Find your city's rules in seconds β permit requirements, fees, annual limits, sign rules, and where to apply.
It depends entirely on your city or county. There is no national law requiring garage sale permits β rules are set at the local level. Some cities (like Dallas TX and San Antonio TX) require a permit for every sale. Others (like Houston TX and Chicago IL) don't require one but limit how many sales you can hold per year. And many cities have no rules at all. The safest move: check your city before you set up a table.
Answer 3 questions and we'll tell you whether your city requires a permit and what the rules are.
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Detailed permit guides with fees, rules, sign ordinances, and direct application links.
Apply online through Dallas City Hall. On-premises signs only; no street posting allowed.
Free permit online. Hours strictly 8amβ6pm. One permit per 3-day sale.
$150 citation for no permit. Private property signs only.
No city permit required, but limited to 2 sales/year. HOA rules may still apply.
No permit, but keep a sold-items list for 72 hours post-sale per city ordinance.
Free permit required. Permit number must appear on all sale signs.
State-level overviews with links to every covered city and county.
Everything you need to run a legal, stress-free garage sale.
Answer 3 questions and get a personalized yes/no answer for your city β with fees, limits, and where to apply.
Open Wizard βA printable 20-point checklist covering permits, sign rules, hours, setup, and post-sale cleanup. Print it. Tape it to your table.
Get Free Checklist βSee permit fees, annual limits, and duration rules side-by-side for 50+ cities. Sortable by state, fee, and limit.
Compare Cities βWhere can you post signs? How big? When must they come down? A complete state-by-state sign ordinance guide.
Read the Guide βEverything you need to know before, during, and after your garage sale.
What the law says, how to find your local rules, and what happens if you skip the permit.
Read guide βMany cities treat estate sales and garage sales very differently. Here's what to know.
Read guide βA state-by-state breakdown of annual sale limits β and the fines for going over.
Read guide βReal fine amounts from real cities β and whether code enforcement actually shows up.
Read guide βWhen city rules and HOA rules conflict β which one wins?
Read guide βMany cities now offer instant online permits. Here's exactly which ones and how.
Read guide βIt depends on your city or county β there is no federal or state law that universally requires one. Roughly 40% of U.S. cities require some form of permit or registration. The best way to find out is to search "[your city] garage sale permit" or call your city clerk's office. Use our Permit Wizard for a fast answer on covered cities.
Most garage sale permits are free or under $25. Many cities (Dallas TX, Oklahoma City OK, West Hollywood CA) offer free online permits. Where fees exist, they typically range from $5 to $25. The City of South Gate CA charges $15 (cash only). Bellaire TX charges $15 for garage sales and $25 for estate sales. A few cities charge up to $50 for estate sales.
Most cities that regulate garage sales allow 2 to 4 sales per calendar year per address. Common limits: Dallas TX (2/yr), Fort Worth TX (2/yr), San Antonio TX (4/yr), Oklahoma City OK (2/yr), West Hollywood CA (4/yr), Tavares FL (4/yr). Holding more sales than allowed without an exemption can result in the city classifying you as a commercial vendor, which triggers business license requirements.
In virtually every city: no. Attaching signs to telephone poles, utility poles, traffic signs, trees, or any public property is prohibited and typically results in the sign being removed β sometimes with a fine. Most cities allow one or two signs on the sale property itself (private property) and sometimes at a friend's yard if they give permission. See our complete sign rules guide for your state.
In cities that require permits, code enforcement can issue an administrative citation on-the-spot. Fines typically start at $25β$50 for a first offense and escalate to $100β$500 for repeat violations. Some cities (like Corona CA) have a three-tier escalating fine schedule. Enforcement varies β some cities are strict; others rarely patrol. But the risk isn't worth it when most permits are free and take 5 minutes to get online.
Your HOA and your city have separate and independent rules. You may need to comply with both. When the two conflict, you generally must follow whichever rule is stricter β an HOA can be more restrictive than local law, but cannot authorize something a city ordinance prohibits. Some HOAs ban garage sales entirely; others require advance notice or limit them to designated community sale weekends. Always check your HOA's CC&Rs in addition to city rules.
Get your free compliance checklist β 20 items that cover permits, signs, hours, and day-of rules. Print it. Tape it to your folding table.
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