Halloween will look a little different for one Southern California city.
The city of Beverly Hills is banning house-to-house trick-or-treating to stop the spread of COVID-19, according to the Associated Press.
It was an urgency ordinance that was approved by the city's City Council this week which means no car to car trunk trick-or-treating either.
This comes as the state gave guidance on Halloween and Dia de los Muertos amid the COVID-19 pandemic this week.
On Tuesday night, the city put this out on Twitter: "In an ongoing effort to promote and protect public health, the Beverly Hills City Council tonight approved an urgency ordinance that restricts Halloween activities in the City due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic."
“While I know this is disappointing news, especially to our children, we believe this is the responsible approach to protect the health of the community,” said Mayor Lester Friedman in a press release.
The following will be prohibited in the City of Beverly Hills on Saturday, October 31, 2020:
House-to-house trick or treating, or car-to-car trunk or treating.
Spraying shaving cream on others (except within their home or residence or for licensed barbers on their customers).
Providing candy or other Halloween treats or toys to any person outside their household.
You can't share candy with anybody outside of your household.