Landscaping Regulations and HOA Rules in North Carolina

Landscaping in North Carolina is shaped by an overlapping framework of state statutes, local municipal ordinances, and private homeowners association (HOA) covenants. Property owners and landscaping contractors must navigate these layers simultaneously, as a project that satisfies state law may still violate a local code or HOA declaration. This page defines the regulatory framework, explains how each layer functions, identifies common conflict scenarios, and establishes the decision boundaries that determine which authority governs a given situation.

Definition and scope

North Carolina landscaping regulations refer to the body of rules — drawn from state law, county codes, municipal ordinances, and private HOA governing documents — that restrict or direct how land is planted, graded, maintained, and modified. These rules govern activities as broad as impervious surface coverage and tree removal, and as narrow as grass height limits and approved plant palettes.

Scope coverage: This page covers regulations applicable to private residential and commercial properties within North Carolina's jurisdiction. Federal rules (such as wetlands protections under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act, administered by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers) are adjacent but not covered here in detail. Note that as of October 4, 2019, federal law was amended to permit States to transfer certain funds from the clean water revolving fund to the drinking water revolving fund under specified circumstances; projects near water features or involving stormwater infrastructure should verify whether this affects applicable federal funding or program requirements. Properties located in another state do not fall under North Carolina's regulatory reach. HOA rules discussed here apply only to communities that have filed a valid declaration under N.C. General Statute Chapter 47F (Planned Community Act) or Chapter 47C (Condominium Act). Properties outside an HOA are not subject to private covenant enforcement.

For a broader orientation, the landscaping services overview and the conceptual overview of North Carolina landscaping services provide context on what services operate within this regulatory environment.

How it works

North Carolina does not maintain a single statewide landscaping code. Instead, authority is distributed across three distinct levels:

Level 1 — State law. The North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (NCDA&CS) regulates pesticide and herbicide application under the North Carolina Pesticide Law of 1971 (N.C.G.S. Chapter 143, Article 52). Commercial applicators must hold a valid pesticide license issued by NCDA&CS. The North Carolina Licensing Board for General Contractors and the North Carolina Landscape Contractors' Licensing Board govern contractor licensing — a separate topic addressed in North Carolina landscaping contractor licensing.

Level 2 — Local ordinances. Counties and municipalities set rules on grading permits, tree preservation, grass height, and irrigation restrictions. For example, Charlotte's Unified Development Ordinance includes specific buffer yard and canopy requirements. Wake County and Mecklenburg County each operate separate erosion and sedimentation control programs aligned with the N.C. Sedimentation Pollution Control Act administered by the N.C. Department of Environmental Quality (NCDEQ).

Level 3 — HOA covenants. Homeowners associations operating under N.C.G.S. Chapter 47F may adopt Architectural Review Committee (ARC) rules that regulate plant species, lawn maintenance schedules, fence placement, and hardscape materials. HOA rules are private contractual obligations, not public law, but they are enforced through civil remedies including fines, liens, and legal action.

Common scenarios

The following structured breakdown identifies the 5 most frequent regulatory conflict points in North Carolina landscaping:

  1. Grass height violations. Municipalities commonly set maximum turf height at 8–12 inches. Violations can trigger municipal code enforcement action independent of any HOA rule. HOAs often impose a stricter threshold — frequently 6 inches — creating a two-tier enforcement reality on the same property.

  2. Tree removal on private property. No blanket statewide permit is required for tree removal on private land, but Charlotte, Raleigh, and Cary each maintain tree ordinances requiring permits for removal of trees above a specified diameter at breast height (DBH), often 12 inches DBH or greater. HOA declarations may independently prohibit removal of specimen trees without ARC approval.

  3. Irrigation installation and water use. North Carolina irrigation system installation work requires contractor licensing for backflow prevention devices under N.C.G.S. §87-21. During drought declarations by the N.C. Division of Water Resources, local water authorities may impose mandatory restrictions that override standard HOA watering schedules. Projects involving public water system connections should be aware that, effective October 4, 2019, States may transfer certain funds from the clean water revolving fund to the drinking water revolving fund under qualifying circumstances, which may affect local water infrastructure funding and program availability.

  4. Impervious surface limits. Watershed protection overlay districts — particularly those protecting Jordan Lake and Falls Lake — restrict impervious surface coverage, sometimes to 24% of a lot, under 15A NCAC 02B rules. Hardscape additions, including patios and driveways, count toward this cap. North Carolina hardscape services operators in these districts must verify coverage calculations before installation.

  5. Mulching and planting bed rules. HOAs routinely specify approved mulch colors or materials. North Carolina mulching services contractors installing non-approved materials on HOA lots expose the property owner to covenant enforcement action.

Decision boundaries

Distinguishing which authority governs requires applying a clear hierarchy:

Practical compliance means checking local ordinance first, then verifying HOA covenants, and confirming state licensing requirements for any contractor engaged. Projects near water features should also consult North Carolina erosion control landscaping guidance given NCDEQ's active enforcement posture in riparian buffer zones. Additionally, projects intersecting with public water or wastewater infrastructure should note the October 4, 2019 federal authorization permitting States to transfer certain funds from the clean water revolving fund to the drinking water revolving fund, which may influence available state funding for water-related landscaping or stormwater infrastructure improvements.

References

📜 5 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026  ·  View update log

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