Pop. 26,472 Β· Hillsborough County
Pool barriers in Temple Terrace must be at least 48 inches high with self-closing, self-latching gates opening outward, per FL Β§515.27 and the FL Building Code.
Florida's Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act requires at least one additional safety feature beyond the 48-inch barrier: exit alarms, power safety cover, self-closing doors, or an approved pool alarm.
All swimming pools and spas in Temple Terrace require a building permit. Construction must comply with FL Building Code Chapter 4 and the FL Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act (FL Β§515).
Feeding alligators, bears, and sandhill cranes is a state-level misdemeanor under FL 379.412. Feeding of raccoons, foxes and other wildlife is also discouraged. The Hillsborough River borders Temple Terrace and has active alligator population.
Exotic pet ownership in Temple Terrace is governed by FL Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) Class I/II/III classifications under FL 379. Class I (large cats, bears, chimps) prohibited. Class II/III require state permits.
Beekeeping is permitted in Temple Terrace under FL 586.10 state preemption. Cities cannot ban beekeeping. FDACS annual registration required for all hives. HOAs may still restrict.
Backyard chickens are permitted in Temple Terrace in limited numbers on residential lots, typically up to 4-6 hens. No roosters allowed due to noise. Coops must be setback from property lines and maintained sanitarily.
Temple Terrace follows Hillsborough County pet limits of 4 dogs or cats per household in residential zones. Exceeding requires a kennel or multiple pet permit. Enforcement is complaint-driven.
No breed-specific restrictions are allowed in Temple Terrace. FL 767.14 preempts breed bans statewide, and Miami-Dades grandfathered pit bull ban was repealed by referendum in October 2023. Dangerous dog determinations are behavior-based.
All dogs in Temple Terrace must be on a leash no longer than 6 feet when off the owners property, per Hillsborough County Animal Ordinance adopted by reference. Off-leash dogs are impounded and owners fined.
Temple Terrace does not mandate a specific STR liability policy, but DBPR vacation rental licensing and standard lender/HOA rules typically require 1 million dollars in commercial liability coverage.
Temple Terrace STRs must provide all guest parking on site. On-street parking for overnight rental guests is discouraged and subject to the citywide prohibition against blocking sidewalks, hydrants, and driveways.
Temple Terrace applies reasonable occupancy standards consistent with FL Β§509.032(7)(b), typically 2 persons per bedroom plus 2 additional overnight guests, and enforces building code life-safety limits.
Temple Terrace may require STR operators to maintain a local Business Tax Receipt and provide a 24-hour responsible-party contact. SB 280 (2024) allows Florida cities to adopt formal STR registration programs.
Short-term rentals in Temple Terrace are regulated but cannot be banned under FL Β§509.032 preemption. Operators must hold a Florida DBPR vacation rental license, a city Business Tax Receipt, and register the property with Hillsborough County for tourist development tax.
STR guests in Temple Terrace are subject to the citywide noise ordinance with an 11 PM to 7 AM quiet period. Operators are responsible for guest conduct and can be cited for repeated disturbances.
Temple Terrace does not impose a minimum-night-stay cap on short-term rentals; any such restriction is preempted by FL Β§509.032(7)(b).
STR stays under 6 months in Temple Terrace are subject to 6 percent Florida sales tax, 1.5 percent Hillsborough County discretionary surtax, and 6 percent Hillsborough Tourist Development Tax, for a total of roughly 13.5 percent.
Cottage food operations in Temple Terrace are protected under FL Β§500.80 (updated by HB 663 in 2021) allowing home production of non-hazardous foods with sales up to $250,000 per year without a state food license or commercial kitchen.
Home occupations in Temple Terrace require a Business Tax Receipt and compliance with strict accessory-use standards: no employees outside the household, no exterior signage, and no customer traffic that alters the residential character of the neighborhood.
Home-based businesses in Temple Terrace cannot display exterior signage of any kind, including vehicle-mounted business signs parked overnight in front yards. The dwelling must retain the appearance of a single-family residence.
Home occupations in Temple Terrace may receive customers only on a limited basis that does not generate traffic, parking, or noise beyond a normal residential pattern. Classes, group sessions, and retail walk-in traffic are generally prohibited in residential zones.
Family day care homes in Temple Terrace are permitted in residential zones as a home occupation, subject to DCF licensing under FL Β§402.313 and local zoning limits on group size, staff, and outdoor activity.
Temple Terrace allows home occupations in residential zones with a Home Occupation license through the city Business Tax Receipt office. The business must be secondary to the residential use, operated by a resident, and produce no external evidence of commercial activity.
Attached and detached carports in Temple Terrace require building permits, must meet Florida Building Code wind load standards, and comply with setbacks. Metal prefabricated carports require engineered drawings and anchoring adequate for 130+ mph design winds.
Converting a garage to living space in Temple Terrace requires a building permit, meeting egress, ventilation, and insulation standards, and maintaining the city's minimum off-street parking requirement (typically 2 spaces per single-family home).
Storage sheds under 120 square feet are typically exempt from building permits in Temple Terrace per FL Building Code, but zoning setback, height, and placement rules still apply. Sheds must sit behind the front building line and at least 5 feet from side/rear property lines.
Temple Terrace permits accessory dwelling units in limited residential zones subject to lot size, setback, owner-occupancy, and design review requirements. ADUs must meet Florida Building Code 7th Edition hurricane wind load standards and connect to city water and sewer.
Tiny homes on permanent foundations are allowed in Temple Terrace if they meet Florida Building Code and zoning minimum floor area. Tiny homes on wheels (THOWs) are regulated as RVs and cannot be used as permanent dwellings in residential zones.
Aircraft noise is federally preempted by the FAA and cannot be regulated by Temple Terrace. Tampa International Airport (TPA) is about 10 miles west and Peter O Knight and Plant City airports are nearby. Helicopter and small plane overflights are common.
Modified exhaust, loud music from vehicles, and excessive engine noise are enforced by Temple Terrace Police under the city noise ordinance and FL 316.272 (exhaust systems). Audible at 25 feet for stereos and illegal modifications are citable.
Temple Terrace does not ban leaf blowers but restricts their use to daytime hours (typically 7 AM to 7 PM). Gas and electric blowers are both permitted. No decibel cap applies as long as general noise rules are followed.
Commercial noise along Fowler Avenue and 56th Street commercial corridors must stay within zoning compatibility standards. HVAC, loading docks, and dumpster pickups near residential zones are restricted to daytime hours.
Temple Terrace enforces nighttime quiet hours from 10 PM to 7 AM under Chapter 10 of the City Code. Unreasonable noise audible at the property line during these hours is a code violation, and state law under FL 877.03 provides additional misdemeanor backup for disorderly noise.
Amplified music audible beyond the property line after 10 PM is prohibited in Temple Terrace. Outdoor events at venues like the Temple Terrace Golf & Country Club require a special event permit with amplified sound conditions.
Construction activity in Temple Terrace is generally restricted to 7 AM to 7 PM Monday through Saturday, with Sunday and legal holidays prohibited for powered tools or heavy equipment that would disturb residential areas.
Persistent dog barking is enforced in Temple Terrace as a noise nuisance under City Code Chapter 10 and as an animal control matter under the Hillsborough County Animal Resources contract. Barking for 20 or more continuous minutes is typically actionable.
Fence permits are required in Temple Terrace for all new fences over 4 feet tall or for any masonry/block walls. Typical fee is $75-$150. Pool barriers always require a permit under FL Building Code.
Florida has no shared-cost fence law. Each owner is responsible for fences on their own property. FL 823.11 provides remedy against spite fences built maliciously to annoy neighbors. Surveys recommended before construction.
Wood, PVC/vinyl, aluminum, and masonry are permitted fence materials in Temple Terrace. Chain link allowed in rear yards but discouraged in front. Barbed wire and electric fences prohibited in residential zones.
Pool barriers in Temple Terrace must comply with FL 515 Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act. Minimum 48-inch barrier with self-closing/self-latching gate. At least one additional safety feature (alarm, cover, or self-closing door) required.
Corner lots in Temple Terrace must maintain a clear sight triangle at intersections. No fence, wall, hedge, or structure over 3 feet tall is permitted within a 25-foot triangle measured from the intersection of property lines at the street corner.
Temple Terrace limits residential fences to 6 feet in rear and side yards and 4 feet in front yards. Corner lots have a 3-foot visibility triangle rule at intersections. Pool fences must be at least 4 feet per FL 515.
In unincorporated Hillsborough County, retaining walls are regulated under Land Development Code Part 6.07.00 (Fences and Walls) for setback and dimensional standards and under the Construction Code (County Code Chapter 8 / 2023 Florida Building Code) for permitting and engineering. A retaining wall must be shown on the residential site plan whenever there is an existing-to-proposed grade differential, and grading must either match the county-approved subdivision lot grading plan, be supported by plans signed and sealed by a Florida-registered Professional Engineer, or use the NO FILL Attestation. Hillsborough County Building Services issues the permit; the FBC generally requires permits for retaining walls over 4 feet measured from bottom of footing to top of wall, or any wall that retains a surcharge.
Temple Terrace requires residential lots be kept clear of dead vegetation, dry brush, and combustible debris as nuisance conditions under city code. There is no formal defensible-space zone like western states, but overgrown lots in violation can be abated by the city with costs billed to the owner.
Temple Terrace enforces the Florida Building Code and FL Β§553.883 requiring smoke alarms in every bedroom, outside each sleeping area, and on every level of all dwellings. New and substantially renovated homes require hardwired interconnected alarms with battery backup; existing homes at minimum need 10-year sealed-battery units.
Temple Terrace is not in a high-risk wildland-urban interface like central Florida scrub areas, but natural areas along the Hillsborough River and nearby preserves carry seasonal wildfire risk. No formal wildfire hazard zone designation applies to most city properties.
Open burning of yard debris in Temple Terrace generally requires authorization from the Florida Forest Service under FL Admin Code 5I-2. The dense residential setting makes authorizations rare; most yard waste must go to curbside pickup rather than be burned on site.
Backyard recreational fires in Temple Terrace are allowed under NFPA 1 10.11 when contained in a pit, chiminea, or portable fireplace under 3 feet across with 25-foot setbacks from structures. Fires creating smoke nuisances to neighbors can be ordered extinguished by the fire department.
Temple Terrace allows residential fire pits as recreational fires when kept under 3 feet in diameter and 2 feet tall, burning only clean seasoned firewood. Pits must sit at least 25 feet from structures, fences, and property lines, with a responsible adult and extinguishing means present at all times.
Consumer fireworks are legal in Temple Terrace only on the three state-protected holidays (July 4, December 31, January 1) under FL Β§791.08. Outside those dates only sparklers and novelties from the FL approved list are allowed. Launching into neighbor yards or public streets can trigger reckless discharge charges.
Florida regulates propane (LP-gas) storage, transport, and installation uniformly under Chapter 527 and the Florida Fire Prevention Code, preempting inconsistent local rules.
Temple Terrace follows Florida Building Code EV-ready wiring standards for new construction and allows Level 1 and Level 2 residential EV chargers with a simple electrical permit. FL Β§718.113 protects condo owner EV-charger rights, and FL Β§163.08 supports local EV infrastructure.
Temple Terrace permits overnight on-street parking in residential districts for passenger vehicles with current registration. There is no blanket overnight ban, but vehicles must move every 72 hours and cannot block sidewalks, hydrants, or mail delivery.
Temple Terrace driveways must be paved with concrete, asphalt, or pavers, and connect to the street via a permitted curb cut. Maximum driveway width at the property line is 20 feet for single-family homes, and impervious coverage contributes to lot-coverage calculations.
Temple Terrace prohibits parking commercial vehicles over 10,000 pounds GVWR or exceeding 22 feet in length in residential districts overnight. Dually trucks with commercial lettering, box trucks, and tow trucks must be parked at the business site.
Temple Terrace prohibits parking recreational vehicles, boats, and trailers on residential streets for more than 24 hours and requires them to be stored behind the front-yard setback on private property, screened from view where possible.
Temple Terrace generally permits on-street parking in residential zones but prohibits parking on the grass, in swales, or blocking sidewalks. Vehicles must be moved every 72 hours, and parking is banned within 15 feet of a fire hydrant or 30 feet of a stop sign.
Temple Terrace classifies any vehicle left unmoved for 72 hours, lacking current registration, or visibly inoperable as abandoned. Code enforcement tags the vehicle, and if not removed within 10 days, the city tows it under FL Statute Β§715.05.
Homeowners in Temple Terrace may trim trees on their own property but must follow ANSI A300 standards for health and should hire an ISA-certified arborist for large or hazardous work. FL Β§163.045 limits local permit requirements when a certified arborist documents danger to persons or property.
Temple Terrace is within the Southwest Florida Water Management District (SWFWMD) Tampa Bay region year-round watering restrictions: 2 days per week for most residents, before 10 AM or after 4 PM, with addresses setting day assignments.
Weeds, invasive vines, and uncultivated vegetation over 12 inches are prosecuted as nuisances under Temple Terrace Code Chapter 14. Property owners are responsible for maintaining the lot edge to the street pavement, including the city right-of-way strip.
Removal of protected trees in Temple Terrace normally requires a tree removal permit through the city unless the tree meets the FL Β§163.045 danger exemption documented by an ISA-certified arborist. The city has historically been known for its oak-lined streets and enforces replacement mitigation.
Temple Terrace Code Enforcement requires turf grass and weeds on residential and vacant lots to be maintained under 12 inches. Overgrown lawns trigger courtesy notices followed by abatement mowing with costs liened to the property.
Florida-Friendly native plantings are expressly protected in Temple Terrace under FL Β§373.185. Homeowners may replace turf with native, drought-tolerant landscaping without facing nuisance citations, though HOAs may impose additional design standards.
Artificial turf is generally allowed in Temple Terrace backyards and is common for pet areas, though front-yard use and HOA-governed properties often require architectural review. No citywide ban exists but zoning landscape buffers still require live vegetation percentages.
Rainwater harvesting is legal and encouraged in Temple Terrace. SWFWMD and Hillsborough County offer rain barrel rebate and workshop programs. No permit is required for simple residential rain barrels or cistern systems under typical household scale.
Hillsborough County juvenile curfew ordinance applies in Temple Terrace: minors under 17 prohibited from public places between 11 PM-6 AM Sunday-Thursday and 12:01 AM-6 AM Friday-Saturday.
Temple Terrace parks close from sunset to sunrise (or dusk to dawn) unless posted otherwise. Entry during closed hours is a trespass under city code.
Temple Terrace HOAs operate under FL Β§720, which requires open board meetings, 48-hour posted notice, annual meetings, and recorded minutes.
HOA CC and R enforcement in Temple Terrace follows FL Β§720.305, which requires uniform enforcement, written notice, and an opportunity to be heard before fines or suspensions.
HOA assessments in Temple Terrace must comply with FL Β§720.3085, including itemized budgets, proper notice, and statutory lien procedures for nonpayment.
HOA disputes in Temple Terrace must first go through pre-suit mediation under FL Β§720.311 before most lawsuits can be filed.
Architectural review in Temple Terrace HOAs is governed by FL Β§720.3035, which limits ARCs to standards expressed in the governing documents and requires written decisions.
Temple Terrace requires scaffolding to comply with the Florida Building Code and OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart L. Building permits are required for scaffolds exceeding 30 feet, and pedestrian protection is mandatory when work occurs over sidewalks or the public right-of-way.
Temple Terrace requires pest-control operators to hold Florida Department of Agriculture (FDACS) licensing under FL Statute Β§482. Termite pre-treatment is mandatory for new construction per Florida Building Code section 1816, and property owners must abate rodent and mosquito harborage.
Elevators in Temple Terrace buildings are regulated by the Florida Bureau of Elevator Safety under FL Β§399, requiring annual inspections and certificates of operation.
Pre-1978 homes in Temple Terrace are subject to federal EPA Renovation, Repair, and Painting Rule requirements. There is no separate Florida or city lead-paint inspection mandate.
Temple Terrace requires silt fencing, inlet protection, and stabilized construction entrances on all active construction sites. Erosion-control measures must comply with the Florida Stormwater Erosion and Sedimentation Control Inspector Manual and be inspected weekly.
Temple Terrace participates in the National Flood Insurance Program and enforces FEMA flood-zone standards along the Hillsborough River. Structures in AE zones must have finished floors at least 1 foot above base flood elevation, and substantial improvements trigger full compliance.
Temple Terrace requires grading plans for new construction and additions that alter site drainage. Lots must maintain positive drainage away from structures at minimum 2 percent slope for 10 feet, and discharge onto neighboring properties is prohibited.
Temple Terrace enforces stormwater rules through its MS4 NPDES permit administered with the Southwest Florida Water Management District. Projects disturbing over 5,000 sq ft require a stormwater permit, and illicit discharges to storm drains are banned under City Code Chapter 22.
Hillsborough County's Tampa Bay shoreline is estuarine, so the Florida Coastal Construction Control Line (CCCL) program under F.S. 161.053 does NOT apply countywide (only Gulf-fronting sandy-beach counties have CCCLs). Instead, coastal development in unincorporated Hillsborough is governed by Land Development Code Part 3.04.00 (Coastal High Hazard Area), the Construction Code in County Code Chapter 8, the 2023 Florida Building Code, ASCE 24, and FEMA NFIP standards, with the most restrictive prevailing. Special needs facilities (hospitals, nursing homes, ALFs) are prohibited in the CHHA under Future Land Use Policy 6.01.8, and structures in V Zones, Coastal A Zones, and SFHAs require elevation certificates and may require a sealed geotechnical report.
Florida preempts local regulation of medical marijuana dispensaries: cities must either allow MMTCs in any zone permitting pharmacies or ban them entirely. Temple Terrace follows the statewide framework.
Home cultivation of cannabis is illegal statewide in Florida including Temple Terrace. Medical marijuana patients must purchase from licensed MMTCs; recreational cannabis remains illegal after Amendment 3 failed in November 2024.
Temple Terrace requires trash and recycling carts to be stored out of street view between collection days, typically in a side yard, rear yard, or enclosure.
Not applicable in Temple Terrace. Central Florida does not receive measurable snowfall and no sidewalk-clearing ordinance exists. Sidewalk maintenance (cracks, trip hazards) remains the adjoining property owner responsibility.
Vacant lots must be maintained free of tall weeds, accumulated debris, and overgrown vegetation per Temple Terrace Code. Grass and weeds cannot exceed 12 inches.
Temple Terrace limits garage sales to 2 per calendar year per residence, maximum 3 consecutive days each. Sales must occur between 8 AM and sunset.
Temple Terrace enforces property maintenance standards under Code Chapter 14 (Property Maintenance) adopting the International Property Maintenance Code with local amendments. Unmaintained exteriors, broken windows, and accumulated junk trigger code action.
Temple Terrace generally permits temporary holiday displays on private property without permit. Displays must not create safety hazards, obstruct visibility at intersections, or produce noise violations.
Temple Terrace regulates political signs as temporary signs with size limits (typically 6 sq ft residential) but cannot regulate based on content per Reed v. Town of Gilbert (2015). Signs allowed on private property with owner consent.
Temple Terrace allows temporary garage sale signs on private property during the sale only. Right-of-way placement is prohibited and signs must be removed within 24 hours after the sale ends.
Temple Terrace treats light trespass exceeding 0.5 footcandles at a residential property line as a code violation. Neighbors can file complaints with Code Compliance, and repeat violations escalate to special magistrate hearings with daily fines.
Temple Terrace requires exterior lighting to be shielded and downward-directed to minimize glare on adjacent properties. Maximum illumination at residential property lines is 0.5 footcandles, and commercial parking-lot lighting must be turned down or off after business hours.
Temple Terrace issues solar PV permits under the Florida Building Code with a typical turnaround of 5 to 10 business days. Florida Statute Β§163.04 preempts any local ban on solar, and system size is generally limited by roof structural capacity and net-metering caps.
Florida Statute Β§163.04 prohibits Temple Terrace HOAs from banning solar-energy devices or requiring them to be installed on rear roof planes if doing so reduces energy output. Aesthetic review is limited to placement that does not impair performance.
Temple Terrace limits residential structures to 35 feet or 2.5 stories, whichever is less. Accessory structures cannot exceed 15 feet in height, and commercial buildings downtown are capped at 45 feet with special-use exceptions available via City Council.
Temple Terrace limits lot coverage by principal and accessory structures to 35 percent in RS-2 zones. Total impervious surface including driveways and pools cannot exceed 50 percent, and stormwater retention is required for additions expanding impervious area.
Temple Terrace residential setbacks in the RS-2 single-family zone are 25 feet front, 7.5 feet side, and 20 feet rear. Corner lots require a 15-foot street-side setback, and accessory structures must be at least 5 feet from rear and side lines.
Recreational drone use in Temple Terrace is governed by FAA Part 107 and state law. Tampa International Airport (TPA) Class B airspace covers much of the region, and MacDill AFB restrictions further south make LAANC authorization critical.
Commercial drone operators in Temple Terrace need FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate and LAANC authorization for the Tampa Class B airspace. City park commercial use requires a film/photography permit.
Rent control is preempted statewide in Florida under FL Statute Β§125.0103 and Β§166.043. Temple Terrace cannot enact rent-control ordinances except during a state-of-emergency housing crisis declared by County Commission with a 1-year sunset and voter referendum.
Temple Terrace follows Florida Statutes Chapter 83 for residential tenancies. No local just-cause eviction ordinance exists, and FL law does not require landlords to state cause for non-renewal of month-to-month tenancies.
Temple Terrace requires a local business tax receipt for rental properties through the city Business Tax office. Short-term rentals additionally require a DBPR vacation rental license per FL Β§509.
Temple Terrace requires mobile food vendors to hold a Florida DBPR Mobile Food Dispensing Vehicle license and a City business-tax receipt. Vendors must operate on private property with owner consent, and FL Β§509.102 preempts most local operational restrictions.
Temple Terrace permits food-truck vending on private commercial property in C-1, C-2, and Planned Development zones with owner permission. Vending in residential zones, city parks, and the right-of-way requires a special event permit issued by the City Clerk.
Temple Terrace does not require a paid permit for occasional residential garage sales but limits each household to 2 sales per year, 3 consecutive days each.
Unincorporated Hillsborough County does not impose a numeric annual limit on residential garage, yard, or estate sales, and does not require a permit for an occasional sale on private residential property. The Code of Ordinances and Land Development Code contain no dedicated garage-sale ordinance for the unincorporated areas. However, sales that recur frequently enough to operate as a de facto retail business in a residential district (regular weekly or monthly schedule, posted hours, ongoing inventory, exterior signage) violate the Land Development Code's residential zoning rules and the home-occupation prohibition on customer traffic. Tampa, Plant City, and Temple Terrace each administer their own city codes that may differ.
Temple Terrace offers weekly bulk pickup for large items like furniture and appliances on the residents yard waste collection day. Residents must call sanitation to schedule appliances with refrigerant.
Carts must be placed at the curb with handles facing the house, 3 feet of clearance from obstacles, and removed within 12 hours of pickup per Temple Terrace Code Β§62.
Temple Terrace Sanitation provides twice-weekly residential garbage pickup, weekly recycling, and weekly yard waste collection. Containers must be at curb by 6 AM on pickup day.
Temple Terrace provides single-stream curbside recycling in 95-gallon blue carts. Recycling is offered but not mandated by ordinance; contaminated loads may be rejected.
Temple Terrace honors No Solicitation signs posted at residential entries. Solicitors must also avoid properties on a registered No Knock list maintained by the city if available.
Door-to-door solicitors in Temple Terrace must obtain a permit from the Police Department, provide ID and background check information, and carry the permit visibly. Solicitation allowed 9 AM-7 PM only.
Florida Statute 218.077 prohibits local governments from establishing a minimum wage other than the state or federal rate, preempting city and county living-wage ordinances except for direct local government employees.
Florida Statute 218.077 and 448.110 framework, combined with FS 125.01045 and 166.04151 limits, preempt local mandates requiring private employers to provide paid sick leave or other employment benefits beyond state law.
Florida Statute 509.032(7) and broader employment preemption framework prevent local governments from requiring private employers to follow predictive or fair-scheduling rules beyond state and federal law.
Florida allows permitless concealed carry of firearms by law-abiding adults under FS 790.01 and continues to issue concealed weapon licenses through FS 790.06, with both regimes preempting local concealed-carry restrictions.
Florida Statute 790.33 expressly preempts the entire field of firearm and ammunition regulation to the state, voiding all local ordinances and imposing personal civil penalties on local officials who knowingly enact or enforce conflicting rules.
Florida Statute 790.053 generally bans the open carry of firearms by individuals, with limited exceptions for hunting, fishing, camping, target shooting, and lawful self-defense, and preempts any local variance.
Florida Statute 790.25(5) allows any law-abiding person 18 or older to possess a concealed firearm in a private vehicle for self-defense, provided the firearm is securely encased or not readily accessible for immediate use, regardless of any concealed-carry license.
Florida Statute 448.095 requires every private employer with 25 or more employees to use the federal E-Verify system to confirm work authorization for new hires beginning July 1, 2023, with public agencies and contractors subject to broader requirements.
Senate Bill 168 (2019), codified at FS 908.103 and 908.104, prohibits sanctuary policies in Florida and requires every state and local law enforcement agency to use best efforts to support federal immigration enforcement and honor ICE detainer requests.
Florida Statutes 823.14 and 163.3162 restrict local governments from adopting zoning rules that inhibit established farms on agriculturally classified land, preserving agricultural uses against incompatible local regulation.
Florida Statute 823.14, the Florida Right to Farm Act, protects established bona fide farm operations from nuisance suits and local ordinances that would inhibit standard agricultural practices conducted in good faith.
Florida Statute 403.7033 preempts the regulation of disposable plastic bags by local governments, prohibiting cities and counties from enacting bans or fees on retailers pending a legislative review that has not occurred.
Florida Statute 500.90 preempts the regulation of polystyrene products by local governments, blocking cities and counties from banning expanded polystyrene foam food containers, cups, and similar items.
Florida Statute 403.7033 and related law impose a moratorium on enforcement of municipal plastic straw bans, requiring DEP study before any local prohibition can take effect, effectively preempting current ordinances.
Florida Statute 569.101 prohibits the sale or delivery of tobacco and nicotine products to persons under 21, aligning with federal law and applying uniformly statewide with local preemption under FS 386.2125.
Florida Statute 386.2125 preempts local regulation of nicotine products and dispensing devices, blocking cities and counties from banning flavored e-cigarettes, menthol, or other flavored tobacco at the retail level.
Florida Statute 386.2125 expressly preempts the regulation of nicotine products, nicotine dispensing devices, and vape retailing to the state, voiding most municipal ordinances on electronic cigarettes and vape shops.
Section 163.045 expressly applies regardless of any local heritage, specimen, or champion tree designation, preempting protective ordinances when an arborist documents danger.
Florida law prohibits local governments from requiring permits or replacement trees for the removal of dangerous trees on residential property when supported by a qualified arborist's documentation.
Florida law prohibits local governments from requiring replacement plantings or mitigation when a residential tree is removed under documented danger conditions.