Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
🌿 Landscaping Rules/Native Plants

Native Plants: Isleton vs Vineyard

How do native plants rules compare between Isleton, CA and Vineyard, CA?

Isleton and Vineyard have similar restriction levels.

Isleton, CA

Sacramento County

Few Restrictions

MWELO requires water-efficient landscapes including native plants for new installations over 500 square feet. Delta-adapted native plants (tule, valley oak, native grasses) are encouraged in Isleton.

View full Isleton rules β†’

Vineyard, CA

Sacramento County

Few Restrictions

Sacramento County encourages native and drought-tolerant landscaping through MWELO and regional water-wise programs. New development over 500 sq ft must meet Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance water budget rules.

View full Vineyard rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactIsletonVineyard
MWELO500 sq ft threshold-
NativesNot mandated but encouragedValley oak, redbud, poppy
Delta SpeciesValley oak, tule, deergrass-
Water BudgetRequired for new landscapes-
StormwaterNPDES MS4 native plantings-
MWELO Threshold-500 sq ft new install
ET Factor-0.55 residential
Rebate-Lawn conversion funds
Irrigation-Drip/high-efficiency required

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Isleton FAQ

Do I have to plant natives?

Not required. MWELO sets a water-efficiency target that natives help meet, but any plant palette that hits the budget is acceptable.

What natives grow well in the Delta?

Valley oak, Fremont cottonwood, California wild rose, native grasses, and wetland-margin species like tule.

Vineyard FAQ

Do I have to rip out my lawn?

No. MWELO applies only to new or major rehabilitated landscapes, not existing ones.

Can I still have a small lawn?

Yes, but new lawns are limited by MWELO water budget and hydrozone rules.

Want to add a third city?

Use our full comparison tool to compare up to three cities.

Open Comparison Tool