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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Rainwater Harvesting

Rainwater Harvesting: Menifee vs Moreno Valley

How do rainwater harvesting rules compare between Menifee, CA and Moreno Valley, CA?

Menifee and Moreno Valley have similar restriction levels.

Menifee, CA

Riverside County

Few Restrictions

Menifee Municipal Code Ch. 15.04 (Landscape Water Use Efficiency) explicitly encourages onsite stormwater capture and graywater reuse for landscape irrigation. Graywater installations must comply with the California Plumbing Code (CPC Chapter 16A). State law — the Rainwater Capture Act of 2012 (AB 1750, Cal. Water Code §10574) — permits rooftop rainwater harvesting without a water-rights permit. EMWD offers graywater 3-way diverter-valve rebates (up to $50) for laundry-to-landscape systems serving Menifee customers. The City requires a building permit only when rainwater storage tanks exceed thresholds in the California Plumbing/Building Code (typically tanks ≥5,000 gallons or pressurized systems tied to potable supply).

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Moreno Valley, CA

Riverside County

Few Restrictions

Rainwater harvesting from rooftops for landscape irrigation is legal and encouraged in Moreno Valley under California's Rainwater Capture Act (AB 1750). Rain barrels under 100 gallons do not require a permit. Larger cisterns or systems connected to plumbing require a building permit and backflow prevention.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactMenifeeMoreno Valley
Rainwater captureAllowed under Cal. Water Code §10574 (AB 1750)-
L2L graywater permitNot required (CPC §1503.1.1) if non-pressurized-
Multi-fixture graywaterPlumbing permit required-
EMWD rebateUp to $50 for 3-way diverter valve-
Mosquito controlTanks must be screened (HSC §2270)-
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Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Menifee FAQ

Do I need a City permit to install rain barrels?

No permit is needed for typical residential rain barrels (≤5,000 gal aggregate, non-potable, screened). Larger cisterns or tanks tied into structures may require building-permit review.

Can I divert my washing machine to the landscape without a permit?

Yes — a single-fixture, gravity-fed Laundry-to-Landscape system is exempt under California Plumbing Code §1503.1.1. Don't pressurize or connect to potable lines.

Are there rebates?

EMWD offers a rebate (up to $50) for the 3-way diverter valve component of a qualifying L2L system. Check current rebate availability on emwd.org.

Moreno Valley FAQ

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