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🌍 Environmental Rules/Grading & Drainage

Grading & Drainage: Elk Grove vs Florin

How do grading & drainage rules compare between Elk Grove, CA and Florin, CA?

Elk Grove has fewer restrictions than Florin.

Elk Grove, CA

Sacramento County

Some Restrictions

Grading and drainage in Elk Grove is regulated by Title 16 and the California Building Code Appendix J. A grading permit is required for most earthwork over 50 cubic yards or on steep slopes, and drainage must not be redirected onto adjacent properties.

View full Elk Grove rules β†’

Florin, CA

Sacramento County

Heavy Restrictions

Sacramento County grading regulated under County Code Chapter 16.44. Permits required for earthwork exceeding 50 cu yd, cuts/fills over specified depths, or work on steep slopes. Drainage must not be diverted onto neighboring properties. County drainage standards follow the Sacramento County Improvement Standards and Hydrology Manual.

View full Florin rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactElk GroveFlorin
Permit threshold~50 cubic yards-
Code basisCBC Appendix J + EGMC 16-
Foundation slope5% over 10 ft-
Redirecting runoffProhibited to neighbors-
LID featuresOwner-maintained-
Code-Chapter 16.44
Permit-50+ cu yd
Standards-County Improvement Stds + Hydrology Manual
Diversion-Prohibited to neighbors
Waterway-50 ft buffer triggers

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Elk Grove FAQ

Do I need a permit to level my backyard?

Small yard leveling usually does not, but moving 50+ cubic yards, or any work near a slope or drainage swale, requires a grading permit.

My neighbor's new patio is draining onto my yard β€” who do I call?

Start with Elk Grove Code Enforcement. Redirecting surface water that damages neighbors is both a code and civil matter.

Florin FAQ

Can I regrade my backyard?

Minor regrading under 50 cubic yards generally does not require a permit. Significant earthwork, retaining walls over 4 feet, or drainage changes may.

What if my neighbor's drainage floods my yard?

Contact county code enforcement. California law generally prohibits concentrated diversion of surface water that damages neighbors.

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