You’re browsing publicly — statutes and search stay open. A free account adds bookmarks, document upload, side-by-side compare, and forum posting (header: Log in or Sign up).
Educational reference only — not legal advice
Common Elements is not a law firm and does not provide legal services. Plain-English summaries, topic guides, and synced statutory text help you find the right citation faster — always confirm the current official version on the official leg.state.fl.us (statutes) or flrules.org (administrative rules) before relying on any citation.
Limitations regarding regulation of certain roads, streets,
alleys or other thoroughfares; permissible regulation of parking or storage of
certain vehicles.
����� 1. In a common-interest community which is
not gated or enclosed and the access to which is not restricted or controlled
by a person or device, the executive board shall not and the governing
documents must not provide for the regulation of any road, street, alley or
other thoroughfare the right-of-way of which is accepted by the State or a
local government for dedication as a road, street, alley or other thoroughfare
for public use.
����� 2. Except as otherwise provided in
subsection 3, the provisions of subsection 1 do not preclude an association
from adopting, and do not preclude the governing documents of an association
from setting forth, rules that reasonably restrict the parking or storage of
recreational vehicles, watercraft, trailers or commercial vehicles in the
common-interest community to the extent authorized by law. The governing
documents of an association may authorize the executive board of the
association to impose a fine pursuant to NRS
116.31031 for any violation of the rules authorized pursuant to this
subsection.
����� 3. In any common-interest community, the
executive board shall not and the governing documents must not prohibit a
person from:
����� (a) Parking a utility service vehicle that has a
gross vehicle weight rating of 20,000 pounds or less:
������������
In an area designated for parking for
visitors, in a designated parking area or common parking area, or on the
driveway of the unit of a subscriber or consumer, while the person is engaged
in any activity relating to the delivery of public utility services to
subscribers or consumers; or
������������
In an area designated for parking for
visitors, in a designated parking area or common parking area, or on the
driveway of his or her unit, if the person is:
������������������ (I) A unit�s owner or a tenant of a
unit�s owner; and
������������������ (II) Bringing the vehicle to his or
her unit pursuant to his or her employment with the entity which owns the
vehicle for the purpose of responding to emergency requests for public utility
services; or
����� (b) Parking a law enforcement vehicle or
emergency services vehicle:
������������
In an area designated for parking for
visitors, in a designated parking area or common parking area, or on the
driveway of the unit of a person to whom law enforcement or emergency services
are being provided, while the person is engaged in his or her official duties;
or
������������
In an area designated for parking for
visitors, in a designated parking area or common parking area, or on the
driveway of his or her unit, if the person is:
������������������ (I) A unit�s owner or a tenant of a
unit�s owner; and
������������������ (II) Bringing the vehicle to his or
her unit pursuant to his or her employment with the entity which owns the
vehicle for the purpose of responding to requests for law enforcement services
or emergency services.
����� 4. An association may require that a
person parking a utility service vehicle, law enforcement vehicle or emergency
services vehicle as set forth in subsection 3 provide written confirmation from
his or her employer that the person is qualified to park his or her vehicle in
the manner set forth in subsection 3.
����� 5. As used in this section:
����� (a) �Emergency services vehicle� means a vehicle:
������������
Owned by any governmental agency or
political subdivision of this State; and
������������
Identified by the entity which owns
the vehicle as a vehicle used to provide emergency services.
����� (b) �Law enforcement vehicle� means a vehicle:
������������
Owned by any governmental agency or
political subdivision of this State; and
������������
Identified by the entity which owns
the vehicle as a vehicle used to provide law enforcement services.
����� (c) �Utility service vehicle� means any motor
vehicle:
������������
Used in the furtherance of repairing,
maintaining or operating any structure or any other physical facility necessary
for the delivery of public utility services, including, without limitation, the
furnishing of electricity, gas, water, sanitary sewer, telephone, cable or
community antenna service; and
������������
Except for any emergency use, operated
primarily within the service area of a utility�s subscribers or consumers,
without regard to whether the motor vehicle is owned, leased or rented by the
utility.
Synced from the Florida Legislature’s official site. Verify the current version before citing.
Community discussion
No discussions tagged with NRS 116.350 yet. Be the first to ask a question or share how your association handles this.
Free account — read statutes without signing in; posting needs an account.
Discussing Limitations regarding regulation of certain roads, streets,
alleys or other thoroughfares; permissible regulation of parking or storage of
certain vehicles.
Your governing documents
Statute pages break long law into searchable subsections. Upload your CC&Rs, bylaws, and rules for the same experience — private to your account.
Find “budget” or “fines” in your docs
Search docs and statutes side by side — no AI, same keyword index
Common Elements is the always-on industry expo for community associations — vendor hall, professional community, and structured procurement, open 24/7. It complements the management and accounting software you already use; it does not replace it.
Reference only — not legal advice. Verify the current official text on leg.state.fl.us before citing. Printed from Common Elements (May 22, 2026).