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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Native Plants

Native Plants: Oakland vs Sunol

How do native plants rules compare between Oakland, CA and Sunol, CA?

Oakland has fewer restrictions than Sunol.

Oakland, CA

Alameda County

Few Restrictions

California Civil Code 4735 prohibits HOAs from banning low-water or California-native landscaping, and Oakland's Bay-Friendly and creek-protection policies actively encourage native plants, though protected-tree rules under OMC 12.36 still apply to removals.

View full Oakland rules β†’

Sunol, CA

Alameda County

Some Restrictions

Native and drought-tolerant plants are encouraged throughout Alameda County. State MWELO requires climate-appropriate plants for new landscapes, and EBMUD/ACWD offer rebates for lawn-to-native conversions.

View full Sunol rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactOaklandSunol
--
MWELO threshold-500 sqft new landscape
Rebates-EBMUD, ACWD lawn conversion
Suggested natives-Live oak, toyon, Ceanothus
Fire-wise list-CAL FIRE maintains
Technical help-ACRCD free

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Oakland FAQ

Can my Oakland HOA force me to keep a lawn?

No. California Civil Code 4735 makes unenforceable any HOA rule prohibiting low-water or native plant landscaping. You can replace lawn with natives even if CC and Rs say otherwise.

Does Oakland have a native plant list?

There is no single mandatory list, but the Bay-Friendly Landscape Guidelines and the Creek Protection Ordinance reference locally appropriate California natives.

Sunol FAQ

Do I have to plant natives?

No, but MWELO requires climate-appropriate species in new and major renovation landscapes, and rebates are tied to low-water-use plant palettes.

Are natives fire-safe?

Many but not all; chamise and dry grasses are flammable, while coast live oak and redwood are relatively fire-resistant; use CAL FIRE Ready For Wildfire plant guidance.

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