54.001 for code violations.
Frisco, TX
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