Clark County does not have a specific holiday decoration ordinance, but seasonal displays must comply with property maintenance, noise, electrical safety, and public right-of-way rules. Displays must not obstruct sidewalks or create traffic hazards.
Seasonal and holiday decorations on residential property in unincorporated Clark County are not specifically regulated by a separate holiday display ordinance. Instead, decorations must comply with general property maintenance, noise, sign, and safety codes under Titles 9, 11, 22, and 30. Standard principles include: decorations must be safely installed, without creating electrical hazards (Title 22, adopted National Electrical Code); must not obstruct public sidewalks or the right-of-way (Title 18); must not create traffic hazards through excessive brightness aimed at roadways; must be removed within a reasonable period after the holiday (typically 30 to 45 days β excessive year-round display can draw blight complaints under Title 11); and sound-generating displays (music, animated figures) must comply with the Clark County noise ordinance Title 14.12 with quiet hours typically 10 pm to 7 am. The desert climate creates some unique considerations β wind storms can blow inflatable and unsecured decorations into public areas, and extreme heat can degrade holiday lighting. Displays that constitute a nuisance β such as extremely bright lighting that affects neighbor sleep, or amplified holiday music at all hours β can be cited under Title 11 nuisance or Title 14 noise provisions. HOAs in Clark County frequently regulate holiday decoration timing, colors, and brightness through CC and Rs more strictly than county code. Religious expression in holiday displays receives First Amendment protection within the bounds of content-neutral regulations.
No specific holiday display fines exist. Violations are cited under applicable Title 11 nuisance, Title 14 noise, or Title 18 right-of-way provisions. Administrative citations typically begin around 100 dollars. Right-of-way obstructions may be removed without notice.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Paradise, NV
CCC Β§10.36.010 (Noise annoyance) prohibits keeping any animal that, by loud or frequent habitual barking, yelping, braying, crowing, or other noise, causes a...
Paradise, NV
Paradise is unincorporated Clark County, so Clark County Code Chapter 14.55 (Unnecessary Noise) controls. CCC Β§14.55.020 prohibits noise that is annoying to ...
Paradise, NV
Party noise in residential Paradise is handled under CCC Β§14.55.020 unnecessary-noise standard. There is no specific 'party house' chapter β but STR-hosted p...
Paradise, NV
Nevada NRS 484D.475 prohibits modifying a motor vehicle muffler or exhaust to produce louder noise than the factory original. CCC Β§14.55 backs this with loca...
Paradise, NV
Vehicles parked on public streets in Paradise can be towed under NRS 484B.450 after 72 hours, and from private property (apartment lots, shopping centers) un...
Paradise, NV
Clark County Code Β§10.08 requires that all licensed dogs and cats in unincorporated Clark County be spayed or neutered. Intact pets require a fancier, breede...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Clark County.
See how other cities in Clark County handle holiday displays.
See how Paradise's holiday displays rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.