Monmouth County political signs on private property are broadly protected under the First Amendment following Reed v. Town of Gilbert (2015) and NJ Supreme Court precedent. Municipalities may regulate size (typically 6 to 32 sq ft) and location but cannot impose content-based restrictions. Most Monmouth towns require removal within 7 to 14 days after election. Signs in public rights-of-way are prohibited.
Monmouth County political signs are governed by municipal sign ordinances that must comply with First Amendment content-neutrality requirements established in Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 576 U.S. 155 (2015), which invalidated discriminatory treatment of temporary political signs. NJ Supreme Court in State v. Miller, 83 N.J. 402 (1980) and successor cases reinforced strong sign expression protections. Typical Monmouth municipal rules: Middletown Code §530-108 allows political signs up to 16 sq ft in residential zones, 32 sq ft in commercial, with removal required within 7 days of election; Freehold Township Code §190-97 permits 8 sq ft residential/32 sq ft commercial with 10-day removal; Howell Township Code §188-174 allows 6 sq ft residential signs with 14-day post-election removal; Long Branch Code §345-53 permits 12 sq ft residential with 7-day removal. All Monmouth towns prohibit political signs in public rights-of-way, on utility poles, on traffic signs, or on public property (medians, parks). Signs must not obstruct traffic sight lines at intersections or driveways, typically requiring 25-foot corner clearance. No permits required for residential political signs. Commercial property political signs follow commercial sign ordinance (usually requires permit). Monmouth towns may not impose stricter size limits or shorter time frames on political signs than on other non-commercial speech. HOA restrictions may be limited by NJ Radburn Act (N.J.S.A. 45:22A-43) and First Amendment principles but enforcement varies.
Signs in right-of-way: removal by municipality, possible fine $25 to $100 per sign. Oversized signs: notice to reduce. Failure to remove post-election: fines $25 to $100 per day after grace period (most Monmouth towns). Commercial property without permit: $100 to $500.
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