Sharjah Municipality has begun enforcing a ban on car parking shades installed outside private property boundaries, with inspection teams carrying out regular checks across residential neighbourhoods and issuing removal notices to violators.
Authorities say any structure that extends beyond a property’s legally defined plot limits is considered a violation, regardless of its design or purpose. Residents found in breach face mandatory removal and financial penalties.
The municipality clarified that permits are readily approved for parking shades built on private property. However, the restriction on external installations has sparked debate among homeowners, many of whom say their villa plots simply do not have enough internal space.
Why the rule exists
The regulation is aimed at maintaining urban order and protecting critical infrastructure such as underground utility networks, water pipelines and electricity cables. Officials stress that off-plot structures can pose safety risks and interfere with long-term urban planning.
Residents push back as summer approaches
On social media, residents have raised several concerns, noting that:
- Many villas have limited space for internal parking shades
- Extreme summer heat makes vehicle protection a necessity
- Families have already spent significant amounts installing the shades
With temperatures expected to exceed 45°C in the coming months, residents argue that shades which do not block traffic, pedestrian walkways or infrastructure should be allowed under a regulated permit system rather than a blanket ban.
What happens next
Sharjah Municipality said it is offering technical support to homeowners, including help with redesigning internal parking layouts and improving vehicle access within private plots.
Residents, meanwhile, are calling for a review of the policy, urging authorities to introduce a flexible regulatory framework that balances urban planning needs with the practical realities faced by families.