Sacramento County Code Enforcement responds to complaints based on severity. Initial investigations typically begin within 5-10 business days for standard complaints. Health and safety hazards receive priority response. The division processes over 6,000 investigations annually.
Sacramento County Code Enforcement prioritizes complaints based on public health and safety risk. Dangerous building conditions, hazardous materials, and immediate safety threats receive priority investigation, often within days. Standard property maintenance complaints, zoning violations, and junk vehicle issues typically receive initial investigation within 5-10 business days. The enforcement process follows a structured timeline: initial site inspection and documentation, followed by a Notice of Violation giving the property owner a specific timeframe to correct (typically 30 days for standard violations). If not corrected, the case escalates to an Administrative Hearing, where additional time and penalties may be assessed. Complex cases involving legal proceedings, property liens, or forced abatement can take months to fully resolve. The division has seen increasing caseloads, processing over 6,000 citizen complaints per year, which can affect response times during peak periods.
Non-compliance after the initial notice period triggers escalating enforcement. Administrative hearing decisions can result in daily fines, typically $100-$500 per day depending on violation severity. Abatement costs performed by the county are charged to the property owner and may become a lien on the property.
Sacramento County, CA
Unincorporated Sacramento County Zoning Code restricts RV, boat, and trailer storage in residential zones. Generally allowed in side or rear yards with scree...
Sacramento County, CA
Unincorporated Sacramento County does not generally prohibit overnight street parking in residential areas. The CVC 22651(k) 72-hour rule applies. Some comme...
Sacramento County, CA
California Civil Code 841 (Good Neighbor Fence Act) presumes equal cost-sharing for boundary fences. 30-day written notice is required before building or rep...
Sacramento County, CA
Fences 7 feet and under in unincorporated Sacramento County do not require a building permit, but a zoning clearance is required for front-yard fences over 3...
Sacramento County, CA
Sacramento County allows backyard chickens in most residential zones: up to 6 hens on lots under 10,000 sq ft, no roosters in RD zones. Coops must be set bac...
Sacramento County, CA
Sacramento County Code 9.60 prohibits feeding wild mammals including deer, raccoons, coyotes, and wild turkeys. Bird feeders are allowed if they do not attra...
See how Sacramento County's response times rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.