Ruskin residents now face tighter watering limits as Hillsborough drought rules take hold
Ruskin FL – One-day-per-week watering, narrower overnight irrigation windows, and added limits on pressure washing and fountains are now in effect.
Ruskin residents in unincorporated Hillsborough County now face tighter outdoor watering rules that took effect April 3, and this is more than the usual dry-season reminder to watch the sprinkler timer.
Under the current drought order, most homes, rentals, HOA-governed neighborhoods, and small business properties in Ruskin are limited to one assigned irrigation day per week, with narrower overnight watering windows than before. The rules are scheduled to run through July 1, 2026, unless regional water officials reduce or extend them based on conditions.
Who the rules cover in Ruskin
For Ruskin readers, the key local framework is unincorporated Hillsborough County. County guidance says the restrictions apply to all residents there, including people who irrigate from private wells rather than a public utility connection.
The county also notes that residents inside Tampa, Plant City, and Temple Terrace must follow their own city schedules. For most Ruskin households, though, the county schedule is the one that matters.
What your watering schedule looks like now
Outdoor irrigation is limited to one day a week based on the last digit of the street address: 0 or 1 on Monday, 2 or 3 on Tuesday, 4 or 5 on Wednesday, 6 or 7 on Thursday, and 8 or 9 on Friday.
Common areas, mixed-address properties, and sites without a clear address can water only on Fridays. That matters for apartment complexes, shopping areas, office properties, and HOA-maintained landscaping in and around Ruskin.
The tighter time windows are just as important. Conventional irrigation such as sprinklers and overhead spraying is allowed only from 12:01 a.m. to 4 a.m. or from 8 p.m. to 11:59 p.m. on the assigned day. Properties under 1 acre may use only one of those two windows, not both.
That means residents and property managers should reset automatic irrigation timers now rather than assume older twice-a-week settings are still allowed.
Less obvious restrictions households and property managers should know
The county and the Southwest Florida Water Management District say the drought order goes beyond lawn watering.
Hand watering and micro-irrigation for plants, shrubs, and beds are limited to before 8 a.m. or after 6 p.m. Decorative fountain use is restricted unless the system is properly maintained and recirculates water, uses reclaimed water, or provides a necessary water-quality benefit. Even then, aesthetic fountain operation is limited to four hours a day.
Non-commercial annual aesthetic pressure washing is also prohibited during the order. Pressure washing is still allowed for health and safety needs, and preparation for painting or sealing remains allowed under the district order. Car washing at home is not banned outright, but it is limited to the property’s lawn-watering day and requires a hose with a shutoff nozzle.
County guidance also says HOA enforcement activity is curtailed during the shortage order, especially where aesthetic landscape expectations would push residents toward extra water use or replacement planting.
Why officials say the shortage is still serious
Hillsborough County says the area is in one of its driest stretches in years, and the water management district reported a 13.7-inch regional rainfall deficit compared with the average 12-month total when the order was adopted.
The National Weather Service Tampa Bay said on April 2 that even after recent rain, there had not been meaningful improvement in the long-term drought. Hillsborough County remains in extreme drought, with rivers, ponds, and other water resources still unusually low for this time of year.
That is why officials are stressing conservation now, not later. Outdoor watering makes up a large share of household water use, and the region’s public water supplies are already unusually low heading into hotter months.
What to do next
For Ruskin residents, the practical steps are straightforward: confirm the correct watering day, reprogram irrigation systems, check whether shared landscaping falls under Friday-only rules, and read the exceptions carefully before doing things like pressure washing or running decorative fountains.
The next deadline to watch is July 1. Officials have not said the shortage will definitely end then, only that the current order runs through that date unless conditions improve enough to relax it or stay bad enough to extend it.
Sources
- Hillsborough County Find My Watering Days and Times
- Hillsborough County drought notice
- Hillsborough County April 3 restrictions notice
- Southwest Florida Water Management District Phase III order
- National Weather Service Tampa Bay drought information statement issued April 2, 2026
- Spectrum Bay News 9 water restrictions report
- Hillsborough County watering days and times
- National Weather Service Tampa Bay drought information
- Weather
- Hcfl