Building setbacks in unincorporated Sonoma County are set by each zoning district in Chapter 26. In the R1 Low Density Residential district, the front yard must be at least 20 feet (and no structure closer than 45 feet to a road centerline), side yards at least 5 feet, and rear yards at least 20 feet. Other districts have different yards.
Sonoma County's Zoning Code (Chapter 26) sets minimum yard (setback) requirements separately for each zoning district, so the exact numbers depend on your parcel's zone. For the R1 Low Density Residential district, Section 26-20-030(f) requires a front yard of not less than twenty feet (20'), provided that no structure may be located closer than forty-five feet (45') to the centerline of any public road, street or highway; side yards of not less than five feet (5'), except where a side yard abuts a street, in which case it must equal the front yard; and a rear yard of not less than twenty feet (20'). Garages and carports with openings facing the street must be at least 20 feet from the exterior property line, though this can be reduced to as little as 10 feet where most of the block is already improved. Limited architectural projections are allowed: cornices, eaves, bay windows and similar features may extend 2 feet into a required yard, and uncovered porches may extend 6 feet into a front or rear yard and 3 feet into a side yard. Accessory buildings may be placed in required yards on the rear half of the lot subject to limits. Agricultural, rural-residential and resource districts have their own (often larger) setbacks, and parcels adjoining AR or agricultural land are subject to additional buffer requirements. Always confirm your zoning district and any recorded setback lines with Permit Sonoma.
Building within a required yard, too close to a road centerline, or in violation of recorded setback lines can result in a code-enforcement notice, denial or revocation of permits, fines, and an order to remove or relocate the structure. A variance is required to legally reduce a required setback.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Sonoma County, CA
Outdoor music, concerts and special events in unincorporated Sonoma County are regulated through the use-permit and special-event review process rather than ...
Sonoma County, CA
Sonoma County has no enforceable countywide decibel ordinance for everyday noise. The General Plan Noise Element Table NE-2 sets exterior performance standar...
Sonoma County, CA
On County roads in unincorporated Sonoma County, loading and passenger-loading zones are established under Sonoma County Code Sec. 18-3.3 and marked by curb ...
Sonoma County, CA
Sonoma County Code Sec. 18-3.10 prohibits parking any 'oversized vehicle' on a County road or right-of-way for more than six consecutive hours, after which i...
Sonoma County, CA
Fences in unincorporated Sonoma County must meet zoning height limits by yard, sit at least 6 inches outside public rights-of-way and easements, and be measu...
Sonoma County, CA
Residential and K-district fences in unincorporated Sonoma County may use wood, naturalistic composite wood, stone or masonry, stucco/plaster, woven metal or...
See how Sonoma County's setback rules rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.