The Delray Beach Planning & Zoning Advisory Board on May 18 voted to recommend that the City Commission amend the land development regulations to make pet grooming (including bathing) a principal use in multiple commercial and industrial districts.
Senior Planner Alexis Rosenberg explained the change (file 592‑2026) would extract “pet grooming” from the broader domestic animal services definition and allow grooming to proceed through an administrative zoning certificate process rather than a conditional‑use hearing, while retaining conditional‑use review for any activity with an outdoor component, overnight boarding, or other uses that could increase noise or nuisance potential. The city previously moved veterinary clinics to a principal‑use process after staff concluded they were less intensive than other domestic animal services.
Rosenberg said the code already requires standards for domestic animal services — such as parking requirements, hours of operation, solid‑core doors and walls for noise mitigation and separation distances from residential zoning when outdoor activity is involved — and those protections would remain. Staff clarified daytime boarding and training would remain conditional uses in districts where they are currently allowed; pet hotels, shelters, training and daytime boarding would become principal uses in certain industrial districts only when no outdoor area is proposed.
Board members asked about noise and barking concerns, and Rosenberg noted that the LDR includes a 300‑foot separation requirement from residentially zoned properties for outdoor facilities and that indoor grooming operations are subject to construction and hours requirements to reduce noise transfer. The board recommended the ordinance to the City Commission by a 6–0 vote.
Next steps: the amendment will be scheduled for first and second reading before the City Commission; staff expects public notice and continued application of operational standards for any domestic animal service.