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Camper/Van parking regulations
We are considering purchasing a van/camper, and are wondering what the regulations are regarding parking in one's driveway. It looks like a regular van, but its a couple inches too long to fit in our garage. thanks...
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and it's registered just like a car no special plates
any one ask its your passenger van |
Neighbour will love you!
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hope you bought way south
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Community Standards. But only if you want an accurate answer.
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Sorry but camping vans are not allowed here.. We have friends the have one and need to keep moving it every 3 days from one drive way to another...
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The rules that specify no campers - do they define "camper?" Because a VW bus is a van - but it is also a camper. It doesn't have a kitchen or toilet, but you can put a twin mattress in the back, and there are drawers underneath the back seat for storage/clothing. I lived in mine for a summer. But it is absolutely positively considered a passenger vehicle.
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Don't register it as a camper-----problem solved.
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:ohdear: Read the rules before you buy and follow them-----problem solved. :icon_wink:
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The title designates the vehicle as a recreational vehicle (plumbing and electrical hookup). Most everyone knows what a B size recreational vehicle is. No one will be fooled thinking it’s a just a van or we would all be doing this instead of storing them in outlying areas. There are several threads on this subject so beware. Mine cost $180 a month just to store off of Highway 44. There was even a news story about a villager moving his van around different areas of The Villages to skirt the 72 hour rule. The Villages took care of that also. |
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what's with the "U" in the word neighbor.... aye? |
Glad I am not your neighbor
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Class C Storage FYI
Our 2020 Tiffin Wayfarer Class C is stored off Route 301 for $112/month under cover with 30 amp hookup included. Also has dump station and wash area included.
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I would ask the dealer what the MSO/Title states. Van? RV? Camper? That would definitely let you know the category it falls within.
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Be courteous to your neighbors. Don't park it in your driveway.
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Be considerate to your neighbors and find a storage facility. Drive around you will not even find many cars parked in driveways. Try and be a good neighbor it will come back 10 fold
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Don’t assume you can get away with anything. Go look around at better areas. No vehicles are left in the driveway. Besides, your neighbors will call in a complaint. Save yourself a problem.
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So untrue. |
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"No Owner of Homesite shall park, store or keep any vehicle except wholly within his driveway, garage or other non-visitor parking spaces. No truck in excess of 3/4 ton, camper, boat trailer or aircraft, or any vehicle other than a private, non-commercial vehicle may be parked in a parking space excepot a boat may be kept in the garage with the garage door closed. No Owner of a Homesite shall repair or restore any motor vehicle, boat trailer, aircraft, or other vehicle on any portion of any Homesite, or on dedicated or reserved areas, except for emergency repairs, and then only to the extent necessary to enable movement thereof to a proper repair facility." In addition to the above stated rule, this subject if further clarified by each District under the External Deed Restriction Standards for your District. Within this document conversion vans with hook-ups for electric and water on rear or side are consideredc recreational vehicles. Furthermore, this same document clarifies the term Parking to state that Campers, Winnebago's and other RV's are allowed on the driveway for not to exceed 72 hours (3 days) provided they are not plugged in or inhabited thus accommodating the packing and unpacking process. Fines for violating this rule are set at $150 plus $50 per day of continued violation. Although the above information specifically addresses my specific District, I think you will find that many of the Districts have very similar restrictions. FYI The Villages operates and maintains at least two designated areas where you can rent a space to store RV's and other motor vehicles plus there are several non-Villages businesses that offer the same service. You might want to check these out. |
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We had a 23 foot motor home and 3 days is the rule in the Villages.
I would see. Bigger ones parked for longer but we lived on Chula Vista and got told to move it. |
I would not do that to my neighbors. Many of us moved here because of the rules and enjoy clean beautiful neighborhoods without the clutter of work truck and vans parked all over. If I was into camping or boating, I would have moved somewhere else with less rules rather than try to finagle or bend the rules for my purpose. But that’s just me. Best of luck.
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van....
we had a class b rv.. we were told it could not stay permanently in the drive-way..
the villages does have a place that you can store the van.. however the place on cr 301 has great storage and also covered storage... |
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Or just maybe you could call. https://www.talkofthevillages.com/fo...hlight=parking |
In Florida, tags for any r/v are same as for passenger vehicle. Therefore, you will not be able to park it in your driveway if it has the features of an r/v, e.g., a visible roof a/c unit, water and sewer tanks/connections, etc. You might be able to get away with it, but if a complaint is made to community standards, you will have to move it and pay to park it off site.
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No vehicle that you use to sleep and camp etc can be kept at your house..rent an RV spot..you can have at your house to load and unload 72 hours..don't take the chance of trying to park at your house..it's not your everyday vehicle
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Be prepared to pay a monthly fee to park it off the reservation. If it is registered as an RV you cannot park it on your property. All you will need to one complaint.
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Anyone can sleep in any covered vehicle. There are students who can't afford room and board at their universities, who have been sleeping in their cars. There are homeless people who live out of their cars. Not vans, not trucks, not RVs. Cars. Just normal cars. Maybe hatch-backs. And as I said previously - I lived in my VW bus, on a twin mattress. The back set pulled down flat, and the mattress fit perfectly on top of it. There were 2 drawers underneath the seat, where I stored my clothing. I had a portable cooler - the kind you had to put ice in to keep it cool, for soda and juice. I parked it in a field that belonged to a farmer who I paid a few dollars every day for the privilege, and used his outhouse and outdoor shower to clean off. It was not a camper. It was not an RV. It didn't have a pop-top or pull-outs or awnings, no plumbing, no electric hookup options. Just a passenger vehicle. And I lived in it for a summer in Canada. I could've done the same with my subaru station wagon, though it wouldn't have been as spacious. A normal car can absolutely be lived in, if circumstances required it. The point is - "if you live in it or sleep or camp in it" is not criteria for what constitutes a camper. A camper is a very specific thing. It is distinguishable from any other car not by how you use it, but rather by how it was purposely designed to be used. |
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So does that mean I can’t park the Subaru in my driveway? |
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Pop-up?
I live on the Historic side. Would a pop-up be allowed to be permanently parked in my driveway as long as most if not all of it is under the carport?
Chris |
Before you start parking it in your driveway let me know where you live In can I have to move
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