Oak Island Water Restrictions 2026
Brunswick County · North Carolina
Published:
Restrictions Active - Stage 3 Water Shortage Warning - Total Irrigation Ban (Mandatory)
0
Days/Week
ALL automated outdoor irrigation is prohibited; there are no watering days
Allowed Hours
Up to $5,000 for repeat violations, added to your utility bill
Max Fine
Find Your Watering Day
This city assigns watering days by property location, not by address digit. Find your assigned days in the table below.
Watering schedule by property location
| Property Location | Watering Day |
|---|
Allowed Watering Hours
Oak Island buys its water from Brunswick County Public Utilities as a wholesale customer, so the county's Stage 3 order reaches Oak Island; confirm any additional Town of Oak Island rules on the town's own site. Brunswick County declared a Stage 3 Water Shortage Warning, mandatory, on July 10, 2026, in force until further notice. ALL automated outdoor irrigation is prohibited: there are no watering days. Hand watering of food gardens under a quarter acre and of existing landscaping is allowed only from 8:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m., using a hand-held container, hand-held hose, or drip irrigation with an automatic shutoff. Also prohibited: filling pools or hot tubs, washing vehicles at home, and power washing buildings or paved surfaces. Restaurants serve water only on request. Exemptions include commercial car washes and dealerships, medical pool use with a doctor's prescription, wastewater effluent spray systems, and vehicles that must be washed to stay operational; commercial power washing may be allowed at the Public Utilities Director's discretion. Irrigation contractors and licensed inspectors may run a system up to five minutes for testing, with dated documentation given to the owner.
Still Allowed
💧 Hand Watering
Allowed with shut-off nozzle. Hours: 8:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m. only, using a hand-held container, hand-held hose, or drip irrigation with an automatic shutoff.
🌿 Drip Irrigation
Exempt from day-of-week limits. Must follow allowed hours.
Fines & Enforcement
Up to $5,000 for repeat violations, added to your utility bill
Brunswick County enforces Stage 3 with escalating penalties added to your next utility bill, reaching up to $5,000 for repeat violations. Confirm the full escalation ladder on the county's own page. Enforcement covers all Brunswick County Public Utilities customers, including wholesale customers, residents, businesses and new developments.
Citations begin July 10, 2026🏠 HOA Rules During Restrictions
North Carolina HOA law (G.S. 143-355.2) prohibits HOAs from fining residents for dormant or brown lawns during active mandatory drought restrictions. Under Brunswick County's Stage 3 total ban, an HOA cannot require irrigation that the county prohibits.
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 Brunswick County Public 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
Oak Island is the largest of Brunswick County's beach towns, a barrier-island community on the southeastern North Carolina coast at peak summer occupancy. Its drinking water is supplied by Brunswick County Public Utilities, which declared a Stage 3 Water Shortage Warning on July 10, 2026 after nearly a third of the county reached exceptional (D4) drought. The escalation was fast: Stage 1 voluntary conservation, then a Stage 2 Mandatory Alert warned on July 2, then the Stage 3 total irrigation ban on July 10, eight days from warning to ban. A county burn ban is also in effect and a wildfire has been active near Ocean Isle Beach and Shallotte.
This deficit has accumulated over the current water year and represents a significant departure from historical averages for the Oak Island area. Water supply reservoirs and aquifer levels are well below seasonal targets, necessitating mandatory conservation measures.
How to Keep Your Lawn Alive During Oak Island Water Restrictions
6 tips tailored for Oak Island homeowners during Stage 3 Water Shortage Warning - Total Irrigation Ban (Mandatory) restrictions.
Automated irrigation is banned entirely in Oak Island; keep new plantings alive by hand between 8 p.m. and 4 a.m. only, and let established lawns go dormant.
The exemption for existing landscaping and food gardens is 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. ONLY, by hand-held hose or container; automated systems may not run at any time.
New sod or seed needs a county approval email in hand before you water it, even during the 28-day establishment period; photos to utilityadmin@brunswickcountync.gov first.
Captured rainwater from a barrel is unrestricted and is the most reliable way to keep a few plants alive under the total ban.
Let established lawns go dormant; coastal Bermuda and Centipede recover once rain returns, and dormancy is survival, not death.
Commercial car washes are exempt, so wash your vehicle there rather than at home, where it is prohibited.
Oak Island Water Restriction FAQs
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What hours can I run my sprinklers in Oak Island?
What are the fines for water violations in Oak Island?
Can I install new sod or seed in Oak Island during restrictions?
When will water restrictions end in Oak Island?
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