Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas/Safety Rules

Safety Rules: Citrus Heights vs Courtland

How do safety rules rules compare between Citrus Heights, CA and Courtland, CA?

Citrus Heights and Courtland have similar restriction levels.

Citrus Heights, CA

Sacramento County

Heavy Restrictions

Citrus Heights pools must comply with the California Swimming Pool Safety Act (HSC Β§115920-115929), including anti-entrapment drain covers meeting the Virginia Graeme Baker Act, at least 2 of 7 approved drowning prevention features, and real estate disclosure at sale.

View full Citrus Heights rules β†’

Courtland, CA

Sacramento County

Heavy Restrictions

Sacramento County Code Section 16.36.130 requires a self-latching barrier, and where a dwelling wall with a door provides direct pool access, a separation fence is required. The County also recognizes approved child safety devices, pool alarms (UL 2017), and ASTM-compliant safety covers. California's Pool Safety Act (HSC 115922 et seq.) sets parallel drowning-prevention requirements.

View full Courtland rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactCitrus HeightsCourtland
Safety Features2 of 7 required-
Drain CoversVGB Act compliant-
DisclosureRequired at sale-
State LawHSC Β§115920-115929-
Upgrade TriggerSale or remodel-
Direct-access doors-Separation fence required (SCC 16.36.130)
Approved child safety device-Allowed with Chief Building Inspector written approval
Safety cover standard-ASTM F1346-91
Pool alarms-UL 2017 listed (County-approved list)
State law-CA Pool Safety Act, HSC 115922-115929

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Citrus Heights FAQ

What are the 7 safety features?

Isolation fence, removable mesh fence, safety cover, door alarms, self-closing doors, pool alarm, or other approved means. You need at least 2.

Do I have to upgrade my old pool when I sell?

Pools built after 2007 must meet current standards. Older pools require disclosure but may be grandfathered; a remodel triggers upgrade requirements.

Courtland FAQ

If a door of my house opens to the pool, do I need anything extra?

Yes. Under Section 16.36.130, where a dwelling wall serves as part of the barrier and has doors providing direct access to the pool, a separation fence meeting the barrier standards must be installed between those doors and the pool.

Does California's Pool Safety Act apply here too?

Yes. The California Swimming Pool Safety Act (Health & Safety Code 115922 et seq.) applies to new and remodeled residential pools statewide, requiring an enclosure and at least one approved drowning-prevention safety feature. It applies alongside Sacramento County Code Chapter 16.36; satisfy whichever rule is stricter.

Compare other topics

See how Citrus Heights and Courtland compare on other ordinance categories.

Want to add a third city?

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

Open Comparison Tool