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🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas/Above-Ground Pools

Above-Ground Pools: Lincoln vs Rocklin

How do above-ground pools rules compare between Lincoln, CA and Rocklin, CA?

Lincoln and Rocklin have similar restriction levels.

Lincoln, CA

Placer County

Some Restrictions

Above-ground pools in Lincoln must meet the same barrier rules as in-ground pools and require a building permit if water depth exceeds 18 inches or the pool is connected to permanent plumbing/electrical.

View full Lincoln rules →

Rocklin, CA

Placer County

Some Restrictions

Above-ground pools deeper than 18 inches are 'swimming pools' under California Health & Safety Code §115921 and are subject to the same Rocklin enclosure rules (Code §17.08.150, 5-foot fence with self-latching gates) and the dual-feature drowning-prevention requirement of SB 442. A building permit under Title 15 / California Residential Code is required, and electrical bonding per CEC Article 680 must be inspected.

View full Rocklin rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactLincolnRocklin
Permit required if water depthMore than 18 inches-
Barrier ruleSame 60-inch enclosure as in-ground-
Pool wall as barrierAllowed only if ladder is secured/removable-
Electrical bondingCEC Article 680 required-
Permit fee$1,197 swimming pool/spa-
Triggers Pool Safety Act-Water depth > 18 in (H&S Code §115921)
Fence rule-5-foot self-latching fence (Rocklin §17.08.150)
Ladder-Must be removable/lockable or separately enclosed
Electrical-CEC Article 680 bonding required

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lincoln FAQ

Is an inflatable kiddie pool covered?

If it cannot hold water deeper than 18 inches, the Swimming Pool Safety Act does not apply. Drowning risk to small children remains - never leave unattended.

Can I install an above-ground pool myself?

Homeowners can pull a permit for their own primary residence under California Business & Professions Code Section 7044, but you must still meet barrier, electrical bonding, and inspection requirements.

Rocklin FAQ

Is an inflatable 'soft-sided' pool exempt?

Once it holds water deeper than 18 inches, California's Swimming Pool Safety Act treats it as a pool. Rocklin Code §17.08.150 5-foot enclosure rule and SB 442 dual-feature rule apply.

Can the pool wall itself act as the fence?

Only if the wall is at least 48 inches high, has no climbable features, and access (ladder/steps) is either removable, lockable, or independently enclosed to meet ASTM F2286 / §17.08.150.

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