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🌳 Tree Protection/Tree Replacement Requirements

Tree Replacement Requirements: Chino vs San Bernardino

How do tree replacement requirements rules compare between Chino, CA and San Bernardino, CA?

Chino, CA

San Bernardino County

Some Restrictions

Chino imposes replacement-tree requirements only through Title 20 (Zoning) landscape standards for new development, multi-family projects, commercial/industrial site plans, and parking lots β€” not through a standalone tree-removal ordinance. Replacement is also required for any city-owned parkway tree removed by Public Works (typically a 15-gallon or 24-inch box replacement in the same parkway). Single-family homeowners removing trees on their own lots have no city-imposed replacement obligation.

View full Chino rules β†’

San Bernardino, CA

San Bernardino County

No data available yet for San Bernardino.

Key Facts Comparison

FactChinoSan Bernardino
Single-family lot replacementNot required by city code-
New development replacementPer approved landscape plan (Chino Code Title 20)-
Typical replacement size15-gallon minimum; 24-inch box for significant trees-
ROW tree replacementPublic Works (909-334-3266) β€” city selects species from master list-
MWELO threshold (state)β‰₯500 sq ft homeowner / β‰₯2,500 sq ft developer landscape installs-

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Chino FAQ

If I take out a tree in my yard, do I have to plant a new one?

Not unless the tree was required as a condition of a development permit (subdivision, ADU, addition with landscape plan, CUP). Homeowners replacing dead trees in standard residential yards have no city replacement requirement.

What about a tree the city removes from my parkway?

Public Works typically replants the same parkway with a species from the city's approved street tree list at the city's expense.

Does MWELO require trees?

MWELO (CCR Title 23) regulates irrigation efficiency and turf area, not tree counts, but landscape design plans submitted under MWELO commonly identify trees for shade and ET (evapotranspiration) credit.

San Bernardino FAQ

No FAQs available.

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