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🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas/Pool Permits

Pool Permits: Corona vs Mead Valley

How do pool permits rules compare between Corona, CA and Mead Valley, CA?

Corona and Mead Valley have similar restriction levels.

Corona, CA

Riverside County

Heavy Restrictions

Corona requires building permits for pools over 18 inches deep or 2,000 gallons under CMC Title 15. Plans must address structural, electrical (CEC 680), and Pool Safety Act (H&S 115920) compliance.

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Mead Valley, CA

Riverside County

Heavy Restrictions

In unincorporated Riverside County, a building permit from Building & Safety is required to construct or install any swimming pool, spa, or hot tub. Plans must show setbacks, equipment, electrical/gas, and the required two-barrier safety system. A signed 'Barrier Agreement' (form 284-004) and a pre-plaster inspection are required before plastering or filling with water.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactCoronaMead Valley
--
Permit threshold-Pools, spas, hot tubs 18 inches or more in depth (Ord. 421 Β§1)
Governing code-2025 CRC, CEC, CMC, CPC + County Ordinance 421
Required form-Barrier Agreement Letter, form 284-004 (Rev. 12/2025)
Inspections-4-stage sequence; pre-plaster inspection mandatory before fill (Ord. 421 Β§6)
Equipment setback-Pool equipment and ground-emerging pipes must clear the 5-foot setback
Enforcement-Penalties under Ordinance 725

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Corona FAQ

Mead Valley FAQ

Do I need a permit for a small spa or hot tub in unincorporated Riverside County?

Yes. Ordinance 421 covers any spa or hot tub 18 inches or more in depth, and Building & Safety requires a permit to install one. A self-contained spa or hot tub with a listed ASTM F-1346-91 safety cover is exempt from the barrier requirements, but the installation itself still goes through County permitting and inspection.

Can I fill my new pool as soon as it is built?

No. Under Ordinance 421, Section 6, a pre-plaster inspection is required, and all barrier requirements must be installed to the inspector's satisfaction before permission is granted to plaster and fill. The County's four-stage inspection ends with a final and secondary-barrier check before the pool is approved.

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