Pearl City follows ROH Chapter 30 water management rules plus Board of Water Supply shortage stages that apply to all leeward and central Oahu properties during drought.
Pearl City homeowners along Kamehameha Highway and Waimano Home Road must get a permit from Urban Forestry for street tree work under ROH Sec. 10-1.4.
Pearl City properties near Pearlridge and along H-1 must keep vegetation from creating fire hazard or vermin harborage under ROH Chapter 16A public nuisance rules.
Pearl City yard crews serving H-1 corridor neighborhoods must follow HAR 11-46 leaf blower hours: 8am-7pm weekdays and 9am-7pm Sundays and holidays.
Pearl City residents near Pearl Harbor and along the H-1 corridor must comply with ROH Section 41-6.1 prohibiting sound devices audible at 30 feet or more.
Pearl City construction along the H-1 corridor follows state HAR 11-46, limiting audible work to weekdays 7am-6pm and Saturdays 9am-6pm without a permit.
Pearl City dog owners must control persistent barking under ROH Section 7-2.3, which governs animal nuisances across all Honolulu residential neighborhoods.
ROH Section 21-4.80 restricts outdoor amplified music at Pearl City commercial centers like Pearlridge Center when they abut nearby residential zoning.
Military and civilian aircraft noise over Pearl City is governed by federal FAA rules and HRS Section 261-12, with ROH Section 41-6 expressly excluding aircraft.
Pearl City industrial and commercial noise sources follow ROH Chapter 41 Article 6 and state HAR 11-46 dBA limits, protecting adjacent residential neighborhoods.
Pearl City prohibits on-street storage of commercial vehicles under ROH 15-16.6, with residential off-street parking governed by LUO 21-6.20, affecting contractors and small business owners across Momilani and Waimalu.
Pearl City streets near Pearlridge Center, Kamehameha Highway, and Pali Momi medical area carry signed no-parking zones under ROH 15-14.5 Schedule XXII, with curb-alignment rules enforced under ROH 15-13.5.
Vehicles unattended on Pearl City streets more than 24 hours can be declared abandoned under ROH 15-13.8, with HPD or DCS authorizing removal and owners billed for tow, storage, and disposal.
Pearl City military families and boaters using Pearl Harbor marinas face strict storage limits under ROH 15-16.6, which prohibits on-street parking of RVs, campers, and boat trailers without need for posted signage.
ROH 15-14.1 prohibits parking in front of driveways or within four feet on either side, a rule enforced across Pearl City's dense Momilani, Manana, and Pearlridge-area streets where curb space is often contested.
Pearl City has no general overnight parking ban, but ROH 15-14.6 enforces posted hour limits near schools and Pearlridge, while ROH 15-16.6 caps continuous vehicle storage at 72 hours on any city street.
Pearl City's Pearlridge Center and new multi-family housing near the Skyline rail line must provide EV-ready stalls under LUO 21-6.60 at set thresholds for residential and commercial projects.
Pearl City owners of bed and breakfast homes or transient vacation units must register with the Honolulu DPP before offering stays under 180 consecutive days.
Pearl City short-term rental operators must collect and remit the 3% Oahu Transient Accommodations Tax on gross rental proceeds from stays under 180 consecutive days.
Pearl City short-term rental operators must ensure guests comply with Honolulu's prohibited noise rules, protecting military families and longtime residents from disruption.
Pearl City short-term rentals must submit an on-site parking plan to DPP at registration, with adequate stalls for all expected guest vehicles.
Pearl City short-term rental operators must carry at least $1 million in commercial general liability insurance and show proof to DPP at registration.
Pearl City short-term rentals must post maximum occupancy limits based on DPP-approved floor plans, with per-bedroom caps and safety standards.
Pearl City residential pools must be enclosed under ROH Sec. 16-6.2, with companion standards at 16-7.9 covering public and condo pools at Pearl City Highlands and Waimalu complexes.
Pearl City neighborhoods including Manana, Pearl City Highlands, and Waiau follow the islandwide ROH 21-4.60 fence height rules, with military-family rentals near Pearl Harbor subject to the same caps.
Pearl City homeowners obtain fence and wall permits from Honolulu DPP under ROH 18-3.1, with retaining or riprap walls up to 30 inches exempt from the building permit requirement.
Pearl City neighbor fence disputes apply ROH 21-4.30 yard setbacks with 21-4.60 height limits, since Hawaii has no dedicated spite fence statute for Waiau or Manana shared property lines.
Pearl City retaining walls on the Pearl City Highlands and Manana hillsides fall under ROH 21-4.40, capping fill-bearing walls in required yards at 6 feet and combining terraced heights.
Pearl City fence materials follow the LUO fence definition in ROH 21-4.60, allowing wrought iron, wood, vinyl, plastic, and wire on post foundations in Waiau, Manana, and Pearl City Highlands yards.
Pearl City home occupations must limit client visits and parking impacts under ROH Sec. 21-5.350 so the business remains incidental to residential use and does not disturb neighbors.
Pearl City residential districts severely limit home-business signage under ROH Chapter 21, Article 7. Only minimal nameplate signs identifying the resident are typically permitted.
Pearl City residents providing in-home child care for three to six unrelated children must register under HRS Sec. 346-151 and comply with ROH Sec. 21-5.350 home occupation rules.
Pearl City residents, including those adjacent to Pearl Harbor, may operate home occupations under ROH Sec. 21-5.350 only when the business is incidental and subordinate to residential use.
Pearl City cottage food operations follow state rules in HRS Chapter 321, updated by 2024 Acts 194 and 195, which created homemade food operation permitting through the Hawaii Department of Health.
Pearl City has no separate tiny-home category. Permanent tiny homes on foundations are regulated as ADUs, and movable tiny homes on wheels are not allowed as permanent dwellings in residential districts.
Pearl City homeowners, including military families near Pearl Harbor, may build one accessory dwelling unit per zoning lot in eligible residential districts, subject to parking, occupancy, and rental-duration limits.
Sheds in Pearl City must meet yard setback and height limits under the Land Use Ordinance. Smaller sheds below size thresholds may be exempt from building permits but must still comply with zoning.
Converting a garage into living space in Pearl City is treated as an ADU under the Land Use Ordinance, requires building permits, and usually requires replacement off-street parking.
Carports in Pearl City are limited to 20 by 20 feet in horizontal dimensions. Hillside carports of Type V-B construction may exceed one story under specified conditions along Pearl City's sloped upper streets.
Pearl City dogs must be on physical restraint no longer than eight feet on public streets, schools, and parks under ROH Chapter 7, Article 4, including Neal Blaisdell Park and Pearl Harbor Historic Trail.
Pearl City households near Pearl Harbor may keep no more than two hens under ROH 7-2.4, with roosters prohibited outright. Coops must meet zoning setback and sanitation standards on residential lots.
Pearl City has no breed-specific dog ban. ROH Chapter 7, Article 7 instead regulates individual dogs declared dangerous, requiring muzzle, six-foot leash, and adult handler per ROH 7-7.2.
Pearl City has no dedicated beekeeping ordinance. Apiaries are treated as agricultural under ROH Chapter 21, requiring state apiary registration with Hawaii Department of Agriculture under HRS 152.
Pearl City enforces Hawaii's strict statewide exotic pet ban under HRS 150A. Snakes, ferrets, hamsters, and gerbils are illegal, with particular scrutiny for animals arriving through Pearl Harbor military moves.
Pearl City households face a ten dog or ten cat cap under ROH 7-2.5, with state animal hoarding charges under HRS 711-1109.6 when more than fifteen dogs or cats combined live in poor conditions.
Pearl City has no blanket local wildlife-feeding ban. State HRS 183D and federal MMPA govern feeding near Pearl Harbor National Wildlife Refuge, and feral animal enforcement runs through ROH 7-2.
Consumer fireworks are prohibited in Pearl City. Military families and residents may only use licensed displays or permitted firecrackers under Honolulu's fireworks article.
Pearl City residents, including military families near Pearl Harbor, must meet Honolulu Fire Code open-burning rules before lighting backyard fire pits or ceremonial fires.
Pearl City hillside properties along Waimano and Manana can be designated hazardous fire areas, triggering brush clearance and firebreak obligations under Honolulu's Fire Code.
Outdoor burning in Pearl City is restricted under the Honolulu Fire Code. Imu cooking fires, recreational burns, and ceremonial fires each require different advance notices or permissions.
Pearl City's upland slopes can be flagged as hazardous fire areas by the Honolulu Fire Chief, triggering vegetation, access, and ignition controls under the Fire Code.
Pearl City homes and businesses using propane for cooking, generators, or pool heating must follow Honolulu's Fire Code LP-Gas rules, with plan review for larger tanks.
Residential pools throughout Pearl City are regulated by Chapter 16 Article 6, which sets purpose, barriers, construction, modification, exceptions, and penalties for pool owners.
Pearl City homeowners near Pearl Harbor must obtain a Chapter 18 building permit before constructing or modifying a residential swimming pool, with separate electrical and plumbing sub-permits and DPP inspections.
Every Pearl City residential pool must be enclosed by a barrier meeting ROH Section 16-6.2, with self-closing self-latching gates and gap limits designed to prevent child access.
Pearl City above-ground pools are treated the same as in-ground pools under Chapter 16 Article 6, with barrier rules applying once statutory depth is reached and removable ladders required.
Hot tubs and spas in Pearl City follow the residential pool article, with Section 16-6.2 barriers triggered above depth thresholds and ASTM-rated covers an acceptable substitute for spa fencing.
Pearl City homeowners in Pacific Palisades and Waimalu can use ROH Sec. 18-5.10 expedited permitting for solar PV up to 20kW, useful for offsetting high family electricity bills.
Pearl City HOAs and condo associations cannot prevent solar installation on single-family dwellings or townhouses owned by homeowners under HRS Sec. 196-7 state preemption.
Pearl City residents need no permit for occasional garage sales under LUO 21-5.350, which allows them as accessory residential use, commonly tied to PCS moves and military family transitions.
Pearl City imposes no numeric cap on garage sale frequency, but LUO 21-5.350 requires sales stay occasional and accessory, with recurring PCS-area sales sometimes drawing DPP scrutiny.
Pearl City sets no specific hours for garage sales, though ROH Chapter 41 noise rules and LUO 21-5.350 accessory-use expectations effectively confine sales to reasonable daytime hours in dense residential areas.
Pearl City has no rent control. Hawaii has no state cap on rent, and landlord-tenant relations follow HRS Chapter 521, which relies on advance notice rather than price controls.
Pearl City has no just-cause eviction law. Month-to-month tenancies can be terminated on 45 days' notice under state law, with 120 days required for certain conversions.
Pearl City has no long-term rental registry, but short-term and transient rentals must register with DPP and face strict zoning limits under Honolulu's short-term rental law.
Pearl City has no prohibited vending districts under ROH Sec. 13-6.2, but peddlers citywide must still avoid Waikiki, Chinatown, and downtown malls listed in the section.
Food truck operators serving Pearl City, including those catering near Pearl Harbor gates and shopping centers, need a Honolulu peddler's license plus a state mobile food permit.
ROH Section 40-7.4 requires Pearl City property owners to remove weeds, garbage, trash, and waste within 30 days of a DPP notice, or face city abatement, a billed lien, and 7 percent interest.
Pearl City residents must use city automated carts or compliant 10-35 gallon private containers, placed curbside within the allowed window and removed promptly, under ROH Section 42-1.4.
Pearl City vacant lots are subject to the same Section 40-7.4 weed and waste enforcement as occupied properties, with 30-day abatement notices and liens for noncompliance.
Pearl City has no snow-clearing law; sidewalk maintenance falls under Chapter 13 on streets and sidewalks and Chapter 14 Article 3 on sidewalk construction and repair permits.
Pearl City garage and yard sales are permitted under the Land Use Ordinance only as occasional accessory uses of a residence; they cannot operate as ongoing retail businesses.
Pearl City carts must be placed curbside with clearance and proper orientation for automated collection and must not block sidewalks, driveways, or create safety hazards on busy streets.
Honolulu operates an islandwide curbside recycling program serving Pearl City. At least two recyclable materials are collected, with no apartment-specific mandate currently in place.
Pearl City residents must prepare refuse and recyclables under ROH rules, including limits on branch diameter, bundle weight, and green-waste length for manual collection areas.
Pearl City residents must schedule appointment-based bulky waste pickup and may only set items out the evening before collection. Failure to remove items within seven days of notice is a public nuisance.
ROH Section 10-1.4 requires Pearl City residents to obtain DPR permits before removing, trimming, or pruning street trees along neighborhood roadways.
Tree replacement in Pearl City is imposed through ROH Chapter 40 Article 8 regulations, Section 10-1.4 street-tree permits, and LUO landscaping standards.
ROH Chapter 40 Article 8 protects exceptional trees in Pearl City through City Council removal approval and DPR alteration permits.
Pearl City cannabis home cultivation is permitted only for registered medical patients under HRS 329-122 at up to ten plants. Active-duty military face additional federal prohibitions beyond state law.
Medical cannabis dispensaries in Pearl City must comply with ROH Chapter 21 and sit at least 750 feet from schools or playgrounds under HRS 329D-22, with retail hours limited to 8 a.m. through 8 p.m.
Pearl City commercial, industrial, and recreational development must use full cut-off shielded fixtures under ROH 21-4.100, protecting residential neighborhoods and Pearl Harbor security lighting corridors.
Pearl City light trespass is controlled through shielding and cutoff requirements in ROH 21-4.100, preventing direct illumination onto residential Pearl City Highlands, Waimalu, and Manana neighborhoods.
Pearl City residential setbacks apply ROH 21-4.30 yard rules with residential-district specifics in ROH 21-3.70-1, generally a 10-foot front yard and 5-foot side and rear yards in R-5 districts.
Pearl City structure heights follow ROH 21-4.60 with residential envelope planes in 21-3.70-1, typically 25 feet in R-5 districts covering Waiau, Manana, and the core Pearl City CDP.
Pearl City lot coverage follows ROH 21-3.70-1, capping impervious surface at 75 percent for dwellings permitted after May 1, 2019, including homes in Waimalu, Manana, and Pearl City Highlands.
Door-to-door sellers in Pearl City must hold a Honolulu peddler's license under ROH Chapter 13, Article 6, with a $27.50 annual fee applying equally in Waimalu, Manana, and Pearl City Highlands.
Pearl City has no dedicated no-knock registry. Door-to-door activity is regulated through the ROH 13-6.2 peddler framework combined with Hawaii state trespass law under HRS 708-814.
Pearl City's drainages into Pearl Harbor estuary fall under strict ROH Chapter 43, Article 11 stormwater rules prohibiting non-stormwater discharges to the city's MS4 system.
Development in Pearl City's FEMA-mapped flood zones must comply with ROH Chapter 21A, which governs special flood hazard areas, elevation standards, and flood variance procedures.
Pearl City construction projects must submit erosion and sediment control plans under ROH Sec. 18A-1.6 before the city issues building, grading, stockpiling, or trenching permits.
Shoreline-adjacent properties in Pearl City along Pearl Harbor require Special Management Area permits under ROH Chapter 25, implementing HRS Chapter 205A coastal management.
Pearl City hillside properties, including Pacific Palisades and Waiawa area lots, require grading permits under ROH Chapter 18A when land disturbance exceeds permit thresholds.
Pearl City follows the Hawaii state juvenile curfew under HRS 577-16. Children under 16 cannot be in public places between 10 pm and 4 am without a parent or guardian.
Public parks in Pearl City, including Pearl City District Park and Neal S. Blaisdell Park, are closed during posted night hours. Entering closed parks is prohibited, with shoreline access preserved.
Pearl City commercial drone operations require FAA Part 107 certification and LAANC airspace authorization due to proximity to Pearl Harbor and airport restricted airspace.
Pearl City recreational drone flights face strict limits due to proximity to Pearl Harbor restricted airspace, plus Honolulu park rules and FAA regulations.
Pearl City political campaign signs are temporary signs under Honolulu's sign ordinance, permit-exempt but barred from public rights-of-way.
Pearl City garage sale signs are exempt temporary announcing signs, but may not be posted on utility poles or in public rights-of-way.
Pearl City holiday and seasonal displays are generally allowed on private property under Honolulu's temporary sign standards, with restrictions on public land.
Hawaii Revised Statutes Chapter 387 sets the statewide minimum wage and governs employer wage obligations. The statute establishes a uniform statewide floor that scheduled increases apply to all counties equally.
Hawaii has no general statewide paid sick leave mandate, but HRS Chapter 392 requires employers to provide temporary disability insurance for non-work injuries, and family leave is governed by HRS Chapter 398.
Hawaii has not enacted a statewide predictive scheduling or fair workweek law. Wage-and-hour rules under HRS Chapter 387 govern overtime and reporting time, but advance scheduling notice is not generally required.
HRS 134-9 governs Hawaii concealed carry licensing. Following the U.S. Supreme Court's Bruen decision, Hawaii revised standards but maintains stringent training, application, and sensitive-place requirements administered by county police chiefs.
Hawaii Revised Statutes Chapter 134 establishes statewide firearms regulations, but unlike many states, Hawaii does not broadly preempt counties from enacting local firearms ordinances on certain matters.
Hawaii prohibits open carry of firearms in public without a license issued under HRS 134-9. Unlicensed open carry is a felony, making Hawaii one of the most restrictive states for visible firearm carrying.
Hawaii imposes some of the nation's strictest rules on carrying firearms in vehicles. HRS 134-25 and HRS 134-26 prohibit carrying a loaded or unloaded pistol, revolver, or long gun in a motor vehicle except under narrow license and transport exceptions.
Hawaii does not require private or public employers to use the federal E-Verify system to confirm employee work authorization. Use of E-Verify in Hawaii is voluntary, except where federal contracts independently require it.
Hawaii has not enacted a statewide sanctuary law nor a statewide preemption forbidding sanctuary policies. Counties and city governments such as Honolulu have adopted their own policies governing local cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.
Hawaii uniquely classifies all land statewide into four state land use districts under HRS Chapter 205, with the Agricultural District protecting farmland and limiting non-agricultural uses across the state.
HRS Chapter 165, Hawaii's Right to Farm Act, protects farming operations from nuisance lawsuits when they have operated for at least one year and were not nuisances at their inception, supporting agricultural land use across the state.
Hawaii has no statewide plastic bag preemption law, but all four counties have enacted bans on non-recyclable plastic checkout bags, making Hawaii the first U.S. state with a de facto statewide ban on single-use plastic bags.
Hawaii has no statewide polystyrene ban, but Honolulu, Hawaii County, Maui County, and Kauai County have adopted ordinances prohibiting food vendors from using polystyrene foam containers for prepared foods.
Hawaii does not regulate plastic straws at the state level, but Maui County and other county ordinances restrict food vendors from automatically providing single-use plastic straws and stirrers to customers.
Hawaii was the first U.S. state to raise the tobacco purchase age to 21 in 2016. HRS 712-1258 prohibits the sale, furnishing, or purchase of tobacco and electronic smoking devices by anyone under 21.
Hawaii has no statewide ban on flavored tobacco or vape products, but the City and County of Honolulu and other county governments have considered or adopted local restrictions, leaving a regulatory patchwork across the islands.
Hawaii regulates retail sales of electronic smoking devices and e-liquid under HRS Chapter 245 and 712-1258, requiring retailer permits, age verification, and packaging standards for all vape products sold in the state.