Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
🌍 Environmental Rules/Grading & Drainage

Grading & Drainage: Carson vs Santa Clarita

How do grading & drainage rules compare between Carson, CA and Santa Clarita, CA?

Carson and Santa Clarita have similar restriction levels.

Carson, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Carson enforces grading and drainage standards by adopting the California Building Code (Title 24 Part 2) including Appendix J — Grading. A grading permit is required for fill or excavation exceeding the thresholds in CBC Appendix J §J103 (generally >50 cubic yards or cuts/fills more than a few feet deep). Drainage must be conveyed by approved storm drains or graded swales, must not cross sidewalks or driveways (except single-family driveways), and must not be diverted onto adjacent properties.

View full Carson rules →

Santa Clarita, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Hillside grading is heavily regulated to minimize environmental impact. Standards aim to maximize positive site design and reduce slope instability.

View full Santa Clarita rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactCarsonSanta Clarita
Local citationCarson Building Code (CMC Art. 8) adopting CBC Appendix J — Grading-
Grading permit thresholdGenerally >50 cubic yards excavation or fill (CBC Appendix J §J103)-
Foundation drainageMinimum 5% slope away from foundation for first 10 feet (CBC Appendix J §J109)-
Slope ratiosFill slopes ≤2:1 H:V; cut slopes per soils report-
Stormwater connectionDrainage must connect to city-approved storm drain (CMC Art. 4 Ch. 8)-
Hillside Standards-SCMC 17.51 hillside section
Drainage-Must direct to approved outlets
Grading Permit-Required for earthwork
General Plan-Consistency required

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Carson FAQ

Do I need a permit to regrade my Carson backyard?

Minor residential regrading involving less than 50 cubic yards of earth movement and not altering drainage patterns is typically exempt under CBC Appendix J §J103, but any work that changes how water flows on or off your lot — particularly toward a neighbor — requires a grading permit and engineered drainage plan.

Can I direct downspout water to my neighbor's yard?

No. Both CBC Appendix J §J109 and California common-law nuisance prohibit diverting concentrated drainage onto adjacent property. Downspouts must discharge onto your own property, into approved on-site retention, or via a drain connected to the public storm drain.

What is the minimum lot grading slope?

Around buildings, finished grade must slope away from foundations at a minimum 5% (6 inches over the first 10 feet) per CBC Appendix J §J109. Swales conveying lot drainage must have a minimum 2% slope to an approved point of discharge.

Santa Clarita FAQ

Do I need a grading permit?

Generally required for earth-moving over 50 to 100 cubic yards or changes to existing drainage patterns. Small landscaping projects are usually exempt.

My neighbor changed their grading and water flows onto my property. What can I do?

Contact Santa Clarita code enforcement. Redirecting drainage onto neighboring properties violates most municipal codes. The neighbor may be required to restore proper drainage.

Want to add a third city?

Use our full comparison tool to compare up to three cities.

Open Comparison Tool