King County and its cities respond to loud parties under noise ordinances and state disorderly conduct law (RCW 9A.84.030); a second response within a defined window can trigger costs charged to property owners.
Loud parties in unincorporated King County are addressed through King County Code Title 12 noise rules and the state disorderly conduct statute, RCW 9A.84.030. Sheriff deputies typically issue a warning on the first response, requiring guests to disperse or volume to drop. A second response within a set window, often 12 to 24 hours, may result in citations, billed officer time, and notice to the property owner. Several cities, including Bellevue and Renton, have unruly gathering ordinances that hold hosts and owners financially responsible.
Continuing a disturbance after warning, hosting an unruly gathering, or repeated responses can result in noise citations, disorderly conduct misdemeanor charges, and civil cost recovery from the host or property owner.
Kent, WA
Kent decibel limits follow WAC 173-60 and KCC 8.05 using EDNA zones. Residential receiving limit is 55 dBA day and 45 dBA night. Commercial sources are cappe...
Kent, WA
Kent industrial sources are capped at 70 dBA day and 65 dBA night at another industrial property, but only 60 dBA day and 50 dBA night when received at a res...
Kent, WA
Commercial trucks over 10,000 pounds GVWR generally cannot park on Kent residential streets except for active loading. Warehouse districts and truck routes h...
Kent, WA
Kent follows Washington State Building Code EV-ready requirements for new multifamily and commercial buildings. Public chargers exist at Kent Station and sev...
Kent, WA
Kent driveway aprons require Public Works approval under KCC Title 6. New or widened driveways need a right-of-way construction permit, and vehicles must not...
Kent, WA
Kent has no city requirement to split shared fence costs with a neighbor. Washington common law controls boundary fences. Survey the property line before bui...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in King County.
See how Kent's loud party ordinance rules stack up against other locations.
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