106 city rules · Pop. 53,093 · Pinellas County
Pinellas Park's Chapter 5 (Animals and Fowl) and Pinellas County animal regulations prohibit dogs from creating excessive, continuous, or repeated noise that disturbs neighbors. Two sworn complaints are typically required for enforcement.
Pinellas Park restricts loud construction activities to reasonable daytime hours and prohibits site noise that disturbs neighboring residents during early morning and evening periods, consistent with Chapter 16 noise rules.
Pinellas Park does not ban leaf blowers but limits their use to reasonable daytime hours under the city's general noise ordinance. Powered yard equipment used outside daytime hours can be cited as a noise disturbance.
Pinellas Park limits residential fence height to 4 feet in front yards and 6 feet in rear and side yards under Land Development Code Section 18-1530, with the F (Farm) district allowing 6 feet on all property lines.
Pinellas Park enforces Florida's Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act (Chapter 515) through the Florida Building Code, requiring 48-inch barriers, self-closing gates, and approved alternatives like alarms or covers.
Pinellas Park allows fences up to the property line under Section 18-1530, but Florida is not a mandatory shared-fence state, so fence ownership and cost-sharing remain civil matters between neighbors.
Pinellas Park requires a building permit for fence installation, reviewed by Building Development Division under Land Development Code Article 9 technical codes and the Florida Building Code.
Pinellas Park requires permits for retaining walls under Land Development Code Article 9, with engineered design typically required when wall height exceeds the Florida Building Code threshold of 4 feet.
Pinellas Park Land Development Code Section 18-1530 regulates fence materials, generally permitting wood, vinyl, masonry, and chain link, while prohibiting barbed wire and electric fencing in residential districts.
Pinellas Park allows home-based businesses in residential zones consistent with Florida Statute 559.955, which preempts overly restrictive local rules. Activities must remain secondary to the dwelling's residential use and not alter neighborhood character.
Florida Statute 500.80 preempts cottage food regulation to the state. Pinellas Park residents may produce qualifying low-risk foods at home and sell up to $250,000 annually without a state license, subject to labeling and sales-channel rules.
Pinellas Park's Land Development Code Article 6 governs all signs, including those for home-based businesses. State law also prohibits signage at home businesses that is visible from the street, beyond what is allowed for residential uses.
Family day care homes in Pinellas Park must comply with Florida Statute 402.305 and Pinellas County child care licensing through the Pinellas County License Board, which administers local child care licensing on behalf of the state.
Pinellas Park follows Florida Statute 559.955, which requires home-based business traffic and parking to stay consistent with surrounding residential uses. Excessive customer visits, deliveries, or on-street parking can violate the residential character requirement.
Pinellas Park requires a building permit issued by the Building Development Division for any residential in-ground or above-ground swimming pool, spa, or hot tub installed under the Florida Building Code, 8th Edition (2023).
Pinellas Park enforces the Florida Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act, requiring at least one approved safety feature on all new residential pools, spas, and hot tubs to reduce drowning risk for children.
Above-ground pools in Pinellas Park are regulated like in-ground pools as accessory structures. They require permits, setbacks from property lines, and barrier or removable-ladder safety provisions under Section 18-1530.4 and the Florida Building Code.
Residential pools in Pinellas Park must be enclosed by a barrier meeting Florida Building Code R4501.17 and Chapter 515, with minimum height, non-climbable design, and self-closing self-latching gates separating the pool from the house.
Hot tubs and spas in Pinellas Park are regulated under the same swimming pool ordinance and Florida Pool Safety Act. They require a permit, electrical inspection, and either a barrier or an ASTM F1346 lockable safety cover.
Pinellas Park requires owners to keep yards mowed and free of overgrown vegetation. Grass and weeds that exceed roughly 12 inches across the majority of a parcel are deemed a nuisance and may trigger code enforcement action.
Rainwater harvesting is legal across Florida, and Pinellas Park residents may use rain barrels and small cisterns for landscape irrigation. Larger plumbed cisterns or potable systems trigger building and plumbing permits.
Pinellas Park's landscaping regulations encourage drought-tolerant and native plantings consistent with Florida-Friendly Landscaping principles, which Florida Statute 373.185 protects from prohibition by local governments.
Routine pruning of trees on private property is allowed in Pinellas Park, but heavy cutting that damages a protected tree can trigger the same permit and replacement obligations as removal under Article 4 of the Land Development Code.
Pinellas Park's nuisance code requires property owners to control weeds, undergrowth, and noxious vegetation. Code Compliance can post a notice, set a cure period, and abate untreated weeds at the owner's cost.
Pinellas Park follows Southwest Florida Water Management District (SWFWMD) and Pinellas County watering rules, which currently limit landscape irrigation to once per week with hours based on address.
Removing protected trees in Pinellas Park requires a permit under Article 4 of the Land Development Code. Healthy trees four inches DBH or larger are typically protected, with removal triggering replacement or mitigation.
Synthetic turf is generally allowed on residential lots in Pinellas Park subject to landscape standards in LDC Section 18-1533. HOAs may impose stricter aesthetic rules, and the city still requires required tree and buffer plantings.
Backyard composting is permitted in Pinellas Park and encouraged as an alternative to yard waste disposal. Households are limited to one composting container, which must be properly drained, vented, and maintained.
Pinellas Park does not mandate STR-specific insurance, but Florida's vacation rental statute and Pinellas County Ordinance 25-15 require operators to maintain liability coverage adequate for transient lodging use, typically at least $1 million.
Pinellas Park follows Florida state preemption under FS 509.032, while operators within Pinellas County must also obtain a county Certificate of Use and a Florida DBPR vacation rental license before listing a property.
Short-term rentals in Pinellas Park must comply with the city's general noise and nuisance provisions in Chapter 16 of the Code of Ordinances, which prohibit unreasonably loud or disturbing sounds at any hour.
Pinellas Park STR operators must collect Florida sales tax and Pinellas County's 6% Tourist Development Tax on stays of six months or less, and remit them to the appropriate state and county authorities.
Short-term rentals in Pinellas Park must use off-street parking required by the Land Development Code, and on-street and front-yard parking is regulated by Chapter 9 traffic provisions and Article 5 of the LDC.
Pinellas Park does not set STR-specific occupancy caps, but Florida's preemption statute FS 509.032(7) allows uniform occupancy limits, and Pinellas County Ordinance 25-15 caps occupancy at two per bedroom plus two, up to ten guests.
Pinellas Park requires owners to keep lots clear of overgrown weeds, dead vegetation, and combustible brush that can fuel fires or create nuisances, with code enforcement authorized to abate and lien costs to the property.
Pinellas Park allows recreational fires in containers no larger than three feet in diameter and two feet high, attended at all times with extinguishing equipment ready, per Florida Fire Prevention Code adopted by the city.
Fireworks regulation is preempted to the State of Florida under Chapter 791. Consumer fireworks are legal on three holidays, while sparklers approved by the State Fire Marshal are legal year-round in Pinellas Park.
Pinellas Park prohibits open burning of yard waste and trash. Only recreational, cooking, and permitted public ceremonial fires are allowed, with ceremonial burns requiring a permit through the Pinellas Park online portal under Resolution 23-04.
Pinellas Park is highly developed and not within a state-designated wildland-urban interface zone, but the Florida Forest Service can issue burn bans countywide during drought, and brush fire response is coordinated with city Fire Rescue.
Propane storage in Pinellas Park follows the Florida Fire Prevention Code, NFPA 58, and state LP-gas licensing under Florida Statute Chapter 527, with separation distances based on tank size and limits on quantities at residential properties.
Pinellas Park allows up to two sheds on most residential lots under Section 18-1530 of the Land Development Code. All sheds require a building permit, must sit in rear or side yards, and may not be placed in easements.
Converting a garage into living space in Pinellas Park requires a building permit and full compliance with the Florida Building Code, zoning, parking, and accessory-use standards under Land Development Code Section 18-1530.
Carports are regulated as accessory structures under Pinellas Park Land Development Code Section 18-1530. They require a building permit and must comply with the underlying district's setback, height, and design standards.
Pinellas Park permits accessory dwelling units in eligible residential zoning districts under Land Development Code Section 18-1530, subject to setbacks, lot coverage, owner-occupancy expectations, and consistency with the primary single-family dwelling.
Tiny homes in Pinellas Park must comply with the Florida Building Code definition (400 sq ft or less) and the city's Land Development Code zoning standards, including minimum dwelling size, foundation, and utility-connection requirements.
Pinellas Park regulates recreational vehicle, boat, and trailer storage on residential property under Land Development Code Section 18-1532, requiring durable surfaces and prohibiting parking in required front setbacks of residential zones.
Pinellas Park requires driveways and on-site parking surfaces to be paved with a durable, inorganic material under Land Development Code Section 18-1532. Parking on grass or unimproved surfaces in residential zones is prohibited.
Pinellas Park does not impose a blanket citywide overnight street-parking ban, but Chapter 9 of the Code of Ordinances enforces posted no-parking signs, time-limit zones, and prohibitions against using vehicles or RVs as overnight dwellings.
Pinellas Park restricts parking and storage of commercial vehicles in residentially zoned districts under Land Development Code Section 18-1532, with limited exceptions for size-limited service vehicles parked on a durable surface.
On-street parking in Pinellas Park is governed by Chapter 9 (Traffic) of the Code of Ordinances, which adopts state stopping, standing, and parking laws and regulates parking on city streets and rights-of-way.
Florida Statutes Section 366.94 preempts local regulation of electric vehicle charging stations, so Pinellas Park follows state rules adopted by the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services rather than its own EV charging ordinance.
Pinellas Park prohibits storing junked, wrecked, or inoperable vehicles on private property and abandoning vehicles on public streets, with enforcement through Code Compliance and Chapter 9 of the Code of Ordinances.
Pinellas Park allows up to four hens (no roosters) at single-family homes for personal use. Coops must meet 15-foot setbacks, 6-foot height limits, and screening from public view. Livestock and farm animals are prohibited outside the F Farm District.
Pinellas Park follows Pinellas County animal services rules requiring dogs to be leashed in public. Allowing a dog to run at large is a violation regardless of owner intent. Off-leash activity is permitted only in designated dog parks.
Pinellas Park cannot adopt breed-specific dog regulations. Florida Statute 767.14, amended in 2023, preempts local governments from enacting any rules that target dogs by breed, weight, or size. Behavior-based dangerous-dog laws still apply.
Beekeeping in Pinellas Park is governed by Florida law, not local ordinance. FS 586.10 preempts municipal regulation of managed honeybee colonies; the Florida Department of Agriculture handles registration, inspection, and placement rules.
Pinellas Park bans wild and exotic animals as pets in residential areas under Chapter 5. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission also regulates Class I, II, and III wildlife. Permits issued by FWC are required for many species statewide.
Pinellas Park limits the keeping of multiple animals through nuisance and sanitation provisions in Chapter 5. Hoarding cases are prosecuted under Florida cruelty statutes (FS 828) when animals suffer from overcrowding, neglect, or inadequate care.
Pinellas County Code Section 14-30 prohibits feeding wild animals in a way that creates a public nuisance throughout Pinellas Park. Feeding bears, raccoons, coyotes, or feral cats that attracts wildlife or causes sanitation issues can result in citations.
When removing protected trees, Pinellas Park requires replacement plantings under Section 18-408. Property owners must replace removed inches with new trees from the city's approved species list or pay into the tree mitigation fund.
Pinellas Park gives heightened protection to large 'grand' or 'specimen' trees, requiring extra review before removal. Grand trees are typically those 30 inches DBH or larger of protected species under Article 4 of the LDC.
Pinellas Park requires permits before removing protected trees on most properties under Article 4 of the Land Development Code (Environmental Habitat Preservation and Enhancement). Section 18-408 governs removal, replacement, and tree fund options.
Pinellas Park does not designate dedicated food truck vending zones. Vendors must locate on private property zoned for commercial use, with the city regulating right-of-way occupation, signage, and parking under Chapter 14 of the code.
Food trucks operating in Pinellas Park need a Florida DBPR Mobile Food Dispensing Vehicle license and a Pinellas Park Local Business Tax Receipt. State law (FS 509.102) preempts local licensing fees and inspections of MFDVs.
Pinellas Park regulates grading, fill, and on-site drainage through Land Development Code Article 2 (Drainage Code) and Article 9 (Technical Codes). Permits are required to alter site grading, runoff patterns, or right-of-way drainage improvements.
Any development in a flood zone within Pinellas Park requires a city floodplain permit. The city's Land Development Code Article 8 implements FEMA NFIP elevation, construction, and substantial improvement standards based on FIRM-mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas.
Pinellas Park's Land Development Code Article 2 (Drainage Code) governs stormwater management, retention, and discharge. The city operates under NPDES MS4 permit standards and coordinates with the Pinellas Park Water Management District.
Pinellas Park requires erosion and sediment control best management practices on construction and redevelopment sites under its Drainage Code (Article 2) and NPDES MS4 program, with city staff identifying required measures during plan review.
Although Pinellas Park is inland along Tampa Bay tributaries, portions of the city fall within the Coastal Storm Area as defined by the Pinellas County Comprehensive Plan, restricting density increases and high-intensity uses within Category 1 storm surge zones.
Chapter 11 of the Pinellas Park Code requires residents to place garbage and recycling containers at the curb on collection day and to remove and store them out of public view between pickups.
Pinellas Park provides single-stream curbside recycling once per week under Chapter 11. Residents must use city-issued recycling containers and follow accepted-material guidelines to avoid contamination tagging.
Pinellas Park's solid waste rules in Chapter 11 (Garbage and Disposal Items) require residents to use approved containers and follow assigned twice-weekly pickup schedules with separate weekly recycling collection.
Pinellas Park collects bulk items, white goods, and yard brush curbside on regular trash days under Chapter 11, with strict size, weight, and bundling rules and several prohibited categories.
Pinellas Park allows residential holiday displays and decorations as temporary, non-commercial features. They are not regulated as signs under Article 6 unless they include commercial messaging, and must comply with nuisance and right-of-way rules.
Garage sale signs in Pinellas Park must follow Article 6 of the Land Development Code and Chapter 14 right-of-way rules: signs cannot be placed on public property, utility poles, or in the right-of-way, and must be removed promptly after the sale.
Political signs in Pinellas Park are regulated under Article 6 of the Land Development Code as temporary signs, with limits on size, placement, and time but no content-based restrictions allowed under the First Amendment.
Pinellas Park requires landlords renting residential property to obtain a Local Business Tax Receipt. Short-term vacation rentals must additionally hold a state DBPR license and a Pinellas County Certificate of Use with inspection.
Pinellas Park has no rent control. Florida Statute 166.043 preempts municipal rent regulation except during a declared housing emergency confirmed by voter referendum, and no Florida city currently has rent control in effect.
Pinellas Park does not have a just-cause eviction ordinance. Florida Statute 83.425 preempts residential landlord-tenant regulation to the state, so evictions follow Chapter 83 Part II notice and court procedures.
Pinellas Park structure height limits vary by zoning district, with single-family residential districts under Section 18-1511 typically capping principal buildings at 35 feet measured per the Florida Building Code.
Pinellas Park's R-2 Single-Family Residential District requires a 25-foot front yard setback, 10-foot side yards, and 15-foot rear yards under Land Development Code Section 18-1511.
Pinellas Park caps lot coverage based on assigned future land use category, with Residential Urban (RU) properties typically allowed up to 55% and Residential Low Medium (RLM) up to 65% under the Land Development Code.
Rooftop and ground-mount solar PV systems in Pinellas Park require a building and electrical permit through the Building Development Division. Most residential applications are reviewed within about ten business days.
Florida Statute 163.04 (the Solar Rights Act) preempts HOA bans on solar panels in Pinellas Park. HOAs may regulate placement within a south-facing band but cannot prohibit installation or impair system performance.
Pinellas Park treats garage and yard sales as temporary uses under Land Development Code Section 18-1530.14, which requires a temporary use permit and limits how often residents may hold sales.
Pinellas Park limits how many garage sales a household can hold per year under Land Development Code Section 18-1530.14, treating sales as temporary uses tied to a permit count per calendar year.
Pinellas Park limits garage sale hours and duration under Land Development Code Section 18-1530.14, requiring sales to occur during daylight hours and end within a set number of consecutive days per permit.
Home cultivation of cannabis is illegal in Pinellas Park under Florida law. Even registered medical marijuana patients cannot grow plants. Florida's Amendment 3 to legalize recreational cannabis failed in November 2024, leaving home grow banned statewide.
Pinellas Park regulates Medical Marijuana Treatment Centers under its Land Development Code, mirroring Florida's pharmacy zoning standards required by FS 381.986. Dispensaries must locate at least 500 feet from public or private schools and follow city zoning placement rules.
Pinellas Park requires outdoor lighting to use cut-off fixtures so illumination does not spill onto adjacent lots or roadways, under the Land Development Code. The city does not have a formal Dark Sky designation but enforces shielding and glare-control standards.
Pinellas Park prohibits outdoor lighting that intrudes onto adjacent properties or interferes with traffic. Under the Land Development Code, fixtures must be cut-off so the line of illumination stays on the originating lot. Violations are handled by code enforcement.
Recreational drone flight in Pinellas Park is governed by FAA rules under 49 USC 44809 and Florida Statute 330.41, which preempts local in-air regulation. Pilots must pass TRUST and may not fly over critical infrastructure.
Commercial drone operations in Pinellas Park are governed by FAA Part 107 and Florida Statute 330.41. The city cannot impose its own commercial drone licensing but may control take-off and landing on city property.
Door-to-door commercial solicitors in Pinellas Park must obtain a Pinellas County peddlers and solicitors permit under County Code Chapter 42 Article V, plus a city Business Tax Receipt for commercial activity.
Pinellas Park honors posted No Solicitation signs through Pinellas County Code Chapter 42 Article V, which prohibits commercial solicitors from approaching homes that display clear no-trespass or no-soliciting notice.
Owners of vacant lots in Pinellas Park must keep them mowed, free of debris, and clear of overgrowth under Chapter 12. Vacant or foreclosed properties remain the owner's or mortgagee's responsibility for maintenance.
Pinellas Park Code Chapter 11 requires residents to use covered containers no larger than 35 gallons, weighing under 50 pounds, set out by 7 a.m. on collection day and removed from the curb by midnight that night.
Pinellas Park does not have snow, so there is no snow-clearing ordinance. Sidewalks abutting private property must still be kept clear of vegetation, debris, and obstructions under the city's nuisance and right-of-way rules.
Pinellas Park Chapter 12 (Health and Sanitation) prohibits public nuisances including overgrown vegetation, accumulated debris, junk, and unsanitary conditions on private property, with enforcement by Community Compliance.
Garage sales in Pinellas Park are treated as a residential accessory use under the Land Development Code and limited in frequency. Excessive sales are considered operation of a business in a residential zone and prohibited.
Pinellas Park restricts minors from being in public places during late-night hours under Chapter 16 (Offenses) of the Code of Ordinances, with defenses for emergencies, work, school, and parental accompaniment consistent with Florida Statute 877.22.
Pinellas Park city parks operate under hours posted at each facility and rules adopted under Chapter 2, Article X (Parks and Recreation) of the Code of Ordinances. Entering after posted closing is prohibited.