100 local rules on file Β· Pop. 506 Β· Hamilton County
Showing ordinances that apply to Ridgewood, OH
Ridgewood is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 506 in Hamilton County, Ohio. Because Ridgewood is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Hamilton 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 Hamilton County may have different rules.
Hamilton County has no countywide quiet-hours ordinance. Nighttime noise limits come from your city, village, or township. Ohio law (ORC 505.172) lets township trustees adopt noise resolutions for residentially zoned areas; Cincinnati caps single-family residential noise at 55 dB(A) from 7 p.m.
Ohio law (ORC 4513.221) requires every motor vehicle to have a working muffler in constant operation and bans muffler removal. Cincinnati adds that vehicle sound systems plainly audible 50 feet away are unlawful. The county itself sets no vehicle-noise rule.
Hamilton County has no numeric decibel standard. Ohio sets none statewide for general noise. Cincinnati's Chapter 909 uses zoning-district dB(A) limits, measured Leq over six minutes, e.g., 55 dB(A) at night in single-family residential zones, 75 in manufacturing.
Neither Hamilton County nor any local government may regulate aircraft noise. Airspace, flight operations, and aircraft noise are federally preempted and controlled by the FAA. Complaints about flights over Hamilton County go to the FAA or the airport operator, not the county.
Hamilton County imposes no countywide construction-hours limit. Cities and townships regulate it. Cincinnati bars loud construction within 500 feet of homes from 9:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. without a special nighttime permit; other jurisdictions vary.
Hamilton County has no dedicated barking-dog noise ordinance. Persistent barking is handled under your city or township nuisance-noise rules. The county's dog authority (ORC 955.22) covers licensing and running-at-large, not noise.
The county sets no outdoor-music rule. Cities and townships do. Cincinnati even carves out an exception for one or two unamplified street musicians during set daytime and evening hours, but amplified or late outdoor music must respect residential sound limits.
Neither Hamilton County nor Ohio regulates leaf-blower use, hours, or type. Any restriction comes from your city, village, or township. Under general local noise ordinances, a blower run at prohibited hours can still be cited as a nuisance.
Hamilton County sets no amplified-music rule. Cities and townships do. Cincinnati bars restaurants, hotels, and entertainment venues from allowing amplified music that disturbs nearby residences, with residential noise capped at 55 dB(A) after 7 p.m.
Hamilton County sets no industrial-noise standard. Municipal zoning codes and township resolutions govern factory and business noise. Cincinnati caps manufacturing-district noise at 75 dB(A) daytime and 70 dB(A) at night at the receiving property line.
Hamilton County itself issues no short-term-rental operating permit. Whether you need one depends on your city, village, or township. Cincinnati, the county seat, does require a city registration before you operate an STR.
Hamilton County has no county-wide STR registry. Cincinnati requires all operators to register each unit with the City before operating; registration lasts three years and is non-transferable. Other suburbs set their own rules.
This is the real county-level rule. Ohio law (ORC 5739.09) lets a county levy a lodging excise tax, and Hamilton County's total lodging tax is 7.5%, charged to every transient guest. Cincinnati adds its own 7% STR excise tax.
Hamilton County sets no STR-specific noise rule. Guests must follow your city or township's general noise ordinance and quiet hours. Cincinnati expects STR operators to ensure guests comply with local nuisance and noise laws.
Hamilton County places no cap on the number of nights a property may be rented short-term. Cincinnati's registration does not impose an annual night limit. Any night cap would be a specific municipal ordinance.
Hamilton County sets no STR occupancy cap. Cincinnati limits guests by bedroom and floor area: a studio caps at 2 guests, and rooms allow 2 guests per bedroom with square-footage minimums for larger groups. Other suburbs vary.
Hamilton County does not require STRs to be an owner's primary residence. Cincinnati allows non-owner-occupied and investor STRs so long as they register. Any primary-residence limit would come from a specific city or township.
Hamilton County does not mandate short-term-rental insurance. Cincinnati's registration requires building, safety, and fire-code certification rather than a set liability policy. Hosts should still carry adequate coverage and check platform protections.
Hamilton County imposes no short-term-rental parking rule. Off-street parking, driveway, and on-street limits are set by your city or township zoning code. Check Cincinnati or your suburb's parking and residential-use standards.
Hamilton County does not require a host to be present during a short-term stay. Cincinnati permits whole-home, unhosted rentals once registered but requires a local contact reachable to respond to issues. Suburbs may differ.
Under the Ohio Fire Code (OAC 1301:7-7-03), recreational fires must stay at least 25 feet from any structure or combustible material, and gas-fired fire pits at least 15 feet. There is no separate Hamilton County fire-pit ordinance.
Ohio EPA's OAC 3745-19-03 bans open burning of yard waste and residential trash in "restricted areas" - inside any municipality plus a buffer around larger ones. Because Hamilton County is heavily urbanized, most residents cannot legally burn leaves or brush.
Since HB 172 (2022), Ohioans may discharge 1.4G consumer fireworks on private property on listed holidays with the owner's permission, unless your city, village or township has opted out and banned or restricted them.
The Ohio Fire Code requires owners to cut and remove weeds, grass, vines and other ignitable growth that could endanger property. Township high-grass mowing is handled under ORC 505.87, not by a countywide fire ordinance.
The Ohio Fire Code allows attended backyard recreational fires but requires a 25-foot setback; larger bonfires need a permit and a 50-foot setback. There is no separate county backyard-fire ordinance.
Hamilton County is not a designated wildfire-hazard zone and has no wildland-urban-interface ordinance. The Ohio Fire Code still limits open-flame use in wildfire risk areas and requires clearing ignitable vegetation.
Smoke alarm rules come from the statewide Ohio building and fire codes, not a Hamilton County ordinance. New and substantially renovated dwellings must have interconnected smoke alarms; landlords must keep them working under Ohio's landlord duties (ORC 5321.04).
The Ohio Fire Code (OAC 1301:7-7-61) governs propane storage statewide, not a county rule. In heavily populated areas the aggregate capacity of any one installation cannot exceed 2,000 gallons water capacity, and permits are required above set thresholds.
Hamilton County itself sets no countywide rule on parking recreational vehicles, boats, or trailers at homes. Where you may store an RV or boat is decided by your city, village, or township zoning code. In Great Parks, no vehicle may sit outside a designated parking area.
Hamilton County sets no countywide limit on parking commercial trucks or trailers at a residence. Restrictions on semis, box trucks, and commercial vehicles in residential areas come from your city, village, or township zoning code, not the county.
Hamilton County does not regulate on-street parking. On-street parking rules, permit zones, and time limits are set by each incorporated city or village, or on unincorporated township roads by the township. State law (ORC 4511.68) lists baseline stopping-and-parking prohibitions that apply everywhere.
In Hamilton County's unincorporated townships, a township board may order removal of a junk motor vehicle under ORC 505.871, and abandoned junk vehicles are defined and handled under ORC 4513.63. A junk vehicle is one three model years old or older, apparently inoperable, and extensively damaged.
Hamilton County has no countywide overnight parking ban. Overnight on-street parking rules are set by your city, village, or township. In Great Parks of Hamilton County, parks close at set hours and vehicles may not remain overnight except in designated campgrounds.
Hamilton County sets no countywide rule on parking in your own driveway or on unpaved surfaces. Driveway surface, front-yard parking, and paved-surface requirements are governed by your city, village, or township zoning code.
Hamilton County does not regulate parking of oversized vehicles at homes. Limits on large trucks, buses, and oversized vehicles in residential areas come from your city, village, or township zoning code. State size and weight limits on highways are in ORC Title 45.
Hamilton County does not paint or regulate colored curb markings. Red, yellow, or other painted curb zones are established and maintained by each city or village. Residents may not paint public curbs themselves; only the road authority may mark curbs.
Hamilton County has no countywide ordinance on electric-vehicle charging stations or EV parking spaces. Installation permits follow the state electrical and building codes, and any parking-space set-asides for EVs are set by your city, village, or township.
Hamilton County does not designate or regulate loading zones. Curbside loading zones, commercial delivery areas, and their time limits are established by each city or village, or by the township on unincorporated roads. State law bars stopping in prohibited areas under ORC 4511.68.
Ohio's partition (line) fence law, ORC Chapter 971, governs fences on the division line between adjoining rural properties where livestock is kept. For ordinary residential neighbor disputes, your local zoning code and civil property law apply.
Bans on barbed wire, electric, or other fence materials in residential areas come from your city or township, not from Hamilton County. There is no countywide material ban on incorporated land.
Hamilton County itself sets no countywide residential fence-height limit. Your city, village, or township zoning code controls. Anderson Township, for example, caps rear-yard fences at 6 feet and front/side-yard fences at 4 feet (if 75%+ open).
Hamilton County sets no countywide retaining-wall rule for incorporated land. Your city or township zoning code sets placement and height, and taller walls generally need a building permit for structural review.
Which fence materials you may use, and any construction-quality standard, are defined by your local zoning code. Anderson Township, for example, specifies durable wood, brick, or stone for required screening fences and walls.
A new fence usually needs a zoning certificate from your township or municipality, not from Hamilton County. Colerain Township, for instance, issues a zoning certificate for fences and 1:1 replacements through its Planning & Zoning Department.
Whether a fence needs to be open, how it must be placed, and any "good side out" rule are set by your city or township. Anderson Township, for example, requires front and side fences to be more than 75% open.
Hamilton County itself does not permit or ban backyard chickens; keeping poultry is a local zoning question. In unincorporated townships, ORC 519.21 bars township zoning from prohibiting agriculture, but on platted subdivision lots of one acre or less townships may regulate or ban poultry. Cincinnati and other cities set their
Ohio's Dangerous Wild Animals Act (ORC Chapter 935) bans possessing a dangerous wild animal - big cats, bears, primates, large constricting and venomous snakes, and more - as of January 1, 2014, unless grandfathered with an ODA permit. This applies in Hamilton County; the county itself sets no separate exotic-pet
Ohio's dog-licensing law (ORC Chapter 955) does not cover cats, so Hamilton County requires no cat license or tag. Cat limits, indoor/outdoor rules, and feral-cat programs are set by your city, village, or township. State anti-cruelty law (ORC 959.13) still protects cats countywide.
Ohio repealed its automatic pit-bull 'vicious dog' designation in 2012 (HB 14), so no breed is banned or presumed dangerous by state or Hamilton County law. Dogs are classified as nuisance, dangerous, or vicious by conduct under ORC 955.22, not by breed. Individual cities may still enact local breed rules.
Hamilton County does not regulate backyard livestock; it is a local zoning matter. On unincorporated township land, ORC 519.21 bars township zoning from prohibiting agriculture (including livestock) on most lots, but allows regulation on platted subdivision lots of one acre or less. Cities and villages set their own livestock rules.
Hamilton County has no ordinance banning the feeding of deer or other wildlife. Wildlife is managed statewide by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, which discourages and can restrict deer feeding to limit disease. Feeding that draws pests or creates a nuisance can be cited under local municipal or township
Statewide Ohio law (ORC 955.21) enforced countywide by Hamilton County Dog Wardens requires every dog owner to keep the dog physically confined or restrained by a leash, tether, fence, or under a person's reasonable control at all times, except for lawful hunting or field trials.
Hamilton County sets no beekeeping ordinance. Ohio law (ORC 909.02) requires any person who owns or possesses bees to register the apiary annually with the Ohio Department of Agriculture, which inspects for disease. Hive placement is governed by your city or township zoning and nuisance rules.
Hamilton County sets no limit on how many pets you may own, but every dog over three months old must be licensed annually with the County Auditor under ORC 955.02. Numeric pet caps and kennel rules are set by your city, village, or township. Kennels of many dogs need a
Ohio has no ordinance named 'hoarding,' but ORC 959.13 makes it illegal to neglect an animal or fail to provide adequate food, water, and shelter, and felony cruelty (ORC 959.131) covers companion-animal abuse. Hamilton County humane agents and the Dog Warden can seize animals kept in cruel, overcrowded conditions.
Hamilton County has no countywide grass-height limit. In unincorporated townships, ORC 505.87 lets trustees abate overgrown vegetation as a nuisance after 7 days' notice; each city sets its own height cap (often 8-12 inches).
Ohio's noxious-weed laws apply, not a county ordinance. On municipal land, ORC 731.51 orders weeds cut within five days of written notice; on unincorporated land, townships abate under ORC 505.87. The county sets no separate weed rule.
Hamilton County has no ordinance governing artificial turf in yards. Whether synthetic lawn is allowed, and any drainage or setback conditions, is set by your city, village, or township zoning and property-maintenance code.
Hamilton County has no countywide tree-trimming ordinance. Trimming rules, including street-tree and right-of-way pruning permits, are set by your city, village, or township. Boundary-tree branches are governed by Ohio common law, not the county.
Hamilton County imposes no lawn-watering schedule. Ohio is not a drought-restricted state, so there is no odd/even or day-of-week watering rule. Your water utility (Greater Cincinnati Water Works) may issue temporary advisories only during emergencies.
Rain barrels and rainwater collection for outdoor use are legal in Hamilton County with no county permit. If harvested rainwater is plumbed for drinking or household use, Ohio's private-water-system rules (OAC 3701-28) and local plumbing codes apply.
Backyard composting is legal in Hamilton County, and no county permit is needed for a home compost pile. Ohio bans yard waste from landfills (ORC 3734.121 / OAC 3745-27-70), so grass and leaves must be composted, mulched, or set out for yard-waste collection.
Hamilton County sets no countywide tree-removal rule. Removing a tree on private property is governed by your city, village, or township. Some Cincinnati-area municipalities require a permit for large or street trees; the county does not.
Hamilton County does not require or restrict native-plant landscaping. You may plant native gardens and pollinator beds. The only limit is weed and nuisance law: a garden that grows noxious weeds or is deemed a nuisance can still be cited by your city or township.
Hamilton County Public Health licenses PUBLIC swimming pools and spas under Ohio Administrative Code 3701-31. Private residential pools need no county pool license, but a building permit for the structure is issued by your city or township. Public-pool operators apply at least 30 days before opening.
Ohio building code requires pool access gates to open outward, be self-closing, and self-latching, and bars openings a 4-inch sphere can pass. Hamilton County Public Health enforces safety, staffing and water-quality rules for PUBLIC pools; private-pool safety features are enforced locally through the state building code.
Ohio building code requires a barrier at least 48 inches high around a residential swimming pool, with no opening a 4-inch sphere can pass through. Hamilton County does not set this rule countywide; your city or township building department enforces the Ohio Residential/Building Code locally.
Ohio building code treats above-ground pools like other residential pools: any pool holding water must have a compliant 48-inch barrier, and openings may not pass a 4-inch sphere. Hamilton County sets no separate above-ground rule; your city or township building department issues permits and enforces the state code.
A PUBLIC spa or hot tub is a public swimming pool under Ohio Administrative Code 3701-31 and must be licensed by Hamilton County Public Health. A private residential hot tub needs no county license but must meet the state building code barrier rules unless it has an approved safety cover.
Hamilton County sets no countywide home-business sign rule. Sign size, lighting, and placement for a home occupation are set by your city, village, or township zoning code under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 519. Many local codes limit or prohibit signs advertising a home business in residential zones.
Ohio, not Hamilton County, licenses in-home child care through the Department of Children and Youth (ODJFS/DCY). A Type B home caring for one to seven children needs certification; a Type A home caring for eight to fourteen needs a license. Local zoning may add separate approval.
Hamilton County does not zone home businesses countywide. Incorporated cities and villages zone themselves; townships zone unincorporated land under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 519. Check your municipality's or township's zoning resolution for whether and how a home occupation is permitted at your address.
Hamilton County does not issue home-occupation permits. Whether you need a permit or zoning certificate to run a business from your home is decided by your city, village, or township under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 519. Apply through your local zoning or building department, not the county.
Ohio's cottage food law lets you make listed non-hazardous foods (baked goods, jams, jellies, candy, dry mixes) in your home kitchen with no license, registration, or inspection from the Ohio Department of Agriculture or Hamilton County. Products must be properly labeled and sold within Ohio.
Hamilton County has no countywide ADU code. Accessory dwelling units are governed by your municipality's zoning or, in unincorporated townships, by the township's zoning resolution adopted under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 519. Check your local zoning office first.
Hamilton County has no single shed ordinance. Size thresholds, setbacks, and whether a zoning permit is needed for a shed are set by your city, village, or township zoning resolution under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 519.
Hamilton County has no countywide rule on converting a garage to living space. Conversions are governed by your municipality's or township's zoning resolution under ORC Chapter 519, plus Ohio Residential Code building permits.
Hamilton County has no countywide carport ordinance. Whether a carport is allowed, its setbacks, and any permit are governed by your municipality's zoning or your township's resolution under ORC Chapter 519.
Hamilton County has no countywide tiny-home ordinance. Whether a tiny house on a foundation or on wheels is allowed depends on your municipality's or township's zoning resolution under ORC Chapter 519 and the Ohio Residential Code.
The Ohio Fire Code bans charcoal and other open-flame cooking devices on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction. One- and two-family homes are exempt, and small 1-pound LP-gas grills are allowed.
Backyard smokers count as open-flame cooking under the Ohio Fire Code. On combustible apartment balconies they fall under the same 10-foot ban as grills; at one- and two-family homes they are allowed with common-sense fire safety.
Front, side, and rear setbacks in Hamilton County are set by each city, village, or township zoning code, not by the county. Townships set them under ORC 519.02; accessory buildings in Colerain must sit at least 5 feet from all lot lines.
Maximum building height is set by your city, village, or township zoning district, not by Hamilton County. Colerain Township caps residential accessory buildings at 15 feet and forbids them exceeding the height of the main house.
Maximum lot coverage is a local zoning standard, not a county one. Townships set it under ORC 519.02, which authorizes regulating the "percentages of lot areas that may be occupied." Colerain caps accessory buildings at 30% of the rear yard.
Hamilton County sets no countywide grass-height limit. Townships may cut nuisance vegetation under ORC 505.87; within municipalities, ORC 731.51 lets the city notice owners to cut noxious weeds within five days, and local codes set the actual height limit.
Hamilton County has no countywide rule on where trash carts are stored between pickups. Bin storage and screening requirements come from your municipality or township property-maintenance code, not the county.
There is no countywide vacant-lot maintenance code. Townships may abate nuisance vegetation and debris on vacant parcels under ORC 505.87, and remove junk vehicles under ORC 505.871; incorporated cities use their own codes.
Hamilton County itself has no countywide blight code. In unincorporated areas, township trustees may abate nuisance vegetation, garbage, and debris under Ohio law; incorporated cities enforce their own property-maintenance codes.
Hamilton County has no countywide garage-sale ordinance. Whether you need a permit, and how many sales per year you may hold, is decided by your city, village, or township. Many Hamilton County communities cap sales at two to four per year.
Hamilton County has no countywide cart set-out rule. When and where to place trash and recycling carts at the curb, and when to bring them back, is set by your community and its hauler, not the county district.
The Hamilton County Recycling & Solid Waste District, created under ORC Chapter 343, ensures every community in the county has curbside or drop-off recycling, and Ohio bans yard waste from landfills so it must be composted instead.
Curbside trash and recycling pickup in Hamilton County is arranged by each city, village, or township through a contracted hauler. The county's role is the district-wide solid-waste plan and recycling access, authorized under ORC Chapter 343.
Bulk pickup is arranged through your community's hauler, and the Hamilton County Recycling & Solid Waste District (R3Source) provides drop-off options and a search tool for hard-to-recycle and large items the curbside cart won't take.
Ohio Revised Code 3734.03 flatly prohibits disposing of solid waste by open dumping, and offensive dumping can also be prosecuted as a public nuisance under ORC 3767.13. This applies everywhere in Hamilton County.
Hamilton County has no countywide political-sign ordinance. Time, size, and placement limits for yard signs come from your city, village, or township zoning resolution under ORC Chapter 519 (subject to First Amendment limits).
Hamilton County has no countywide garage-sale-sign ordinance. Temporary-sign size, duration, and placement (including a ban on right-of-way signs) are set by your city, village, or township under ORC Chapter 519.
Hamilton County has no countywide light-trespass ordinance. Glare and spillover onto a neighbor's property are addressed by your city, village, or township zoning code, or as a private nuisance under Ohio common law.
Hamilton County has no countywide dark-sky lighting code. Shielding, fixture, and glare standards for outdoor lighting are adopted by individual cities, villages, and townships under their zoning authority (ORC Chapter 519 for townships).
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Hamilton County ordinances.