125 local rules on file Β· Pop. 36,403 Β· Clark County
Showing ordinances that apply to Winchester, NV
Winchester is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 36,403 in Clark County, Nevada. Because Winchester is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Clark 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 Clark County may have different rules.
Clark County Title 10 Section 10.36 bans wild and exotic animals β big cats, bears, primates, venomous reptiles, crocodilians, and F1 wolf hybrids. Most reptiles, rodents, and birds are allowed. NRS 503 also applies.
Title 10 Section 10.36 requires dogs off their owner property to be on a leash no longer than 6 feet controlled by a competent person. Off-leash only at designated dog parks. Fines start at $100.
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Clark County ordinances.
Unincorporated Clark County allows up to 20 chickens on small lots and more on rural-estate zoning, per Title 30. Roosters are restricted in most residential zones. Livestock require R-E, R-U, or agricultural zoning.
Home daycare in Clark County requires state licensing through Nevada DPBH plus a county home occupation permit. Family homes allow 6 children; group homes 7-12 with an assistant.
Unincorporated Clark County allows home occupations in most residential zones under Title 30, but limits them to low-impact activities that keep the dwelling residential in character.
Unincorporated Clark County generally prohibits all exterior signage for home occupations. Title 30 requires the business to show no visible evidence from the street.
Unincorporated Clark County requires a home occupation permit plus a county business license to operate any business from a residence, reviewed against Title 30 standards.
Unincorporated Clark County heavily restricts client visits to home occupations under Title 30. The rule of thumb is that a home business cannot generate traffic beyond what is typical for a single-family residence.
Nevada authorizes cottage food operations under NRS 446.866 for shelf-stable homemade foods. Clark County requires Health District registration plus a home occupation permit.
Clark County encourages Mojave native and desert-adapted landscaping through SNWA Water Smart Landscapes rebates. No county rule bans native plants, and front-yard xeriscape is allowed under Title 30.
Clark County enforces weed abatement under Title 10.30 plus Regulation 41 dust control. Tumbleweeds and cheatgrass over 6 inches are cited quickly; dust from lots over 5,000 sq ft needs a Dust Control Permit.
Rainwater harvesting for non-potable outdoor use at single-family homes is legal in Nevada under AB 138 (2017). Clark County allows roof-based collection; indoor or potable use still needs state review.
Artificial turf is allowed in Clark County as an SNWA-approved water-saving alternative. Products must meet Title 30 standards for color, pile height, and permeability. AB 356 drives conversion by end of 2026.
Clark County requires property owners to trim trees overhanging public sidewalks to 8 ft clearance and streets to 14 ft. Private trees across property lines follow Nevada common law: neighbors may trim to the line.
Clark County requires property owners to keep weeds, grass, and dry vegetation under 6 inches under Title 10 nuisance rules. Overgrown yards are a desert fire hazard and trigger abatement quickly.
Clark County follows SNWA mandatory water conservation rules due to Lake Mead crisis. AB 356 bans ornamental grass in commercial and HOA common areas by December 2026. Water Smart rebates incentivize turf removal.
Clark County has no heritage tree ordinance or specific tree removal permit. Existing mature tree preservation is encouraged but not mandated for single-family residential. Commercial redevelopment may get reduced tree ratios for preservation.
Clark County allows construction 6 AMβ10 PM in unincorporated areas. Construction during daytime hours is exempt from decibel standards under Β§30.68.020(h)(1). Code Enforcement responds to complaints between 10 PM and 6 AM.
Unincorporated Clark County has no gas leaf blower ban. Lawn maintenance is exempt from Title 30 daytime decibel limits if equipment is in good order. Nuisance use can still be cited under Title 14.
Amplified sound in unincorporated Clark County is capped at 47 dB day and 37 dB night in residential zones at 1000 Hz. The Gaming Enterprise District (Strip) is fully exempt. Special events need a permit.
Title 30 Section 30.68.020 uses an octave-band table. At 1000 Hz: residential 47 day / 37 night; business 52 day / 42 night; industrial 67 day / 57 night. A 10 dB exceedance is allowed once per day for up to 15 minutes.
Industrial zones allow 67 dB day and 57 dB night at 1000 Hz per Title 30 Section 30.68.020. M-1, M-2, M-3 zones also relax audio rules. Residential limits still control at any residential boundary.
Aircraft noise is fully exempt from Clark County standards under Section 30.68.020. Harry Reid International runs an FAA Part 150 program. Nellis AFB adds northeast overflights. FAA preempts airspace.
Outdoor music on private property must stay under 47 dB day and 37 dB night in residential zones per Title 30. The Gaming Enterprise District Strip corridor is exempt. Commercial events need a permit.
Clark County prohibits unnecessary animal noise under Title 14 Β§14.55.020 nuisance standards. Animal Control handles complaints. Dogs must be microchipped and rabies vaccinated. 3-dog household limit without a permit.
Clark County enforces decibel-based noise limits under Title 30 Β§30.68.020. Residential zones: 47 dB daytime, 37 dB nighttime at 1000 Hz. The Las Vegas Strip (Gaming Enterprise District) is fully exempt from noise standards.
Clark County permits residential Level 1 and Level 2 EV chargers with a standard electrical permit. Commercial charging station installations require a building permit through Development Services. Clark County and NV Energy offer rebates and incentives.
Unincorporated Clark County does not impose a blanket ban on overnight on-street parking, but vehicles must be currently registered, operable, and not parked in the same spot for more than 72 hours. Enforcement of abandoned or long-term parked vehicles follows NRS 487.
Unincorporated Clark County requires paved driveways in most residential zones and prohibits parking on unimproved (dirt/gravel) surfaces. Driveway widths, approaches, and curb cuts are regulated under Title 30 (Unified Development Code) and Title 14 (Traffic).
Clark County prohibits abandoned vehicles on highways, streets, and public property under Β§14.40.043 and Β§14.04.005. 72-hour standard applies. Property owners can tow unauthorized vehicles after notice per NRS 487.038.
Clark County limits automobile street parking to 24 hours under Β§14.40.043. RVs prohibited on county roads entirely without permit. Rolling a vehicle a short distance does not reset the time limit. Report at 702-455-4191.
RVs are prohibited from parking on county roads entirely without a permit under Β§14.40.043. Permits allow up to 7 days (renewable once per year). RV habitation on streets is unlawful. Boats and trailers also prohibited on residential streets.
Clark County prohibits commercial vehicles within 1,000 feet of residential districts under Β§14.40.043. Enforced by LVMPD and Constable's Office. One commercial automobile allowed for home occupations. Report at 702-455-4191.
Clark County imposes strict STR noise limits under the 2024 ordinance. Quiet hours run 10 PM to 9 AM, outdoor amplified music is banned, and three complaints can revoke your license.
Clark County STRs must collect combined transient lodging tax of roughly 13.38% plus Live Entertainment Tax where applicable. License fees run about 1,000 to 1,500 dollars per year.
Unincorporated Clark County does not cap annual rental nights for licensed STRs, but imposes a minimum 2-night stay requirement and prohibits STRs entirely in many HOAs and master-planned communities.
Clark County requires licensed STRs to maintain liability insurance of at least 500,000 dollars per occurrence and name Clark County as additional insured. Airbnb Host Protection alone is not sufficient.
Unincorporated Clark County caps STR occupancy at 2 persons per bedroom plus 2 additional, with a hard maximum of 16 persons. Infants may be excluded. Daytime visitors are also capped under the 2024 ordinance.
The 2024 Clark County STR ordinance requires one off-street parking space per bedroom. Guests cannot park on the street in most residential zones, and RV or commercial vehicle parking by guests is prohibited.
Clark County adopted STR ordinance Chapter 7.100 effective July 1, 2023 under AB 363. 1% housing unit cap (~3,000 permits). 1,000-foot separation between STRs. Only 194 permits issued as of August 2025. Federal court injunction currently blocking enforcement.
Clark County adopted STR ordinance Chapter 7.100 effective July 1, 2023 under AB 363. 1% housing unit cap (~3,000 permits). 1,000-foot separation between STRs. Only 194 permits issued as of August 2025. Federal court injunction currently blocking enforcement.
Clark County follows the IRC and IFC: working smoke alarms required in every sleeping room, outside each sleeping area, and on every level. CO alarms required near bedrooms with fuel-burning appliances.
Most of the urban Las Vegas Valley is not in a state wildfire hazard zone, but the Spring Mountains, Red Rock, Lee Canyon, and Mount Charleston areas are high fire risk with seasonal burn bans.
Open burning is prohibited in the Las Vegas Valley PM-10 nonattainment area under Clark County Air Quality Reg 52 and NRS 472.040. Limited ag or ceremonial burning needs permits from DES and Fire.
Clark County Fire enforces Title 13 weed and brush abatement. Defensible space of 30-100 feet required in WUI areas near Red Rock, Mount Charleston, and Lake Mead. Non-compliance triggers county abatement and a lien.
Safe-and-sane consumer fireworks are legal in unincorporated Clark County June 28βJuly 4 only under Β§13.04.260. Must carry CA State Fire Marshal seal. All aerial and exploding fireworks remain illegal. This contrasts with total bans in Las Vegas, Henderson, and North Las Vegas.
Open burning is prohibited in urban Clark County. Recreational fires are allowed only in approved fire pits, chimineas, or manufactured devices burning clean fuel, with a max 3 ft by 2 ft pile and an adult present.
Clark County permits recreational fire pits without a permit under DAQ Regulation Β§42.1.2. Must be attended with fire extinguisher available. Gas fire features at commercial occupancies must be certified. 10-foot clearance from combustible construction.
Barbed wire, razor wire, and electrified fences are prohibited in residential zones of unincorporated Clark County. Masonry and stucco are preferred; chain link is allowed by code but often banned by HOA CCandRs.
Clark County requires a building permit for any retaining wall over 4 feet tall measured from footing to top. Engineering is required, and walls holding a surcharge load need a permit regardless of height.
Clark County allows fences up to 6 feet in side and rear yards and 3.5 feet in front yards. Corner lot vision triangles cap height at 3.5 feet. HOAs often impose tighter architectural rules.
Nevada has no good-neighbor fence statute requiring cost-sharing. Clark County treats neighbor fence disputes as civil matters; boundary walls follow the recorded property line and shared walls need mutual agreement.
Under NRS 461A, any residential pool over 18 inches deep in Clark County must have a 5-foot barrier with self-closing, self-latching gates. Mesh barriers and door alarms may serve as secondary barriers.
Unincorporated Clark County requires a building permit for any fence over 6 feet tall and for most masonry or block walls regardless of height. Wood and wrought iron under 6 feet typically need no permit.
Clark County Title 30 Β§30.64.020 limits single-family residential fences to 6 feet maximum. Fences over 3 feet not permitted within front yard setbacks. Gated communities allow 8-foot perimeter walls. Administrative deviation to 8 feet possible.
Sheds under 200 square feet and 12 feet tall generally need no building permit in Clark County but must meet Title 30 setback rules. Larger sheds or any shed with electrical or plumbing require a permit.
Carports in Clark County require a building permit when attached to the house or over 200 square feet. Freestanding metal carports must meet the 90 mph Las Vegas Valley wind design and Title 30 setbacks.
Unincorporated Clark County permits tiny homes under Title 30 (Unified Development Code) following Nevada SB 150 (2021), which requires Clark County to designate at least one zoning district for tiny houses as ADUs, as single-family residences, and in tiny house parks. The county code defines a tiny home as a detached single-family dwelling built on a foundation, minimum 150 sq ft, per the International Residential Code.
Unincorporated Clark County regulates garage conversions to habitable space under Title 30 (Unified Development Code) and the locally adopted 2018 International Residential Code. Conversions to accessory apartments are permitted in the R-U, R-A, R-E, R-D, R-1, R-T, R-2, H-2, and H-1 zones, but unlike California, Clark County does not have a state mandate prohibiting replacement parking when a garage is converted.
Unincorporated Clark County regulates Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs, locally called Accessory Apartments) under Title 30 (Unified Development Code). Recent code amendments have eliminated the minimum lot size requirement, removed the one-bedroom cap, and now explicitly allow basement ADUs. ADUs are permitted in the R-U, R-A, R-E, R-D, R-1, R-T, R-2, H-2, and H-1 zoning districts.
Unincorporated Clark County requires a building permit for all in-ground swimming pools, spas, and any pool exceeding 24 inches deep. Plans, barrier compliance, and drain anti-entrapment per federal VGB Act are required.
Unincorporated Clark County requires a permit for any hot tub or spa holding water deeper than 24 inches. A locking safety cover satisfying ASTM F1346 can substitute for a perimeter fence on many residential spas.
Unincorporated Clark County requires every residential swimming pool, spa, or artificial body of water to be enclosed by a non-climbable, four-sided barrier at least 60 inches high with self-closing, self-latching gates. Rules are codified at Clark County Code Chapter 22.20 (Swimming Pool and Spa Code), which adopts the International Swimming Pool and Spa Code (ISPSC) with Southern Nevada Amendments. The county adopted the 2024 ISPSC effective January 11, 2026.
Unincorporated Clark County regulates residential pool safety through Title 22 Chapter 22.20, which adopts the Southern Nevada Swimming Pool & Spa Code (SNPSC) β based on the International Swimming Pool & Spa Code (ISPSC). SNPSC Section 305 requires a residential barrier at least 60 inches tall (or 8-ft non-climbable measured inside), with no more than 4 inches of clearance below.
Unincorporated Clark County treats an above-ground pool as a regulated swimming pool under Title 22 Chapter 22.20 once it can hold water more than 24 inches deep, triggering the Southern Nevada Swimming Pool & Spa Code. The pool wall can serve as part of the barrier when it is at least 48 inches tall, but a removable or lockable ladder is required to prevent access.
Clark County follows federal EPA RRP rule (40 CFR 745) for lead paint in pre-1978 housing. Contractors must be EPA-certified. Pre-1978 housing is limited in the Las Vegas Valley due to post-1978 growth.
Nevada DIR Mechanical Compliance Section regulates Clark County elevators under NRS 455C. Annual inspections are required. Las Vegas Strip casinos contain thousands of regulated conveyances.
Clark County pest control is regulated by the Nevada Dept of Agriculture under NRS 555.2605. Applicators must be licensed. Common pests include scorpions, black widows, termites, and African honey bees.
Clark County scaffolding follows Nevada OSHA (NAC 618) adopting 29 CFR 1926 Subpart L. Scaffolds over 4 feet need guardrails, fall protection, and competent-person inspection. Desert heat and wind add hazards.
Clark County sets setbacks through Title 30 UDC. R-1 typically requires 20-foot front, 5-foot side, and 15-foot rear setbacks. Master-planned communities often tighten these through Specific Plans.
Clark County caps lot coverage under Title 30 UDC. R-1 zones typically allow 50 percent building coverage. Impervious surface limits apply in FEMA flood zones and sensitive watershed areas.
Clark County caps residential structures at 35 feet in most R-1 zones under Title 30. Height near Harry Reid International Airport is further restricted by FAA Part 77 surfaces and Airport Environs Overlay.
Clark County Title 30.64 regulates outdoor lighting with shielded fixture, BUG rating, and color temperature standards. Dark-sky protections are strongest near Red Rock Canyon and the Spring Mountains.
Clark County addresses light trespass through Title 30.64 lighting standards and Title 14 nuisance rules. Typical property-line limit is 0.1 to 0.5 footcandle. Glare into neighbor windows is prohibited.
There is no rent control in Clark County. Nevada has no statewide rent control and no state law authorizing local rent control ordinances. Landlords may raise rent by any amount with 60 days written notice for month-to-month tenancies under NRS 118A.
Nevada does not have just-cause eviction protections for private residential tenants. Under NRS 40.251, a landlord may terminate a month-to-month tenancy with 30 days no-cause notice (60 days if over 60 years old or disabled). Clark County has no separate protections.
Clark County requires a business license for owners operating residential rental properties in unincorporated areas. Short-term rentals (less than 31 days) require a separate short-term rental license. There is no general landlord inspection registry for long-term rentals.
Portable and standby generators must meet 47 dB day and 37 dB night residential limits at the property line per Title 30. Emergency use during an outage is exempt. Test runs should be daytime only.
Residential HVAC condensers must stay under 47 dB day and 37 dB night at the property line per Title 30. Desert 115 F heat runs AC 24/7, so compliance usually means setback or a sound blanket.
Bars outside the Gaming Enterprise District must meet 47 dB day and 37 dB night at residential property lines per Title 30. Inside the GED Strip, clubs are fully exempt. License review can deny renewal.
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.
Clark County permits garage sale signs on private property with owner consent. Placement in the public right-of-way, on utility poles, traffic signs, or medians is prohibited. Signs must be removed promptly after the sale ends.
Clark County generally permits political campaign signs on private property with size and duration limits. Signs are typically allowed 60 days before an election and must be removed within 7 to 10 days after. First Amendment protections apply.
Clark County requires building and electrical permits for all solar PV installations. Online permits available through the Citizen Access Portal. NV Energy interconnection is governed by PUCN.
Nevada NRS 111.239 and NRS 116.320 are among the strongest solar access laws in the country. Clark County HOAs cannot ban rooftop solar but may impose reasonable aesthetic restrictions under statute.
Nevada NRS 38.310 requires most Clark County HOA disputes to go through NRED mediation or arbitration before court. The NRED Ombudsman provides free information and referral for owners.
Nevada NRS 116.31031 requires Clark County HOAs to give written notice, cure opportunity, and hearing before fines. Selective enforcement violates NRS 116.31065. Fines capped unless health or safety.
Nevada NRS 116.3108 requires Clark County HOA boards to hold open meetings with posted agendas and 10 days advance notice. Executive sessions are sharply limited. Unit owners have broad speaking rights.
Nevada NRS 116.3115 requires Clark County HOA budgets to be ratified in open meeting. Owners can veto by majority vote. Late assessments may trigger non-judicial foreclosure under NRS 116.31162.
Clark County HOAs run architectural review committees under NRS 116.3102 and 116.31065. Owners submit written applications before exterior changes and receive written decisions, typically within 60 days.
Republic Services is the franchised waste hauler for unincorporated Clark County. Residential customers receive weekly trash pickup and bi-weekly recycling pickup. Carts must be placed curbside by the scheduled day and removed the same day.
Republic Services offers bulk disposal pickup to unincorporated Clark County residents, typically with limits on item count and size per event. Items like furniture, mattresses, appliances, and yard debris are eligible; hazardous waste, tires, and construction debris require special facilities.
Clark County offers single-stream recycling through Republic Services, collected in a separate 95-gallon cart every other week. Recycling is voluntary for residential customers but strongly encouraged. Accepted items include paper, cardboard, plastics #1 and #2, glass, and metal cans.
Trash and recycling carts in unincorporated Clark County must be stored out of public view except on collection days. Carts may not be placed at the curb more than 24 hours before pickup and must be removed within 24 hours after collection.
Clark County Title 11 (Abatement of Nuisances) prohibits property blight including junk accumulation, dead landscaping, graffiti, broken structures, and inoperable vehicles. The Code Enforcement Public Response Office investigates complaints and can abate properties at owner expense.
Clark County Title 11 requires owners of vacant lots to control weeds, trash, debris, and illegal dumping. Desert parcels are particular dust and fire risk sources. Uncontrolled vacant lots are a major Code Enforcement complaint category in unincorporated areas.
Clark County Code Title 11 requires residential trash and recycling bins to be stored out of public view between collection days. Improper storage is a common property maintenance complaint enforced by Code Enforcement in the Las Vegas Valley.
Clark County enforces one of the strictest juvenile curfews in Nevada. Minors under 18 are prohibited from public places from 10 pm to 5 am on weekdays and midnight to 5 am on weekends. Curfew near the Las Vegas Strip is even more restrictive.
Clark County regional parks and trails are generally closed from dusk or 10 pm until 6 am or sunrise. Entering parks during curfew hours is a trespass violation. Posted hours vary by individual park.
Clark County participates in NFIP and enforces Title 28 Flood Damage Prevention in FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas. The CCRFCD maintains regional flood channels and drainage master plans.
Clark County grading follows Title 22 and Title 30. Permits required above 50 cubic yards, 5-foot slopes, or in flood zones. Projects over 5 acres need a CCRFCD drainage study using the HCDDM manual.
Clark County erosion control follows the CCRFCD HCDDM and NDEP Construction Stormwater permit. Dust (PM10) is regulated by the Clark County Dept of Environment and Sustainability under Section 90 and 94.
Clark County runs an MS4 NPDES stormwater program through Title 24 and CCRFCD. Construction sites of 1 acre or more need SWPPPs and NDEP Construction Stormwater permits. Outfall drains to Lake Mead.
In unincorporated Clark County, sidewalk repair within the public right-of-way is generally the responsibility of the adjacent property owner. Clark County Public Works oversees specifications and permit requirements for sidewalk work within the right-of-way.
Clark County prohibits obstructing public sidewalks with vegetation, merchandise, signs, trash bins, or vehicles. Vegetation must be trimmed to maintain a clear pedestrian path and minimum overhead clearance. Violations are enforced under Title 11 and Title 18.
Commercial drones in Clark County require an FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. Class B airspace covers most of the Las Vegas Valley, requiring LAANC authorization. The Las Vegas Strip corridor and Nellis AFB airspace are heavily restricted. Local property permissions also apply.
Recreational drones in Clark County must comply with FAA 14 CFR Part 107 and the FAA recreational exception. Flight over Clark County parks is generally prohibited. Las Vegas airspace and the Strip are heavily restricted. Registration is required for drones over 0.55 pounds.
Drone operations are prohibited in all Clark County Parks unless flown in a designated drone-approved park, by special-use permit, or with written permission of the Parks & Recreation Director. As of February 2026, Clark County expanded its list of drone-permitted parks from 8 to 28 following a campaign by local drone hobbyists. Operations must still comply with FAA Part 107 and NRS 493.109's 5-mile airport buffer rule.
Most renovation work in unincorporated Clark County requires a building permit. Cosmetic work (painting, flooring, cabinets) is exempt. Structural changes, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work all require permits. Clark County adopts the International Building Code and International Residential Code.
In unincorporated Clark County, one-story detached accessory sheds of 200 square feet or less do not require a building permit, provided they have no plumbing, electrical, or mechanical systems. Sheds over 200 square feet require a permit. All sheds must comply with zoning setback requirements.
Fences up to 6 feet tall are exempt from building permits in unincorporated Clark County. Fences over 6 feet require a permit. All fences must comply with Title 30 zoning setback and height restrictions. Pool barrier fences have specific safety requirements.
Decks and platforms 30 inches or less above grade are exempt from permits in Clark County when accessory to a single-family dwelling. All patio covers, carports, and shade structures β whether freestanding or attached β require building permits. Concrete slab patios at grade generally do not require permits.
The most common code violations in unincorporated Clark County include unpermitted construction, blighted properties, graffiti, illegal short-term rentals, zoning violations, junk vehicles, and property maintenance issues. Clark County Code Titles 9, 11, 14, 22, and 30 govern these violations.
Clark County Code Enforcement and Public Response Office handles complaints for unincorporated Clark County. Reports can be filed by phone at (702) 455-4191, by fax, by mail, or through the online complaint portal. Anonymous complaints are accepted.
Clark County Code Enforcement prioritizes cases by severity. Health and safety hazards receive expedited attention. Standard complaints are generally investigated within 7β30 days. The enforcement process begins with education and notices before escalating to citations.
Clark County does not have a specific ordinance restricting or banning bamboo. The desert climate of southern Nevada naturally limits bamboo growth, making it uncommon. Bamboo that spreads to neighboring properties could be addressed as a nuisance under Clark County Title 11.
Nevada's Department of Agriculture maintains a noxious weed list (NAC 555.010) that applies to Clark County. Key invasive species in southern Nevada include tamarisk (salt cedar), giant reed, and Sahara mustard. The SNWA Water Smart Plant List guides recommended species for desert landscaping.
Front yard vegetable and edible gardens are permitted in unincorporated Clark County, subject to water conservation requirements. Nevada law (AB 356, 2021) bans nonfunctional turf, and Clark County enforces strict water waste ordinances through the SNWA. Xeriscaped and drip-irrigated gardens are encouraged.
Security cameras are legal on private property in Clark County. Nevada is a one-party consent state for in-person audio recording (NRS 200.620), meaning you can record conversations you are part of. Video surveillance in areas visible to the public is generally legal. Cameras must not record areas where people have a reasonable expectation of privacy (NRS 200.604).
Nevada has a split consent framework: one-party consent for in-person conversations (NRS 200.620) but all-party consent for telephone communications (NRS 200.650). Illegally recording or disclosing conversations is a felony punishable by 1β4 years in prison and up to a $5,000 fine.
In unincorporated Clark County, fences up to 6 feet tall do not require a building permit. Fences over 6 feet require a permit. Clark County Title 30 governs fence height, materials, and setback requirements. Block walls are common in the Las Vegas Valley due to wind conditions.