Shed permit rules in Shasta County, CA — also referred to as storage shed, backyard shed, or accessory building regulations — set size limits, setbacks, and when a building permit is required.
Storage sheds in unincorporated Shasta County are 'residential accessory buildings' under Zoning Code Section 17.88.140. The combined floor area of all accessory structures on a lot with a home may not exceed 2,500 square feet, and up to two detached structures under 120 square feet each are excluded from that total. Sheds use the zone district's yard setbacks.
Shasta County Code Section 17.88.140 defines residential accessory buildings to include private storage buildings, greenhouses, garages and carports. On a lot with a legally established residence, the combined total floor area of all accessory structures (attached and detached) may not exceed 2,500 square feet, excluding 600 square feet of attached garage space and excluding up to two legal detached structures of less than 120 square feet each, unless an administrative permit is approved. On a lot without an established residence, accessory structures are capped at 1,000 square feet combined (including sub-120-sq-ft buildings) and the owner must record an agreement that the buildings will not be used for human occupancy. Sheds cannot be used as living space; a habitable unit is an ADU or guest house under separate sections. Section 17.88.140 does not itself fix shed setbacks; a shed must meet the yard (setback) and height limits of the underlying zone district (see Sections 17.84.020 Yards and 17.84.030 Height limits). Because rules vary by zone and lot, and a building permit is generally required, verify your parcel's standards with Shasta County Resource Management (Building and Planning).
Exceeding the 2,500-square-foot combined accessory-structure cap without an administrative permit, using a shed for sleeping or living, building on a lot with no legal residence without the recorded no-occupancy agreement, or violating zone setbacks are code violations that can require permits, downsizing, or removal.
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See how Shasta County's shed rules rules stack up against other locations.
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