Norfolk County has no STR occupancy rule. MA State Sanitary Code 105 CMR 410.400 sets minimum floor area per occupant. Quincy and Brookline impose 2-per-bedroom-plus-2 caps on registered STRs. Weymouth has no STR cap.
STR occupancy in Norfolk County follows the MA State Sanitary Code 105 CMR 410.400 (minimum 150 sq ft for first occupant plus 100 sq ft per additional occupant; bedrooms minimum 70 sq ft for one, 50 sq ft per additional occupant). On top of the state floor, Quincy's STR ordinance (Ch. 11.60, adopted 2019) caps guest occupancy at 2 per bedroom plus 2 additional, not to exceed 10. Brookline STR regulations under Art. 5.10 cap at the lesser of 2-per-bedroom-plus-2 or the building code occupancy. Weymouth has no specific STR occupancy cap but enforces 105 CMR 410 on complaint. All Norfolk County STRs must be registered on the MA DOR STR Registry under MGL c. 64G Β§67. Owner-occupancy and annual night caps also apply in Brookline.
Quincy STR over-occupancy: $300 per occurrence, permit suspension at 3 violations. Brookline: up to $300/day under Art. 5.10. 105 CMR 410 over-occupancy: local BOH order.
Norfolk County, MA
Norfolk County does not regulate amplified music. Each municipality requires entertainment licenses or one-day amplified sound permits under MGL c. 140 Β§183A...
Norfolk County, MA
Norfolk County does not handle abandoned vehicles. MGL c. 90B Β§2 allows police to remove abandoned vehicles after 72 hours. Quincy, Brookline, and Weymouth t...
Norfolk County, MA
Norfolk County does not regulate chickens or livestock. Each town sets its own rules via zoning and board of health regulations. Suburban towns often restric...
Norfolk County, MA
Brookline enacted the first MA town-wide ban on new artificial turf on town property (2023 Town Meeting Art. 14). Other Norfolk County towns allow turf resid...
Norfolk County, MA
Norfolk County does not restrict rainwater harvesting. MA has no statewide restrictions on residential rain barrel or cistern use. Many Norfolk County towns ...
Norfolk County, MA
Norfolk County has no native plant rule. MA Pollinator Plan and Stretch Code encourage natives. Brookline and Quincy offer climate-resilient landscape guidan...
See how Norfolk County's occupancy limits rules stack up against other locations.
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