Coastal Development: Daly City vs Redwood City
How do coastal development rules compare between Daly City, CA and Redwood City, CA?
Daly City has fewer restrictions than Redwood City.
Daly City, CA
San Mateo County
A narrow strip of western Daly City along the Pacific coast (Mussel Rock area, west of Skyline Boulevard) falls within the California Coastal Zone established by the California Coastal Act of 1976 (Cal. Public Resources Code §30000 et seq.). Development in the Coastal Zone requires either a Coastal Development Permit (CDP) issued under a certified Local Coastal Program (LCP) or, in the absence of a certified LCP, a CDP issued directly by the California Coastal Commission.
View full Daly City rules →Redwood City, CA
San Mateo County
San Mateo County administers its own certified Local Coastal Program (LCP) and issues Coastal Development Permits (CDPs) for projects in the Coastal Zone, which covers roughly 240 sq miles from Devil's Slide south through Pescadero, Año Nuevo, and the Santa Cruz County line. Projects in the Coastal Zone typically require a CDP from County Planning; certain appealable areas (near the shoreline, in sensitive habitat, or in rural areas) can also be appealed to the California Coastal Commission. ESHA (Environmentally Sensitive Habitat Area) buffers, public access, and view corridors are key LCP policies.
View full Redwood City rules →Key Facts Comparison
| Fact | Daly City | Redwood City |
|---|---|---|
| Statute | California Coastal Act, Cal. PRC §30000 et seq. | - |
| Zone extent in Daly City | Pacific bluff west of Skyline Blvd (Mussel Rock area) | - |
| CDP required for | Grading, construction, intensification, major vegetation removal | - |
| Bluff standard | PRC §30253 - no future shoreline armoring needed | - |
| Civil penalty cap | Up to $30,000/day for knowing violations (PRC §30820) | - |
| LCP Certified | - | Yes, since 1981 |
| Zone Extent | - | Devil's Slide to SCZ line |
| CDP Required | - | Most new development |
| ESHA Buffer | - | 100 ft from sensitive habitat |
| Appeals | - | To CCC in appealable areas |
Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.
Daly City FAQ
Is my Daly City property in the Coastal Zone?
Only properties along the Pacific bluff west of Skyline Boulevard near Mussel Rock and Thornton State Beach are within the Coastal Zone. Inland Daly City (Westlake, Top of the Hill, Bayshore, Original Daly City) is not. Verify your parcel on the Coastal Commission's official Coastal Zone Boundary map.
Do I need a Coastal Development Permit for a remodel?
If the property is in the Coastal Zone, even interior remodels can be exempt under PRC §30610 but additions, demolition, grading, or removal of major vegetation generally require a CDP. Confirm with Daly City Planning and the California Coastal Commission's North Central Coast District office.
Can I build a seawall to protect my coastal bluff?
Cal. PRC §30253 requires new development to be sited so that future shoreline protective devices are NOT needed. Retroactive seawalls are heavily restricted; the Coastal Commission has been increasingly denying or conditioning armoring of single-family homes built after January 1, 1977.
Redwood City FAQ
Do I need a Coastal Development Permit to remodel my kitchen?
Interior remodels and repairs that don't change the building envelope or intensify use are typically categorically excluded from CDP requirements. But additions, exterior changes, and any increase in footprint or height will require at minimum a CDP application — often processed alongside your building permit. Check with Planning at (650) 363-4161.
How do I find out if my property is in the Coastal Zone?
Use the San Mateo County GIS map (smcgov.org/planning/gis-map-zoning-and-other-info-0) and enable the Coastal Zone boundary layer, or check the California Coastal Commission's Coastal Zone Viewer. If your parcel is on the ocean side of Highway 1 or anywhere west of the ridge from Devil's Slide south, assume you are in the Coastal Zone until confirmed otherwise.
Compare other topics
See how Daly City and Redwood City 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