100 local rules on file Β· Pop. 486 Β· Sarasota County
Showing ordinances that apply to Pinecraft, FL
Pinecraft is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 486 in Sarasota County, Florida. Because Pinecraft is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Sarasota County ordinances apply directly to residential and commercial properties here. The rules below are the county-level regulations that govern your area. Nearby incorporated cities in Sarasota County may have different rules.
Construction, demolition, drilling, land clearing and filling operations may not run between 9:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. on weekdays, or between 9:00 p.m. and 9:00 a.m. on weekends and holidays, in unincorporated Sarasota County.
In unincorporated Sarasota County, amplified sound not inside a fully enclosed building may not exceed 65 dBA between 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m., measured at the property line. This is the county's practical nighttime quiet-hours rule.
Sarasota County has no separate leaf-blower ordinance. Gas leaf blowers are treated as general equipment noise under the Sec. 54-118 sound-control limits and the Sec. 54-153 prohibition on disturbing neighbors' peace and quiet.
Amplified sound outside a fully enclosed building may not exceed 65 dBA between 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m., or 75 dBA (continuous) between 7:00 a.m. and 11:00 p.m., measured beyond the property line, in unincorporated Sarasota County.
Sarasota County restricts powered model vehicles (RC cars/boats/planes) near homes: prohibited 7:00 p.m.-7:00 a.m. weekdays and 7:00 p.m.-10:00 a.m. weekends/holidays within 50 yards of any residential property line. Motor-vehicle noise also falls under the sound-control limits.
Sarasota County does not set aircraft noise limits. Aircraft in flight and airport operations are regulated by the FAA under federal law; the Sarasota Manatee Airport Authority manages noise programs at Sarasota Bradenton International Airport (SRQ).
Sarasota County Code prohibits frequent or continuous noise by any animal or bird that disturbs the peace, quiet and comfort of neighboring inhabitants. There is no fixed minute-count; enforcement is by sworn complaint.
Sarasota County sets numeric dBA limits at the property line: a general daytime continuous cap of 75 dBA (7:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m.) and a 65 dBA nighttime cap for amplified sound (10:00 p.m.-7:00 a.m.). Measurements use ANSI Type II meters.
Outdoor and open-air music is amplified sound 'not in a completely enclosed building,' so it must stay under 65 dBA after 10:00 p.m. and under 75 dBA (continuous) during the day, measured at the property line, in unincorporated Sarasota County.
Industrial and commercial noise in unincorporated Sarasota County is capped by Sec. 54-118's Table I dBA sound-level limits, which vary by zoning district and by daytime versus nighttime, measured at the generating property's line.
Unincorporated Sarasota County has no standalone STR permit. Operators must hold a Florida DBPR transient public-lodging license (state) and comply with the county's 30-day minimum-rental rule outside the barrier-island multi-family exception.
Sarasota County does not cap the number of rental nights or bookings per year. Florida law bars local governments from regulating the frequency or duration of vacation rentals, except under pre-2011 ordinances.
Sarasota County has no STR-only noise rule; the general county noise ordinance covers rental guests like any resident. Amplified sound and loud noise are restricted, with tighter limits overnight.
Unincorporated Sarasota County does not require an owner or host to be on-site during a rental. A future registration program could require a locally 'designated responsible party,' but none is in effect.
Sarasota County has not adopted a short-term-rental registration program. Commissioners directed staff in April 2026 to study one. Until then, registration means the state DBPR license plus the Tax Collector tourist-tax account.
Sarasota County levies a 6% Tourist Development Tax on rentals of six months or less, on top of 7% state sales tax. Owners must register a bed-tax account with the Sarasota County Tax Collector before renting.
Sarasota County's UDC sets no numeric per-unit occupancy cap for rentals; a proposed registration program could add maximum occupancies. Florida preempts local rules that would target STR occupancy differently from other homes.
Sarasota County has no short-term-rental parking ordinance. Rentals follow the same residential off-street parking and no-street-obstruction rules as any home. A future registration program could add 'parking arrangements.'
Sarasota County does not require STRs to be an owner's primary residence. Instead, the UDC bans leases under 30 days in most residential zones, allowing true short-term rental only for barrier-island multi-family property.
Sarasota County does not require short-term-rental hosts to carry specific insurance. Standard homeowners policies often exclude rental use, so hosts should verify liability and commercial coverage independently.
In unincorporated Sarasota County residential districts, storing or overnight-parking a commercial vehicle over 6,000 pounds empty weight is prohibited, along with semi-trucks, dump trucks, wreckers, construction equipment, and similar heavy vehicles. Larger limits apply on rural parcels of one acre or more.
Sarasota County does not impose a countywide mandate requiring EV charging spaces in residential development; charging is voluntary and supported through the ChargeUP! rebate program. Home EV charger installation follows the Florida Building Code and county electrical permitting.
In unincorporated Sarasota County, a licensed, operational RV or boat may be parked on your own residential lot, but no parcel may hold more than one boat/boat-on-trailer, two jet skis, and one recreational vehicle outside a fully enclosed building. No living or business use.
On unincorporated Sarasota County roads, using the public right-of-way for long-term vehicle storage or to co-opt public spaces is prohibited. Standard traffic and right-of-way rules apply; commercial and oversized storage in residential rights-of-way is not allowed.
In unincorporated Sarasota County, an inoperable or untagged vehicle stored in the open on residential property is a code nuisance and must be kept inside a completely enclosed building. Abandoned vehicles on public property are handled under Florida Statute 705.103.
Sarasota County caps personal-vehicle empty weight at 6,000 pounds in residential districts (7,500 pounds on rural parcels of one acre or more outside the urban service boundary), with trailers capped at 2,500 pounds. Licensed recreational vehicles are exempt from these weight limits.
Sarasota County has no blanket ban on overnight parking of a properly registered passenger vehicle in your own driveway or on-street where signs permit. The county does prohibit overnight/long-term storage of commercial and oversized vehicles in residential districts and rights-of-way.
Sarasota County's zoning regulations require off-street loading spaces for commercial and industrial uses based on building floor area. This is a development/site-plan standard, not a residential rule; homes have no loading-zone requirement.
In unincorporated Sarasota County, you may park operational, tagged personal vehicles on your own driveway. Additional or oversized personal vehicles beyond the allowed count must be fully enclosed or in a screened side/rear yard. Parking on lawns and unpaved surfaces is generally prohibited.
Sarasota County does not have a residential curb-painting ordinance for house numbers or personal parking. Painting or marking a public curb is not a homeowner right; official curb markings follow Florida's MUTCD/FDOT traffic standards and are placed only by the road authority.
Under Florida law, consumer fireworks are legal in Sarasota County on New Year's Day, July 4, and New Year's Eve. On all other days, only sparklers and similar non-explosive novelties are permitted. The county cannot ban holiday use.
Backyard recreational and cooking fires are allowed in unincorporated Sarasota County without a permit, using only approved fuel, kept at least 25 feet from any structure, attended by an adult, and never used to burn trash or yard debris.
Sarasota County has no separate propane-storage ordinance; storage follows the Florida Fire Prevention Code (adopting NFPA 1 and NFPA 58). For multifamily buildings, LP-gas grills and spare cylinders generally may not be stored on balconies or within 10 feet of the structure.
Recreational fires are allowed in unincorporated Sarasota County without a permit if contained in a fire pit, bowl, chimenea, or similar structure, kept at least 25 feet from any structure, and fueled only with approved clean wood, charcoal, or gas.
Burning yard waste, household trash, and debris from routine property maintenance is prohibited in Sarasota County. Only recreational fires and cooking fires are allowed without a permit. Land-clearing and agricultural burns require a Florida Forest Service permit.
Sarasota County sets no mandatory defensible-space clearance ordinance like fire-prone Western states. The Florida Forest Service recommends clearing dead vegetation within 30 feet of your home and reducing fuels out to 100 feet, but this is voluntary Firewise guidance, not a county mandate.
Smoke alarm requirements in Sarasota County follow the Florida Building Code and Florida Statutes, not a separate county ordinance. Alarms are required in every bedroom, outside each sleeping area, and on every level; new battery alarms must use a 10-year sealed battery.
Much of Sarasota County lies in a wildland-urban interface with real wildfire risk. The county issues countywide burn bans during dry conditions, automatically enacted when the drought index (KBDI) reaches 500 and lifted after it stays below 500 for seven days.
Sarasota County cannot regulate managed honeybee colonies. Florida Statute 586.10 preempts beekeeping to the state Department of Agriculture, so registration and inspection are handled statewide, not by county ordinance.
Larger livestock like horses and cattle is allowed only in agricultural and rural zoning districts under Sarasota County's Unified Development Code, subject to lot-size, use-table, and setback standards. Small residential lots cannot keep large animals.
Sarasota County's Unified Development Code allows up to four chickens (no roosters) on many residential lots, with coop setbacks and enclosure rules. Larger livestock is limited to agricultural and rural zoning districts.
Sarasota County cannot ban or restrict dogs by breed. Florida Statute 767.14 preempts breed-, weight-, and size-specific dog regulation statewide; only behavior-based dangerous-dog rules are allowed.
Exotic pets are regulated by the state, not Sarasota County. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission licenses captive wildlife; Class I and II animals and venomous reptiles require FWC permits and caging standards.
Cats in unincorporated Sarasota County must be vaccinated for rabies at four months and older and may not run at large on public property or a neighbor's land. There is no numeric limit on cats per household.
In unincorporated Sarasota County, dogs and cats may not run at large on public streets, sidewalks, other public property, or a neighbor's property unless leashed. Animal Services officers may impound loose animals.
Feeding wildlife is governed by state FWC rules, not a Sarasota County ordinance. Florida bans intentionally feeding bears, coyotes, foxes, raccoons, pelicans, sandhill cranes, and alligators or crocodiles.
Sarasota County sets no fixed numeric limit on dogs or cats per household. Instead, the animal-control ordinance regulates through nuisance and sanitation standards, so excessive animals become a violation when they create offensive conditions.
Sarasota County has no set pet-number cap, but keeping too many animals to care for them becomes illegal under the county nuisance ordinance and Florida's animal-cruelty statutes (FS 828.12 and 828.13).
In unincorporated Sarasota County, fences and walls facing a side or rear lot line may be up to 8 feet. In a street (front) yard, a fence set back under 4 feet from the line is capped at 4 feet; with a 4-foot average setback it may reach 6 feet
In unincorporated Sarasota County, chain-link, wood, or vinyl residential fences meeting the Zoning Regulations may be built without a building permit. All other fences and walls, plus subdivision walls approved under Chapter 74, require a building permit.
Sarasota County zoning does not set cost-sharing rules for shared fences. A residential fence may be installed up to the property line but must remain entirely on the owner's land and may not encroach into a neighbor's lot, a right-of-way, or a recorded easement. Boundary and cost disputes are civil
Sarasota County Zoning Regulations Sec. 7.8 sets the full fence framework: tiered height limits by yard, a landscaping requirement for tall street-yard fences, prohibited materials, and corner sight-triangle rules. Standard chain-link, wood, or vinyl residential fences need no permit but must meet every standard.
A retaining wall is treated as a wall/structure under the county Zoning Regulations rather than an exempt residential fence. Only chain-link, wood, or vinyl residential fences are permit-exempt under Sec. 7.8; a retaining wall requires a building permit and must meet the Florida Building Code plus county setback and height
Sarasota County Zoning Regulations Sec. 7.8 treats chain-link, wood, and vinyl as the standard permit-free residential fence materials. Other materials are allowed but require a building permit, and barbed wire plus front-yard chain-link are restricted.
Sarasota County Zoning Regulations Sec. 7.8 prohibits barbed wire and similar materials except where required by other ordinances or used by lawful agricultural uses. Chain-link is barred in required front yards and any required yard facing a public right-of-way.
Removing most trees in unincorporated Sarasota County requires a Tree Permit under Code Section 54-584 unless an exemption applies. Florida law (F.S. 163.045) lets homeowners remove a documented hazard tree with an arborist letter and no permit.
Sarasota County treats excessive weeds and overgrown vegetation on developed lots as a code nuisance. Enforcement is complaint-based, beginning with a Notice of Violation and time to cut back the growth before penalties.
Sarasota County encourages rain barrels and cisterns as a conservation practice, and Florida law protects residential rainwater collection. There is no county ban on capturing rainwater for irrigation, and hand watering with collected water is generally exempt from schedule limits.
Pruning your own residential trees generally needs no county permit, but pruning any tree in a public right-of-way or Canopy Road Protection Zone is prohibited without a Tree Permit under Sarasota County Code Section 54-584.
Sarasota County follows Southwest Florida Water Management District (SWFWMD) rules. The standard year-round schedule allows watering twice per week by address (odd Wed/Sat, even Thu/Sun) before 10 a.m. or after 4 p.m. Drought orders can tighten this to one day weekly.
Backyard composting is allowed and encouraged in Sarasota County. County code prohibits letting grass clippings, vegetative material, or debris wash, sweep, or blow into stormwater drains, ditches, water bodies, or roadways (Sec. 54-1031).
In unincorporated Sarasota County, code enforcement treats tall grass and weeds as a nuisance and requires property owners to keep vegetation cut. Enforcement is complaint-driven, starting with a Notice of Violation before fines.
Sarasota County promotes Florida-Friendly, drought-tolerant landscaping and requires water-efficient landscape design for new development. State law also protects a homeowner's right to install Florida-Friendly landscaping despite HOA rules.
Sarasota County has no outright ban on residential artificial turf, but it does not count toward required landscape, open-space, or stormwater-pervious area. Placement must comply with zoning, drainage, and any HOA restrictions.
Permanent above-ground pools in unincorporated Sarasota County generally need a building permit and must meet the same FS 515 barrier/alarm safety standards as in-ground pools; small portable inflatables usually do not.
Yes. Building a residential swimming pool, spa, or hot tub in unincorporated Sarasota County requires a county building permit, and you must submit a signed Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act (FS 515) form before the pool can be finaled.
Residential hot tubs and spas in unincorporated Sarasota County require a building permit, and a spa must either meet FS 515 barrier/alarm safety requirements or use an approved safety cover.
Florida's Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act sets the barrier standard used countywide: a fence at least 4 feet high with no climbable gaps, and self-closing, self-latching gates that open away from the pool.
Every new residential pool in Florida must have at least one approved safety feature: a compliant barrier, an approved safety cover, exit alarms on pool-access doors, self-closing doors, or a pool alarm, per FS 515.27.
Florida's cottage food law (FS 500.80) lets residents make and sell certain non-hazardous foods from their home kitchen without a permit or inspection, as long as annual gross sales stay at or below $250,000.
Under FS 559.955, a home-based business must keep the property looking like a normal residence as viewed from the street - which effectively bars business signage that would advertise the business on the home.
Florida preempts special home-occupation permits: FS 559.955 lets a compliant home-based business operate without a use-specific license, though a local business tax receipt under Chapter 205 is still required.
Florida law (FS 559.955) lets home-based businesses operate in any residentially zoned property in unincorporated Sarasota County, and the county cannot treat them differently from other businesses, subject to limited neighborhood-impact conditions.
Under FS 402.313, a family day care home must be licensed if the county requires it by ordinance or resolution; otherwise it must register annually with the Florida Department of Children and Families.
In unincorporated Sarasota County, detached accessory structures such as sheds may not exceed 20 feet in height (or the height of the principal structure if taller) and may not sit in a required yard except where the zoning code expressly allows. Waterfront accessory structures over 30 inches tall must sit
Sarasota County has no separate tiny-home category. A permanently placed tiny house on a foundation is treated as a single-family dwelling and must meet zoning, minimum-size and Florida Building Code standards; as a secondary unit it must meet the 750-square-foot ADU rules. A tiny house on wheels is an RV
Unincorporated Sarasota County allows one accessory dwelling unit per lot in designated residential districts, up to 750 square feet with a full kitchen and bath. The owner must occupy either the ADU or the principal home, it must match the main house in height and style, and it can't be
Converting a garage into living space in unincorporated Sarasota County requires a building permit and Florida Building Code compliance. If you create a second dwelling unit with a kitchen, it must meet the county's accessory dwelling unit standards (owner-occupancy, 750-square-foot cap, matching design). Converting the garage may also trigger replacement
In unincorporated Sarasota County a carport is an accessory structure regulated by the Unified Development Code. It generally may not exceed 20 feet in height, cannot sit in a required yard except where the code allows, and needs a building permit. Attached carports must meet the same setbacks as the
Cooking fires and grilling are allowed in Sarasota County using approved fuels. Under the Florida Fire Prevention Code, in multifamily buildings gas and charcoal grills may not be used on balconies or within 10 feet of the structure. Single-family homes have far more freedom.
Backyard smokers are allowed in Sarasota County as cooking fires using approved fuel, but any outdoor smoke-producing process must avoid creating a nuisance. Officials weigh wind, air quality, and neighbors' health when deciding if smoke is unlawful.
In unincorporated Sarasota County RSF districts, the maximum building coverage for a single-family structure is 35 percent of the lot area. Structures, including accessory buildings, count toward this coverage and must stay out of required yards.
In unincorporated Sarasota County, minimum front, side, and rear setbacks are set by zoning district under Article 6 of the Zoning Regulations. Residential single-family (RSF) districts require yards on all sides, with waterfront yards typically set back 20 feet. Structures may not be placed in a required yard.
In unincorporated Sarasota County RSF districts, a single-family structure may not exceed 35 feet, measured from the established minimum floor elevation, including in-structure parking. Detached accessory structures are capped at 20 feet.
In unincorporated Sarasota County, owners and occupants must keep premises free of accumulated solid waste and recyclables not properly stored (Sec. 106-58). Improperly stored junk also violates the Property Standards Ordinance as "Improper Outdoor Storage."
Vacant lots in unincorporated Sarasota County must not have Excessive Growth: vegetation over 12 inches that is untended and near improved property. The Property Standards Ordinance (Sec. 54-473) treats it as a public nuisance the County can abate.
Unincorporated Sarasota County declares excessive vegetation growth, improper outdoor storage of junk, and graffiti to be public nuisances under the Property Standards Ordinance (Sec. 54-473). Owners must abate; the County may abate and lien the property.
Unincorporated Sarasota County has no separate garage-sale permit or per-year cap in its code; occasional residential yard sales are allowed. Sale merchandise and signs must not create Improper Outdoor Storage or blight, and incorporated cities set their own limits.
In unincorporated Sarasota County, grass and weeds over 12 inches are "Excessive Growth" and a public nuisance under the Property Standards Ordinance (Sec. 54-473, 54-475). Owners must cut it; the County can mow and lien the property.
In unincorporated Sarasota County, carts must be at the curb by 6:00 a.m. on collection day, set out no earlier than 5:00 p.m. the day before, and returned to storage by 10:00 a.m. the next day (Sec. 106-47).
Sarasota County residents get bulk-waste collection limited to 20 cubic yards, four times per year; additional collections are supplemental service arranged with the franchised hauler for a fee (Sec. 106-47).
Curbside residential collection is mandatory in unincorporated Sarasota County's Solid Waste Service District (Sec. 106-41). Class I curbside customers get once-per-week collection of properly prepared residential waste through the county's franchised hauler.
It is unlawful to dump solid waste or recyclables on any public or private property in unincorporated Sarasota County except at approved sites (Sec. 106-54). Florida's Litter Law (FS 403.413) adds statewide criminal penalties.
Recycling is mandatory in unincorporated Sarasota County under the Solid Waste and Recyclable Materials Collection Ordinance (Ch. 106, adopted per Ord. 2006-001). It is unlawful to knowingly mix recyclables into the trash stream (Sec. 106-55).
In unincorporated Sarasota County, political signs up to 16 square feet may be placed on private property in residential districts, with the total not exceeding 80 square feet. They may go up no sooner than 60 days before the election qualifying date and must come down within 21 days after
In unincorporated Sarasota County, garage-sale and other temporary signs may not be placed in the county right-of-way or on any public street. Signs must go on private property with the owner's consent and be removed promptly after the sale. Signs in the right-of-way may be removed by the county.
Sarasota County's Marine Turtle Protection Ordinance restricts beachfront lighting during the May 1 to October 31 nesting season on Casey, Lido, Manasota and Siesta Keys and the unincorporated Island of Venice. Lights visible from the beach must be shielded, low-wattage and downward-directed, and floodlights or spotlights visible from the beach
Sarasota County's outdoor-lighting standards cap light spilling onto neighbors: illumination at the property line may not exceed 0.2 footcandles on adjacent residential uses and 0.5 footcandles on commercial sites and public rights-of-way. Lighting cannot glare onto streets, and outdoor recreation areas next to homes cannot be lit after 10:00 p.m.
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Sarasota County ordinances.