STATEWIDE FENCE LAWS IN NORTH CAROLINA

OVERVIEW

This page summarizes North Carolina laws that may apply to residential fence projects statewide, regardless of whether a city or county requires a fence permit.

These statewide requirements operate alongside local ordinances and private restrictions. Local fence rules may add additional limits related to placement, height, materials, and permitting.

This information is provided for general orientation and does not replace official statutes, local ordinances, surveys, HOA documents, or professional guidance.

CALL BEFORE YOU DIG (NORTH CAROLINA 811)

North Carolina’s Underground Utility Safety and Damage Prevention Act establishes a statewide notice requirement before excavation or demolition. Notice for excavation or demolition that does not involve a subaqueous facility must be provided within 3 to 12 full working days before the proposed start date. Notice for work in the vicinity of a subaqueous facility has a different notice window. Notice expires 15 full working days after the date it is given.

This notice requirement applies statewide and is separate from local permitting.

SWIMMING POOL AND SPA BARRIER REQUIREMENTS (NORTH CAROLINA RESIDENTIAL CODE)

North Carolina’s Residential Code includes barrier requirements for residential swimming pools, spas, and hot tubs in Appendix V, Section AV105. The North Carolina Office of State Fire Marshal has published guidance indicating that AV105 barrier requirements are part of the code requirements for these facilities and are addressed as part of the same permit, rather than as a separate barrier permit.

Local governments may also apply adopted building code provisions and related inspection processes for pool and barrier construction.

FENCES AND STOCK LAW (RURAL AND AGRICULTURAL CONTEXT)

North Carolina’s Chapter 68 is titled “Fences and Stock Law.” The historic “Lawful Fences” and “Division Fences” provisions in this chapter have been repealed.

Chapter 68 currently includes statewide livestock provisions. North Carolina law prohibits allowing livestock to run at large.

DAMAGE TO FENCES AND ENCLOSURES

North Carolina has a statewide criminal provision addressing unlawful and willful injury to or removal of fences, walls, and other enclosures in specified contexts.

USING THIS INFORMATION

This page provides general orientation on North Carolina statewide laws that may affect fence projects.

It is not legal advice and does not replace official statutes, local ordinances, permits, surveys, HOA governing documents, or professional guidance.

Rules and interpretations may change, and application depends on facts, property conditions, and governing authority. Before purchasing materials or beginning construction, confirm applicable requirements with the relevant governing office and any applicable private agreements. If this page conflicts with official statutes, published guidance, or direction from an applicable authority, the official sources control.

For legal advice or legal interpretation, consult a licensed attorney.