Safety Rules: North Las Vegas vs Paradise
How do safety rules rules compare between North Las Vegas, NV and Paradise, NV?
North Las Vegas and Paradise have similar restriction levels.
North Las Vegas, NV
Clark County
North Las Vegas pools must meet the federal Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act for drain covers plus state and local rules on barriers, alarms, and electrical safety.
View full North Las Vegas rules →Paradise, NV
Clark County
Unincorporated Clark County regulates residential pool safety through Title 22 Chapter 22.20, which adopts the Southern Nevada Swimming Pool & Spa Code (SNPSC) — based on the International Swimming Pool & Spa Code (ISPSC). SNPSC Section 305 requires a residential barrier at least 60 inches tall (or 8-ft non-climbable measured inside), with no more than 4 inches of clearance below.
View full Paradise rules →Key Facts Comparison
| Fact | North Las Vegas | Paradise |
|---|---|---|
| Federal Law | VGB Act | - |
| Drain Covers | Anti-entrapment required | - |
| Electrical | GFCI and bonding | - |
| Door Alarms | If wall is barrier | - |
| State Rule | NAC 444 | - |
| County Authority | - | Title 22 Chapter 22.20 |
| Adopted Code | - | Southern Nevada Swimming Pool & Spa Code (ISPSC-based) |
| Min Residential Barrier Height | - | 60 inches (or 8 ft non-climbable inside) |
| Max Ground Clearance | - | 4 inches under barrier |
| Chain Link Opening | - | ≤1¾ inches |
| Picket Sphere Rule | - | No 4-inch sphere passage |
| Gate | - | Self-closing, self-latching; release 3–6 in from top |
| Public/Semi-Public Pools | - | NAC 444 (Southern Nevada Health District) |
| Permits | - | Clark County Building & Fire Prevention (702) 455-8011 |
Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.
North Las Vegas FAQ
Do I need a special drain cover on my pool?
Yes. The federal VGB Act requires anti-entrapment drain covers on all residential and public pools. Single-main-drain pools also need secondary entrapment prevention.
Are pool alarms required in North Las Vegas?
A pool alarm or self-closing, self-latching safety device is required on house doors that open to the pool area when the dwelling wall serves as part of the pool barrier.
Paradise FAQ
What pool safety code applies in unincorporated Clark County?
Clark County Code Title 22 Chapter 22.20 adopts the Southern Nevada Swimming Pool & Spa Code, which is based on the International Swimming Pool & Spa Code with regional amendments. Section 305 of the code sets the residential barrier, gate, and opening requirements. Public and semi-public pools — including apartment, condo, and HOA pools — also follow Nevada Administrative Code Chapter 444 and are inspected by the Southern Nevada Health District.
How tall does a residential pool fence need to be in Clark County?
Section 305 of the Southern Nevada Swimming Pool & Spa Code requires the top of a residential barrier, including gates, to be at least 60 inches above adjacent grade measured from outside the enclosure, or an 8-foot non-climbable barrier measured from the inside. The maximum clearance between the ground and the bottom of the barrier is 4 inches. Chain-link mesh openings cannot exceed 1¾ inches.
What gate hardware does Clark County require on a pool fence?
Pool gates must be self-closing and self-latching under SNPSC Section 305. The release mechanism must be located at least 3 inches but not more than 6 inches from the top of the gate, and there cannot be any opening larger than ½ inch within 18 inches of the release. Gates should open away from the pool. Confirm specific requirements with Clark County Building & Fire Prevention at (702) 455-8011.
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