DELRAY BEACH, FL (Boca Post) (Copyright © 2026) — Delray Beach is planning a public town hall next week as city leaders move forward with a proposed noise ordinance that would set stricter, citywide limits tied to where you are and what time it is.
The meeting is scheduled for Feb. 5 at 5 p.m. at the Vintage Gym at Old School Square, 51 Swinton Avenue, Delray Beach 33444, according to a city notice shared with residents.
At the center of the debate is how the city plans to balance quality-of-life complaints with the nightlife and live music that define downtown. The proposed ordinance sets specific decibel limits based on time of day and location, with tighter standards in residential areas and higher limits in the entertainment district.
Under the draft framework described by the city, the rules would split the day into “active hours” and “quiet hours.” Active hours would run from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. citywide. The entertainment district would get longer active hours on weekends, extending until 1 a.m.
The entertainment district, as defined in the proposal, covers downtown Delray Beach bounded by NE 2nd Street to the north, SE 2nd Street to the south, Federal Highway/6th Avenue to the east, and Swinton Avenue to the west. Those boundaries matter because the district would be treated differently than residential neighborhoods, with different thresholds for daytime and nighttime noise.
City officials have described the proposal as a response to growing complaints as Delray Beach continues to expand. Residential areas would face the strictest limits under the new standards, while downtown would be permitted at higher levels during defined hours.
Enforcement is also changing. Code enforcement officers are expected to use about five sound meters to measure violations, with each meter costing about $7,000. The penalty structure described with the proposal starts with warnings for first-time offenders. Fines would begin at $250, and a second offense would carry a $500 fine.
The planned town hall is positioned as a chance for residents, business owners, and others who spend time downtown to weigh in on how the ordinance is written and how it will work in practice. The boundaries of the entertainment district, the hour cutoffs, and what gets prioritized for enforcement are all points that have already drawn public reaction.
Some criticism has focused on the fear that stricter enforcement could change the feel of the downtown core. One resident Boca Post spoke to questioned whether top city leadership would attend the meeting and argued the rules could hurt bars and restaurants that rely on live music. He supported lower noise in residential areas and restrictions on loud cars citywide, but opposed tighter controls on music inside the entertainment district, calling live music and nightlife a major tourism draw.
Others, including residents who live close to the Avenue, have said the problem is broader than music alone and that the city needs clearer lines and stronger expectations for behavior spilling out beyond the core blocks. In a Facebook exchange about the same proposal, some have questioned how the city would define where the entertainment area begins and ends, arguing the boundary should be tighter for residents than for businesses. One person also raised concerns about issues that can follow crowds after patrons leave the main strip, including public urination in alleys, parking garages, and near dumpsters.
For residents trying to track what happens next, the key issue is that the ordinance is still in the proposed stage, but it is moving forward. The town hall is one of the main public touchpoints laid out so far. After that, the city would be positioned to move ahead with finalizing standards, enforcement approach, and how the entertainment district is treated compared with residential areas.
People planning to attend should know the basics: the meeting is Feb. 5 at 5 p.m., at the Vintage Gym at Old School Square, 51 Swinton Avenue. The topic is the city’s noise ordinance, and the discussion is expected to center on decibel limits, different rules by location, the active/quiet hour framework, and how violations would be measured and penalized.

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