100 local rules on file Β· Pop. 721 Β· Lancaster County
Showing ordinances that apply to Washington Boro, PA
Washington Boro is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 721 in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Because Washington Boro is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Lancaster 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 Lancaster County may have different rules.
Lancaster County sets no countywide quiet hours. Each of the 60 municipalities does. Lancaster City bars amplified sound that is plainly audible across a property line between 9 p.m. and 8 a.m.; other townships and boroughs set their own night hours.
Lancaster County sets no construction-hours rule. In the City of Lancaster, construction, drilling, and demolition may not run 9:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. on weekdays and Saturdays, or any time on Sundays and legal holidays. Manheim Township restricts most activity to 7 a.m.-10 p.m.
Lancaster County has no leaf-blower ordinance. Lancaster City's Chapter 198 restricts powered lawn and garden tools, including leaf blowers, outdoors in residential areas between 9:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m. when they disturb a neighbor. Other municipalities set their own hours.
Lancaster County sets no outdoor-music rule. In Lancaster City, amplified music in public spaces always requires a Zoning Officer variance, and no variance is granted for noise after 10:00 p.m. Nighttime hours (9 p.m.-8 a.m.) otherwise apply across a property line.
Lancaster County has no countywide barking-dog noise law. Lancaster City's Chapter 198 makes it unlawful to keep an animal that barks continuously for 10 minutes, or intermittently for a half hour, to a neighbor's disturbance. Statewide, the PA Dog Law governs confinement.
Lancaster County sets no amplified-music rule. Lancaster City requires a variance for amplified sound in public and bars it 9:00 p.m.-8:00 a.m. across a property line. Manheim Borough bars amplified sound plainly audible across a property line 10/11 p.m.-7 a.m.
Motor-vehicle noise is governed statewide by the PA Vehicle Code, which requires every vehicle to have a working muffler with no cutout or bypass. Lancaster City adds local limits tied to PennDOT sound rules and caps standing-vehicle idling at 15 minutes per hour.
Lancaster County does no zoning, so industrial-noise limits come from your municipality's zoning and noise codes. Notably, Lancaster City's noise ordinance does not list industrial or data-center noise among regulated sources, a gap the City has publicly acknowledged.
Lancaster County sets no decibel limit. Lancaster City repealed its zoning-district decibel tables in 2007 and now uses a plainly-audible disturbance standard rather than a numeric dBA cap. Statewide vehicle decibel limits come from PennDOT's Title 67, Chapter 157.
Lancaster County does not regulate aircraft noise, and neither do its municipalities. Aircraft and airspace noise is governed by the Federal Aviation Administration under federal law. Local noise codes, including Lancaster City's Chapter 198, exempt aircraft in flight.
There is no countywide STR registration in Lancaster County; each municipality runs its own. The City of Lancaster requires a Certificate of Zoning Compliance, a Residential Rental License Application, and a named property manager whose contact details are filed with the City Housing Unit before an STR may operate.
Lancaster County levies a hotel room rental tax (3.9%) plus a county hotel excise tax (1.1%) on lodging patrons countywide, collected by the County Treasurer. The revenue benefits the Lancaster City Conference/Convention Center and promotes tourism (Discover Lancaster). Returns are due monthly. Pennsylvania's 6% state sales/occupancy tax applies on top.
Lancaster County itself issues no short-term-rental permit. Under Pennsylvania's Municipalities Planning Code, each of the county's 60 municipalities regulates STRs. The City of Lancaster, for example, requires the dwelling to be registered as a transient dwelling rental unit with a Housing Inspector inspection before approval.
Lancaster County sets no STR occupancy cap; limits are municipal. In the City of Lancaster, the number of guests in one party may not exceed two adults per bedroom, and the maximum length of stay per registered party is 30 consecutive days. Other municipalities set their own caps.
Lancaster County has no countywide STR noise rule. Noise at short-term rentals is controlled by each municipality's general noise or nuisance ordinance and its STR conditions. The City of Lancaster's transient dwelling program also bars exterior or interior signage visible to the public, part of keeping STRs unobtrusive in residential
Lancaster County sets no STR parking rule; it is municipal. The City of Lancaster requires one off-street parking space per dwelling, plus one additional off-street space per bedroom for dwellings with four or more bedrooms. All required spaces must be off-street. Other municipalities set their own standards.
Lancaster County imposes no primary-residence requirement on short-term rentals. Whether a rental must be your home is municipal. The City of Lancaster distinguishes a Homestay - where the owner must reside in the dwelling for the duration of the rental - from an unhosted STR, which has no owner-residence requirement
Lancaster County sets no host-presence rule. Whether an owner or manager must be present is municipal. The City of Lancaster does not require owner occupancy for a standard STR, but a property manager must be identified and their contact information provided to the City's Housing Unit; a Homestay, by contrast,
Lancaster County imposes no short-term-rental insurance requirement. Any liability-insurance condition would come from your municipality, and the City of Lancaster's transient dwelling program does not publish a coverage mandate. Hosts should still consult their own insurer, since standard homeowner policies often exclude commercial short-term-rental activity.
Lancaster County imposes no annual night cap on short-term rentals. Any limit on how many nights or how long a stay can be is municipal. The City of Lancaster caps the maximum length of a single stay at 30 consecutive days per registered party but sets no annual-nights ceiling.
Lancaster County sets no countywide fire-pit rule. Recreational fires are governed by your city, borough, or township and the PA Fire/Building Code. Small cooking and recreational fires are generally allowed but must not create off-property smoke that disturbs neighbors under state open-burning rules.
Lancaster County sets no defensible-space or brush-clearance mandate β south-central PA is not a fire-prone wildfire zone like the West. Overgrown brush is handled locally as a property-maintenance nuisance under your municipality's weed and blight ordinance, not a county fire code.
Smoke alarms are required statewide through the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code (34 Pa. Code Β§403.21), which adopts the International Residential Code. Alarms must be in every bedroom, outside each sleeping area, and on every level. Lancaster County has no separate rule; municipalities enforce via the UCC.
Pennsylvania (3 Pa.C.S. Chapter 11) governs consumer fireworks statewide. Adults 18+ may use them, but never within 150 feet of any building or vehicle, on others' property without permission, or while impaired. Lancaster municipalities may add stricter local limits or permit rules.
Pennsylvania DEP rule 25 Pa. Code Β§129.14 sets the baseline: open burning is barred where its smoke, odor, or emissions cross your property line and interfere with neighbors. Lancaster County has no countywide burn ordinance; residential open burning is regulated by your municipality.
Small recreational and cooking fires are generally allowed in Lancaster County, but they must not send smoke or odor across your property line under PA rule 25 Pa. Code Β§129.14. The county sets no rule; your city, borough, or township controls size, setbacks, and permits.
Propane (LP-gas) storage in Lancaster County follows the statewide fire code adopted through the PA Uniform Construction Code, based on NFPA 58 and the International Fire Code. The county sets no separate rule; small residential cylinders are allowed, with larger tanks requiring clearances and permits from your municipality.
Lancaster County is not designated a wildfire hazard zone. South-central Pennsylvania's farmland and moderate climate mean there are no WUI defensible-space or fire-hardening mandates like California's. Fire prevention here is ordinary open-burning and fire-code compliance, not wildfire-zone construction rules.
Lancaster County sets no countywide rule for parking RVs, boats, or trailers at homes or on streetsβyour city, borough, or township does. Lancaster City, for example, bars recreational equipment from streets for more than 48 hours.
In the Lancaster County Park System, no vehicle may be parked between sunset and sunrise unless the Director grants written permission or a permit. On municipal streets, overnight-parking rules are set separately by each city, borough, or township.
Lancaster County sets no countywide rule on parking commercial trucks, box vans, or trailers in residential areas. Each municipality controls this through its zoning and vehicle-and-traffic ordinances under the Municipalities Planning Code.
Lancaster County has no countywide on-street parking law. Permits, time limits, and no-parking zones are enacted by each municipality under Pennsylvania's local traffic-authority power (75 Pa.C.S. Β§6109). Lancaster City and Lancaster Township both run residential permit-parking programs.
Pennsylvania law prohibits abandoning any vehicle on a highway or on public or private property without consent. A vehicle is presumed abandoned once left inoperable or illegally more than 48 hours on public property, or 24 hours on private property.
In Lancaster County parks, no one may park a vehicle across more than one designated spot or in a way that obstructs traffic. Restrictions on oversized vehicles parked at homes or on streets are set separately by each municipality.
In Lancaster County parks, marked passenger or loading zones may be used only for prompt loading and unloading of passengers or materialsβnot general parking. On public streets, loading zones are established and enforced by each municipality.
Lancaster County sets no rule on driveway width, surface, setbacks, or how many vehicles you may park in a driveway. These are zoning and land-development matters decided by each city, borough, or township under the Municipalities Planning Code.
Lancaster County has no countywide EV-charging-station ordinance. County parks allow e-bikes wherever bicycles are permitted (max 20 mph on motor). On-street EV charging, curbside stations, and residential chargers are governed by each municipality.
Lancaster County sets no rule on painted curbs. The meaning of red, yellow, or other curb colors and who may paint them is controlled by each municipality's traffic code under Pennsylvania's local-authority power (75 Pa.C.S. Β§6109). Residents generally may not paint public curbs.
Lancaster County issues no fence permits. Whether one is required depends on your municipality: Manheim Township requires a zoning permit for a fence, while East Hempfield Township does not require one (though height and location rules still apply). Check your local zoning office.
Lancaster County sets no fence-height rule. Each of the 60 municipalities does, under the PA Municipalities Planning Code. Typically fences top out around 42 inches in front yards and 6 feet in side/rear yards. Confirm with your city, borough, or township zoning officer.
Lancaster County has no boundary-fence law. Placement rules come from your municipality. Manheim Township requires that fences sit completely within your lot and that no fence coincide with a lot line β so you cannot straddle the property boundary. Verify your township's setback rules.
Lancaster County imposes no fence requirements. Each municipality does. Common local rules: keep fences out of easements and rights-of-way, out of the clear-sight triangle at corners, and off the property line. Manheim Township also bars fences in floodplains and wetlands. Verify with your township.
Lancaster County sets no wall rule. Your municipality does. Manheim Township requires freestanding walls to be set back 5 feet from side and rear lot lines and caps them at 6 feet in residential yards. All walls must meet the PA Uniform Construction Code. Check your local ordinance.
Lancaster County restricts no fence materials. Municipalities do. The most common restriction is on barbed wire and razor wire: Manheim Township bars them on residential fences and allows them only for commercial or industrial security, six feet or higher off the ground. Check your local zoning ordinance.
Lancaster County sets no material or construction standard for fences. Your municipality does, and all fences and freestanding walls must comply with the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code as enforced locally. Manheim Township applies the PA UCC to every fence and wall. Confirm with your township.
Lancaster County has no countywide leash law. Statewide, the Pennsylvania Dog Law requires every dog be confined to the owner's premises, secured, or under a person's reasonable control at all times. Each municipality (60 of them) may add stricter leash rules.
Pennsylvania bans breed-specific legislation, so no Lancaster County municipality may outlaw pit bulls or any breed. Dogs are instead regulated individually under the state's dangerous-dog law based on behavior, not breed.
Lancaster County sets no rule on backyard chickens or livestock β that is municipal zoning. In this heavily agricultural county, rural townships broadly permit poultry and farm animals, while Lancaster City prohibits fowl and livestock in residential zones.
Lancaster County sets no beekeeping rule. Statewide, Pennsylvania's Bee Law requires every apiary to register with the PA Department of Agriculture. Where hives may be placed on a residential lot is decided by your municipality's zoning code.
Lancaster County imposes no livestock rule β it is municipal zoning. As the nation's leading farmland-preservation county, its agricultural townships broadly permit cattle, horses, goats, and swine, while incorporated boroughs and Lancaster City restrict farm animals in residential districts.
Pennsylvania's Dog Law does not cover cats, and Lancaster County has no cat ordinance. Cat rules β licensing (rare), free-roaming/at-large limits, and feral-cat/TNR programs β are set entirely by individual municipalities. Statewide cruelty and neglect law still protects cats.
You cannot own exotic wildlife in Lancaster County without a state permit. The PA Game Commission (34 Pa.C.S. Β§2963) requires a possession permit for exotic wildlife, and it is unlawful to keep such animals without one.
Lancaster County sets no limit on how many pets you may own. Any cap on the number of dogs or cats per household is set by your individual municipality's zoning or animal ordinance, so limits differ between the city, boroughs, and townships.
Feeding bears and elk is always illegal in Pennsylvania, and deer feeding is banned in Lancaster County, which sits in a Chronic Wasting Disease management area. These Game Commission rules are statewide; municipalities may add feeding restrictions.
Lancaster County has no hoarding ordinance, but Pennsylvania's animal-cruelty law reaches hoarding through the neglect statute (18 Pa.C.S. Β§5532), which requires basic care for every animal. The Pennsylvania SPCA and humane officers investigate hoarding cases here.
Lancaster County sets no tree-trimming rule. Under the PA Shade Tree Act, a municipality's shade-tree commission or public works has custody of trees in the public right-of-way; private-yard trimming is largely unregulated but you own the abutting duty.
Lancaster County sets no weed ordinance; your municipality does (e.g., Lancaster City's six-inch limit). Statewide, Pennsylvania's Controlled Plants and Noxious Weeds law bars cultivating or propagating listed noxious weeds and lets the state order landowners to treat them.
Rainwater collection is legal statewide in Pennsylvania; neither Lancaster County nor the state restricts it, and PA DEP encourages rain barrels for stormwater management. Municipal codes may require barrels to be covered, and Lancaster County Conservation District programs support it.
Lancaster County sets no grass-height rule; each of its 60 municipalities does under the PA Municipalities Planning Code. The City of Lancaster caps grass and weeds at six inches and treats taller growth as a nuisance.
Lancaster County has no tree-removal ordinance. Removing a street or right-of-way tree needs a municipal permit under the PA Shade Tree Act; removing a tree wholly on your private land is usually allowed without a permit.
Lancaster County sets no watering schedule. Water-use restrictions in Pennsylvania come from the state Drought Task Force and PA DEP. Watering limits are voluntary during a Drought Watch or Warning and become mandatory only in a Governor-declared Drought Emergency.
Lancaster County does not require or restrict native-plant landscaping. Whether a meadow or native garden is allowed depends on your municipality's grass/weed nuisance ordinance; managed native beds are usually fine, but Pennsylvania's noxious-weed list still applies.
Lancaster County does not regulate artificial turf. Whether you may install synthetic lawn, and any impervious-coverage or stormwater limits, is set by your municipality's zoning and stormwater code under the PA Municipalities Planning Code.
Lancaster County has no backyard-composting ordinance. Home composting is allowed statewide and encouraged by PA DEP; nuisance limits (odor, rodents, setbacks) come from your municipality. Large-scale composting operations need PA DEP permitting.
There is no county pool-fence rule. Residential pool barriers are set statewide by the PA Uniform Construction Code, which adopts the 2021 ISPSC: a barrier at least 48 inches high must enclose any pool or spa over 24 inches deep, enforced by your municipality.
Lancaster County sets no above-ground pool rule. Under the PA Uniform Construction Code, an above-ground pool over 24 inches deep needs a municipal building permit and a compliant 48-inch barrier; the pool wall itself may serve as the barrier if tall enough.
Lancaster County issues no residential pool permits. A private single-family pool needs a building permit from your municipality under the PA Uniform Construction Code. Only public/commercial pools get a state permit from the PA Department of Health.
Residential pool safety is set by the statewide PA Uniform Construction Code (2021 ISPSC), not the county. Public pools follow the PA Department of Health's 28 Pa. Code Chapter 18, which requires safety equipment, supervision, and permitted operation.
Lancaster County has no hot tub rule. A residential spa or hot tub is covered by the PA Uniform Construction Code (2021 ISPSC). It needs a municipal permit, but a spa with an approved safety cover is exempt from the 48-inch barrier requirement.
Lancaster County does no zoning. Under the PA Municipalities Planning Code, a no-impact home-based business is a permitted use in every residential district of your municipality, subject to eight statutory conditions your city, borough, or township enforces.
Lancaster County issues no home occupation permits. A qualifying no-impact home-based business needs no zoning approval statewide, but a larger home occupation usually needs a zoning permit or special exception from your municipality.
Lancaster County does not license daycares. Under 55 Pa. Code Chapter 3290, a family child care home caring for four to six unrelated children must hold a certificate of compliance from the PA Department of Human Services.
Lancaster County sets no sign rule. State law bars any outside sign of business for a no-impact home-based business. Larger home occupations may display a small sign only if your municipality's zoning ordinance allows it.
Pennsylvania has no cottage food law and no county food rule. A home food business registers as a Limited Food Establishment with the PA Department of Agriculture, gets an on-site inspection, and pays a $35 fee, with no sales cap.
Lancaster County has no countywide shed ordinance. Shed size, height, and setback are governed by your city/borough/township zoning code. Example: Manheim Township lets a storage shed up to 200 sq ft and 10 ft tall sit within 5 ft of a side or rear line.
Lancaster County sets no accessory-dwelling-unit rule. In Pennsylvania, whether you can add an ADU, in-law suite, or accessory apartment is decided by your city, borough, or township zoning ordinance under the state Municipalities Planning Code. Check your municipality's zoning office.
Lancaster County sets no rule on converting a garage to living space. Whether you may turn a garage into a bedroom, office, or apartment β and the parking you must replace β is governed by your city/borough/township zoning ordinance under the PA Municipalities Planning Code.
Lancaster County sets no tiny-home rule. Whether a tiny house on a foundation or on wheels is allowed β as a dwelling, ADU, or RV β is decided by your city/borough/township zoning ordinance and the PA Uniform Construction Code, not the county.
Lancaster County has no carport ordinance. Setbacks, size, height, and permits for a carport are set by your city, borough, or township zoning ordinance under the PA Municipalities Planning Code. A carport is usually treated as an accessory structure locally.
Lancaster County does not regulate garage sales. Whether you need a permit and how many sales you may hold per year are set by your city, borough, or township ordinance.
Lancaster County does not run a countywide blight code. Blight, dilapidated structures, and exterior-maintenance violations are enforced by your city, borough, or township under the PA Municipalities Planning Code and locally adopted property-maintenance codes.
Lancaster County does not regulate vacant-lot upkeep countywide. Overgrowth, dumping, and nuisance conditions on empty lots are enforced by your municipality; some towns require registration of vacant properties.
Lancaster County sets no rule on where you store trash cans. Container storage, screening, and how long bins may stay at the curb are set by your municipality's solid-waste or property-maintenance ordinance.
Lancaster County sets no grass-height limit. Each municipality sets its own maximum. Lancaster City, for example, prohibits grass, weeds, or vegetation exceeding six inches and declares taller growth an unlawful nuisance.
On private property, political-sign rules are set by your municipality's zoning ordinance, not Lancaster County. In county parks, political signs are banned except within 100 yards of a designated polling place, posted up to 2 days before an election and removed within 1 day after.
Lancaster County sets no garage-sale-sign rule for private property β your city/borough/township sign ordinance governs placement, size, and removal. In county parks it is illegal to attach any sign, poster, or handbill to a post, tree, or park sign without a permit.
Backyard gas and charcoal grills are legal in Lancaster County. The county sets no rule. The main restriction is a statewide fire-code limit β adopted through the PA UCC β barring most propane and charcoal grills on combustible balconies of multi-family buildings. Single-family yard grilling is unrestricted.
Backyard meat smokers are legal at single-family homes in Lancaster County. There is no county smoker ordinance. Cooking is exempt from most open-burning limits, but persistent smoke that crosses your property line and disturbs neighbors can still be cited under state rule 25 Pa. Code Β§129.14.
Lancaster County sets no building setbacks. Each municipality does, under MPC Β§603(b), which authorizes zoning of the βlocationβ of structures and βyardsβ left unoccupied. Front, side, and rear setbacks vary by zoning district and municipality β for example, Manheim Township's R-2 district uses a 35-foot rear yard. Verify locally.
Lancaster County sets no lot-coverage limit. Municipalities do, under MPC Β§603(b), which authorizes zoning of the βareas and dimensions of landβ¦ to be occupied byβ¦ structures.β Caps vary by district β Lancaster City allows up to 85% lot coverage in some districts. Check your municipal ordinance.
Lancaster County sets no building-height limit. Municipalities do, under MPC Β§603(b), which authorizes zoning of the βheightβ¦ of structures.β Limits vary by district β Lancaster City caps buildings in some districts at five stories or 60 feet, whichever is more restrictive. Check your municipal zoning ordinance.
LCSWMA does not provide curbside collection. Residents contract with private haulers, arranged through their municipality, who must deliver waste to LCSWMA facilities. Pickup days and rules are set by your hauler and town.
LCSWMA accepts bulky items β mattresses, furniture, mowers, appliances, tires β at its facilities for a disposal fee. For curbside bulk pickup, arrange it through your private hauler or municipality. Household hazardous waste has a free drop-off.
Under PA Act 101, larger Lancaster County municipalities must run recycling programs. Municipalities with 10,000+ residents (or 5,000β10,000 with density over 300/sq mi) must require residents to separate at least three recyclables plus leaf waste.
Lancaster County sets no bin-placement rule. When you may set containers at the curb and when you must bring them in is set by your private hauler and municipal ordinance, since LCSWMA does not collect curbside.
Illegal dumping is a state crime in Pennsylvania. Under 18 Pa.C.S. Β§6501 (scattering rubbish), depositing waste on roads, others' land, or waterways is a summary offense carrying fines, mandatory litter cleanup, or jail, with steeper penalties for repeat and vehicle-based dumping.
Lancaster County sets no light-trespass rule. Whether a floodlight spilling onto a neighbor's property is a violation depends on your city/borough/township lighting ordinance. Many require lighting be arranged to prevent glare onto adjoining lots and streets.
Lancaster County has no dark-sky ordinance. Full-cutoff and shielding requirements are set by your city/borough/township. Example: Lititz Borough requires fixtures for roadways, parking, and walkways to meet IESNA fully-shielded criteria β no light emitted above 90 degrees β with a 1,800-lumen household exemption.
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Lancaster County ordinances.