New Orleans does not impose a citywide ban on overnight on-street parking in residential neighborhoods, and most residents park legally on the street through the night. Overnight restrictions arise from posted signs, Residential Parking Permit zones, street-sweeping schedules, parade and special-event tow windows, and metered or commercial-loading zones. Vehicles parked in metered or time-limited zones overnight risk ticketing when restrictions resume in the morning.
Unlike many cities that impose a blanket overnight parking ban, Orleans Parish allows continuous on-street parking in most residential blocks unless signs say otherwise. Residents in Residential Parking Permit zones must display a valid permit during enforcement hours, and visitors are limited to two hours unless a temporary visitor permit is obtained. Metered districts revert to free parking outside posted hours (often after 6 or 7 pm depending on the block), but vehicles left in metered spaces past the morning resumption time will be ticketed. Loading zones, valet zones, and bus stops are off-limits at all times unless signage states otherwise. Street-sweeping zones require vehicles to be moved during the posted weekly window, even if that window falls overnight. During parade season along established Carnival routes, no-parking and tow-away windows are posted in advance and rigorously enforced; vehicles left in tow zones are removed to the city auto pound. After named tropical systems, the city periodically opens elevated streets and neutral grounds for storm parking, with announcements via emergency channels. Sleeping in a vehicle on the street is generally prohibited, and the city addresses unhoused individuals living in vehicles through outreach rather than ticketing in most cases. Owners going out of town should ensure their vehicle complies with all posted street-sweeping and event windows during the absence.
Specific penalty amounts for this ordinance are not published in a publicly accessible fine schedule. Contact New Orleans code enforcement directly for current fines, enforcement procedures, and hearing options.
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