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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Rainwater Harvesting

Rainwater Harvesting: Corona vs Jurupa Valley

How do rainwater harvesting rules compare between Corona, CA and Jurupa Valley, CA?

Corona and Jurupa Valley have similar restriction levels.

Corona, CA

Riverside County

Few Restrictions

California Water Code 10573 (AB 1750) lets Corona residents collect rainwater in barrels for outdoor use without a permit. Tanks over 5,000 gal or indoor reuse require permits and backflow prevention.

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Jurupa Valley, CA

Riverside County

Few Restrictions

Rainwater collection is broadly legal in Jurupa Valley and California. Under the Rainwater Capture Act of 2012 (AB 1750), residential, commercial, and governmental landowners can capture rooftop rainwater for non-potable uses without a state water-right permit. Jurupa Valley has no separate local prohibition. Small rain barrels under 360 gallons used for outdoor non-potable purposes are exempt from building-permit requirements; larger cisterns may trigger California Plumbing Code (Title 24 Part 5) permitting.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactCoronaJurupa Valley
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State authority-Cal. Water Code §10574 — no water-right permit for rooftop capture
Rain barrel threshold-<360 gallons typically permit-exempt
Larger systems-Cal. Plumbing Code Ch. 17 permit may apply
HOA protection-Civ. Code §4735

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Corona FAQ

Jurupa Valley FAQ

Do I need a permit to put a rain barrel in my Jurupa Valley backyard?

Generally no. Rain barrels under 360 gallons used for outdoor non-potable purposes are exempt from state water-right permits under Cal. Water Code §10574 and typically don't require a city building permit. Larger cisterns or any indoor reuse will require a Cal. Plumbing Code Chapter 17 permit.

Can my HOA stop me from installing a rain barrel?

Cal. Civil Code §4735 generally prevents HOAs from enforcing landscaping rules that prohibit water-efficient practices. HOAs may apply reasonable aesthetic guidelines but cannot effectively ban the practice.

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