Under the Massachusetts State Building Code (780 CMR), decks not exceeding 200 square feet, not more than 30 inches above grade, and not attached to a dwelling are exempt from permits. Larger or elevated decks require a building permit from the local building department. Concrete patios at grade generally do not require permits.
The Massachusetts State Building Code (780 CMR) governs deck permits uniformly across Middlesex County's 54 municipalities. Decks are exempt from building permits if they meet all of these criteria: floor area does not exceed 200 square feet, the deck is not more than 30 inches above grade at any point, the deck is not attached to a dwelling, and the deck does not serve a required exit door. Decks exceeding any of these thresholds require a building permit. This means most practical backyard decks — especially those attached to the house, elevated above 30 inches, or larger than 200 square feet — will need a permit. Plans must be submitted to the local building department showing structural details, footings, guard rails (required when the deck is more than 30 inches above grade — minimum 36 inches tall), and setback compliance. Concrete or paver patios at grade level generally do not require building permits. Covered porches, screened porches, and three-season rooms are treated as additions and always require permits. In flood zones along Middlesex County waterways (Concord River, Charles River, Assabet River), decks may need to comply with FEMA and local flood plain regulations. Some municipalities may require Conservation Commission review if the deck is within a wetland buffer zone. Plan review timelines vary by municipality: smaller towns may issue permits within 1–2 weeks, while larger cities like Cambridge or Lowell may take 3–6 weeks.
Building a deck without a required permit is a building code violation. Penalties include stop-work orders, retroactive permits with potential increased fees, and orders to demolish non-compliant work. Unpermitted decks can affect home sales and insurance.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Lowell, MA
Lowell Code Section 204-4C(1)-(4) declares unlawful any unnecessary motor noise (backfiring, racing, tire-screeching), improper horn/signaling-device use, di...
Lowell, MA
Lowell Code Section 204-3 sets a full district-by-time dBA table (residential 40-50 dB(A), industrial up to 70 dB(A) daytime), measured at the property bound...
Lowell, MA
Lowell restricts gas-powered leaf blower use to daytime hours; no outright ban exists, but decibel and hour limits apply under the general noise ordinance.
Lowell, MA
Outdoor music at restaurants, breweries, and event venues in Lowell requires an entertainment license and must end by 10 p.m. in residential zones.
Lowell, MA
Lowell Code Chapter 204, Section 204-3 sets district-based dBA limits keyed to time of day. In single- and two-family residential districts the limit drops t...
Lowell, MA
Lowell Code Section 204-4C(12) makes it unlawful to operate any radio, stereo, loudspeaker, instrument or other sound-reproducing device so as to disturb a r...
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