Winter parking bans are the dominant rule across Middlesex County. Most cities prohibit overnight on-street parking from November through April to allow snow removal.
Middlesex County cities and towns each set their own overnight parking rules, but winter parking bans are nearly universal given Boston metro snowfall. Cambridge prohibits overnight on-street parking from 2:30 a.m. to 6:00 a.m. year-round without a resident permit. Somerville bans overnight parking 2:30 a.m. to 6:00 a.m. without permit. Lowell enforces a winter parking ban from November 15 to April 15 on posted streets. Newton, Waltham, Medford, and Malden impose seasonal winter bans triggered by snow emergency declarations. Framingham and Marlborough ban parking on public ways from 1:00 a.m. to 6:00 a.m. in winter months. Violations typically range from 25 to 100 dollars and vehicles blocking snow operations are subject to towing under MGL c.90 s.22D procedures.
Contact your local code enforcement office for specific penalty information.
Middlesex County, MA
Middlesex County has no operational county government - it was abolished July 11, 1997 under M.G.L. c. 34B - so there is no countywide noise ordinance. Massa...
Middlesex County, MA
Middlesex County treats persistent barking as a nuisance. Animal control handles complaints. Dog licensing required statewide (MGL c.140 Β§155).
Middlesex County, MA
Middlesex County has no unified leaf blower ordinance. Regulations are set by individual cities and towns such as Cambridge, Newton, Arlington, and Lexington...
Middlesex County, MA
Middlesex County limits fence heights: typically 6 feet rear/side, 3.5 to 4 feet front. MA spite fence law (MGL c.49 Β§21) limits malicious fences over 6 feet.
Middlesex County, MA
Most Middlesex County municipalities prohibit barbed wire, razor wire, and electrified fencing in residential zones under local zoning bylaws. Historic distr...
Middlesex County, MA
Middlesex County has no unified code. Each of the 54 municipalities (Cambridge, Lowell, Newton, Somerville, Framingham, etc.) sets its own fence permit rules...
See how Middlesex County's overnight parking rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.