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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Tree Trimming

Tree Trimming: Corona vs Menifee

How do tree trimming rules compare between Corona, CA and Menifee, CA?

Menifee has fewer restrictions than Corona.

Corona, CA

Riverside County

Some Restrictions

CMC Chapter 12.40 makes property owners maintain parkway street trees with 8 ft sidewalk and 14 ft street clearance. A free Public Works permit is required to remove or heavily prune street trees.

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Menifee, CA

Riverside County

Few Restrictions

Menifee has not adopted a standalone heritage-tree-removal permit ordinance. Tree maintenance is regulated indirectly through Title 9 Development Code landscape-plan approvals (new development must install and maintain plan-approved trees), MMC §11.20.020 prohibited public-nuisance conditions (dead/dying trees creating hazards), and right-of-way street-tree maintenance handled by Public Works. For private trees on private parcels, California common-law applies: a neighbor may trim branches and roots back to the property line per Cal. Civ. Code §3346 and the Booska doctrine, but cannot cross the line or kill the tree.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactCoronaMenifee
--
Heritage-tree permit-No standalone ordinance in MMC
Required trees on plan-Must be maintained per Title 9 Development Code
Hazard trees-Citable nuisance under §11.20.020
Boundary trimming-Allowed to property line per Cal. Civ. Code §3346 / Booska v. Patel
WUI defensible space-PRC §4291 enforced by Riverside County Fire

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Corona FAQ

Menifee FAQ

Do I need a permit to remove a tree on my private lot?

Generally no — unless the tree was installed as part of an approved Title 9 landscape plan (subdivision, multifamily, or commercial), in which case removal requires plan amendment or substitute planting.

Who handles the tree in front of my house?

If it stands in the public right-of-way (parkway), it is City-owned. Contact Public Works before pruning or removing.

Can I cut my neighbor's branches that hang over my yard?

Yes, to the property line and using reasonable care. Cal. Civ. Code §3346 makes willful damage that injures the tree itself liable for up to treble damages.

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