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Home Businesses and Zoning

How city or county zoning or planning laws affect your home business

Your local planning or zoning department has probably established zones for stores and offices (commercial zones), factories (industrial zones), and houses (residential zones). In some residential areas -- especially in affluent communities -- local zoning ordinances prohibit all types of business. In the great majority of municipalities, however, residential zoning laws allow small, non-polluting home businesses, as long as any home containing a business is used primarily as a residence and the business activities don't negatively affect neighbors.

Read Your Local Ordinance

To find out whether residential zoning rules allow the home-based business you have in mind, get a copy of your local ordinances from your city or county clerk's office, the city attorney's office, or your public library. (Many cities also make their ordinances available online -- check your city's home page to find out.)

Do independent contractors need business licenses?

As you read the ordinance, keep in mind that zoning ordinances are worded in many different ways to limit business activities in residential areas. Some are vague, allowing "customary home-based occupations." Others allow homeowners to use their houses for a broad list of business purposes (for example, "professions and domestic occupations, crafts, or services"). Still others contain a detailed list of approved occupations, such as "law, dentistry, medicine, music lessons, photography, or cabinetmaking."

Ask the Planning Department

If you read your ordinance and aren't sure whether your business is okay, you may be tempted to ask for a meeting with zoning or planning officials. But it can be a mistake to call attention to your home business plans until you are sure that you'll meet the requirements. One way to cope with this problem is to have a friend who lives nearby, but who doesn't plan to open a home-based business, make detailed inquiries.


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