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Year-Round Mandatory – SFWMD Rule 40E-24, F.A.C.

West Palm Beach Water Restrictions 2026

Palm Beach County · Florida

Published:

Restrictions Active - Year-Round Mandatory – SFWMD Rule 40E-24, F.A.C.

2

Days/Week

Before 10:00 AM

Allowed Hours

$50 to $500 escalating per local ordinance

Max Fine

Find Your Watering Day

Enter the last digit of your street address:

View full address schedule table
Address EndingWatering Day
Odd addressesWednesday & Saturday
Even addressesThursday & Sunday
HOA common areas (no address number)Tuesday & Friday
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Reset Your Sprinkler Timer
  1. Press and hold the left arrow button for 2 seconds to enter programming mode
  2. Set current day and time first
  3. Set start time to your allowed hour (e.g. 8:00 PM)
  4. Set run time per zone (15–25 minutes for most lawns)
  5. Set watering days to your assigned day ONLY - deselect all others

Allowed Watering Hours

Before 10:00 AMAfter 4:00 PM

SFWMD Rule 40E-24 sets a year-round mandatory schedule for landscape irrigation in southeast Florida: lawn irrigation is limited to 2 days per week, with no sprinkler use any day between 10:00 AM and 4:00 PM. Odd-numbered addresses water Wednesday and Saturday; even-numbered addresses water Thursday and Sunday; common areas (HOA-managed greenspace, multi-family without unique address numbers) water Tuesday and Friday. Reclaimed water and well water customers follow the same schedule unless their utility ordinance grants an explicit exemption. Hand watering with a shut-off nozzle, drip irrigation, soaker hoses, and microirrigation are permitted any day, any hour. Vehicle washing must occur over a pervious surface or use an auto shut-off nozzle. Pressure washing is restricted to registered professionals.

Still Allowed

💧 Hand Watering

Allowed with shut-off nozzle. Hours: Hand watering with a shut-off nozzle is permitted any day outside the 10 AM to 4 PM blackout window. Drip irrigation, soaker hoses, and microirrigation are permitted any time..

🌿 Drip Irrigation

Exempt from day-of-week limits. Must follow allowed hours.

Fines & Enforcement

$50 to $500 escalating per local ordinance

Each city's code-enforcement office handles violations. Typical first-offence fines run $50 to $250 (warning or citation depending on city ordinance); repeat offences escalate to $500 or more. Some cities (Miami, Fort Lauderdale) use water-meter shut-off as the ultimate enforcement step. Year-round rules apply 365 days a year; there is no drought trigger required.

Citations begin Permanent (Rule 40E-24 in force since the 1990s)

🏠 HOA Rules During Restrictions

Florida Statute §373.185 prohibits HOAs from fining residents for landscape practices that conserve water, including drought-stressed brown lawns and Florida-Friendly Landscaping. The statute applies under year-round SFWMD restrictions even without a formal drought declaration. HOAs cannot require irrigation schedules that violate SFWMD Rule 40E-24; state and district law preempts deed restrictions.

If your homeowners association sends a violation notice for a dormant or brown lawn during the current restriction period, respond in writing citing the applicable law and include a copy of the City of West Palm Beach Utilities's current restriction order. Most HOAs will rescind the notice once they are made aware of the legal protections in place. If the issue persists, contact your county’s code enforcement division for assistance.

Why These Restrictions Exist

West Palm Beach, FL is part of the South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) and operates under year-round mandatory irrigation restrictions established by SFWMD Rule 40E-24, Florida Administrative Code. These restrictions are permanent and apply every day of every year, they are not a drought declaration and have no expiration date. Most South Florida residents do not realise the 2-day-per-week schedule is the baseline rule rather than a drought response.

Year-round Rule 40E-24 schedule

  • Odd-numbered addresses water Wednesday and Saturday
  • Even-numbered addresses water Thursday and Sunday
  • Common areas (HOA greenspace, multi-family without unique address numbers) water Tuesday and Friday
  • Sprinkler irrigation prohibited every day between 10:00 AM and 4:00 PM
  • Hand watering with a shut-off nozzle, drip irrigation, soaker hoses, and microirrigation are permitted any time

West Palm Beach's water supply is distinctive among South Florida's larger cities: it draws from surface water rather than the Biscayne Aquifer. The primary sources are Clear Lake (a former gravel pit converted to municipal storage) and the Loxahatchee Slough, with backup from the regional canal system. This makes West Palm Beach more sensitive to surface-water drought conditions than Biscayne-Aquifer cities like Miami and Hollywood, although year-round Rule 40E-24 rules apply identically.

West Palm Beach is the seat of Palm Beach County and is functionally distinct from the island town of Palm Beach (the wealthy enclave across the Intracoastal Waterway, with its own utility). CityPlace (Rosemary Square) anchors the downtown; the Norton Museum of Art and the Mounts Botanical Garden provide major public-landscape benchmarks; the Palm Beach Outlets and Clematis Street districts pull substantial commercial activity. Surface-water dependence makes the city particularly attentive to Lake Okeechobee management decisions by the Army Corps of Engineers.

Separately, in January 2026 SFWMD declared a Modified Phase I Water Shortage Warning for Lee and Collier counties, a voluntary additional reduction. That advisory does not apply to West Palm Beach or change the year-round schedule here. Monitor City of West Palm Beach Utilities (https://www.wpb.org/government/public-utilities) and SFWMD (https://www.sfwmd.gov/our-work/water-shortage) for any future district-wide escalation.

Rainfall Deficit: South Florida year-round mandatory rules are not drought-driven; they reflect permanent regional water-supply limits. The Biscayne Aquifer (most of Miami-Dade and southern Broward) is shallow, vulnerable to salt-water intrusion, and threatened by sea-level rise. Lake Okeechobee feeds Palm Beach and inland surface-water systems and is governed by Army Corps of Engineers regulation schedules.

This deficit has accumulated over the current water year and represents a significant departure from historical averages for the West Palm Beach area. Water supply reservoirs and aquifer levels are well below seasonal targets, necessitating mandatory conservation measures.

How to Keep Your Lawn Alive During West Palm Beach Water Restrictions

10 tips tailored for West Palm Beach homeowners during Year-Round Mandatory – SFWMD Rule 40E-24, F.A.C. restrictions.

Year-round Rule 40E-24 is in effect every day in West Palm Beach, programme your controller permanently: odd addresses Wednesday and Saturday, even addresses Thursday and Sunday, no irrigation 10 AM to 4 PM.

Common-area HOA landscape (without a unique address) waters Tuesday and Friday. If you manage an HOA common area, set the controller for those days specifically.

Hand watering with a shut-off nozzle, drip irrigation, soaker hoses, and microirrigation are permitted any day outside the 10 AM to 4 PM blackout, prioritise mature trees, food crops, and high-value shrubs over turf.

St. Augustine grass is the dominant South Florida turf and the most water-hungry. Under year-round 2-day-per-week rules, expect periods of light browning during dry months, this is normal dormancy, not death.

Bahia is the most drought-tolerant warm-season grass for South Florida and uses ~40 percent less irrigation than St. Augustine. Worth considering for over-seeding or replacement on bare or low-traffic areas.

Florida law (since 1991) requires a working rain sensor on all automatic irrigation systems, verify yours is functional. A stuck rain sensor that does not skip cycles after rain is one of the most common causes of citations.

Mow at 3.5 to 4 inches and mulch clippings, taller grass shades the soil and reduces evapotranspiration in the South Florida humid heat. Sharp blades only; ragged cuts increase moisture loss.

Florida-Friendly Landscaping is protected under FL Statute §373.185 and is an excellent way to reduce reliance on the 2-day-per-week schedule. Native ground covers (sunshine mimosa, perennial peanut) need almost no supplemental water.

Skip your scheduled cycle after any 0.5 inch of rainfall in the prior 48 hours. South Florida's afternoon thunderstorms (May to October) frequently make irrigation unnecessary.

Monitor City of West Palm Beach Utilities (https://www.wpb.org/government/public-utilities) and SFWMD (https://www.sfwmd.gov/our-work/water-shortage) for any local-ordinance updates or district-wide advisories.

West Palm Beach Water Restriction FAQs

What days can I water my lawn in West Palm Beach?
Your watering day in West Palm Beach depends on your street address. Addresses ending in Odd addresses can water on Wednesday and Saturday. Addresses ending in Even addresses can water on Thursday and Sunday. Addresses ending in HOA common areas (no address number) can water on Tuesday and Friday. You are limited to 2 days per week during the current Year-Round Mandatory – SFWMD Rule 40E-24, F.A.C. restrictions.
What hours can I run my sprinklers in West Palm Beach?
Under the current restrictions, sprinkler irrigation in West Palm Beach is only allowed during the following hours: Before 10:00 AM, After 4:00 PM. SFWMD Rule 40E-24 sets a year-round mandatory schedule for landscape irrigation in southeast Florida: lawn irrigation is limited to 2 days per week, with no sprinkler use any day between 10:00 AM and 4:00 PM. Odd-numbered addresses water Wednesday and Saturday; even-numbered addresses water Thursday and Sunday; common areas (HOA-managed greenspace, multi-family without unique address numbers) water Tuesday and Friday. Reclaimed water and well water customers follow the same schedule unless their utility ordinance grants an explicit exemption. Hand watering with a shut-off nozzle, drip irrigation, soaker hoses, and microirrigation are permitted any day, any hour. Vehicle washing must occur over a pervious surface or use an auto shut-off nozzle. Pressure washing is restricted to registered professionals. Watering outside these hours, even on your scheduled day, is a violation and may result in a citation.
What are the fines for water violations in West Palm Beach?
Each city's code-enforcement office handles violations. Typical first-offence fines run $50 to $250 (warning or citation depending on city ordinance); repeat offences escalate to $500 or more. Some cities (Miami, Fort Lauderdale) use water-meter shut-off as the ultimate enforcement step. Year-round rules apply 365 days a year; there is no drought trigger required. The City of West Palm Beach Utilities and local Palm Beach County enforcement officers conduct patrols and respond to complaints. Keep your irrigation timer set to your assigned day and hours to avoid citations.
Can I install new sod or seed in West Palm Beach during restrictions?
New sod, seed, or landscape installations receive a 60-day establishment window: any day for the first 30 days, every other day for the next 30 days, regardless of address-digit assignment. After day 60 the installation falls under the standard 2-day-per-week year-round schedule.
When will water restrictions end in West Palm Beach?
The current Year-Round Mandatory – SFWMD Rule 40E-24, F.A.C. restrictions in West Palm Beach are effective from Permanent (Rule 40E-24 in force since the 1990s) through Year-round; no expiration. Always in force regardless of drought.. However, the restrictions may be extended if drought conditions persist or eased if significant rainfall improves water supply levels. Monitor the City of West Palm Beach Utilities website for updates.
Why does West Palm Beach use surface water when other South FL cities use the Biscayne Aquifer?
West Palm Beach's geography placed it close to surface-water sources, Clear Lake (a former gravel pit converted to municipal storage) and the Loxahatchee Slough, that proved more economical to develop than Biscayne Aquifer wells of the size the city would have needed. The choice dates to early-20th-century infrastructure decisions and has been maintained because the surface system, while sensitive to drought, integrates well with regional canal management and Lake Okeechobee deliveries. The year-round 40E-24 schedule applies regardless of source.
Is my West Palm Beach lawn schedule different from Palm Beach (the island)?
Functionally identical. West Palm Beach (the mainland city) is served by City of West Palm Beach Utilities; Palm Beach (the island town across the Intracoastal Waterway) is served by Palm Beach County Water Utilities Department. Both fall under SFWMD Rule 40E-24 with the same year-round 2-day-per-week schedule. The two municipalities are separate political entities with separate utilities, but identical SFWMD-set watering rules apply.
Does the Norton Museum gardens irrigation follow the same restrictions?
Yes. Public and institutional landscape (Norton Museum gardens, Mounts Botanical Garden, City Hall medians, Clematis Street tree wells) follows the SFWMD Rule 40E-24 year-round schedule. Most public landscape qualifies as common-area (no unique address number) and waters Tuesday and Friday. Drip and microirrigation are permitted any time outside 10 AM to 4 PM, which is what most botanical-quality landscape uses.
What happens if Clear Lake or the Loxahatchee Slough runs low?
If surface-water sources run low, SFWMD has authority to declare an emergency Phase I, II, III, or IV water shortage that would impose additional restrictions on top of the year-round 40E-24 framework. The 2026 Modified Phase I Water Shortage Warning for Lee and Collier counties (issued January 2026) is an example of that escalation pathway, although it does not currently apply to Palm Beach County. West Palm Beach's surface-water dependence makes it an early-warning city for regional supply stress.
I'm in unincorporated Palm Beach County, not WPB city, different rules?
Unincorporated Palm Beach County is served by Palm Beach County Water Utilities Department, not the City of West Palm Beach Utilities, but both fall under SFWMD Rule 40E-24 with identical year-round 2-day-per-week rules. The watering schedule (odd Wednesday/Saturday, even Thursday/Sunday, common areas Tuesday/Friday, no irrigation 10 AM to 4 PM) is the same. Local fines and enforcement may differ; check your bill to confirm your utility.

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