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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Native Plants

Native Plants: Redwood City vs San Mateo

How do native plants rules compare between Redwood City, CA and San Mateo, CA?

Redwood City and San Mateo have similar restriction levels.

Redwood City, CA

San Mateo County

Few Restrictions

Unincorporated San Mateo County encourages native and drought-tolerant landscaping rather than mandating it for homeowners. The Countywide Water Pollution Prevention Program promotes natives for pollinators and watershed health, and BAWSCA's Lawn Be Gone rebate pays up to $4 per square foot to replace lawn with low-water plants. WELO indirectly favors natives through plant-factor rules.

View full Redwood City rules β†’

San Mateo, CA

San Mateo County

Few Restrictions

San Mateo encourages drought-tolerant and native landscaping consistent with California's MWELO. New landscapes over 500 square feet must comply with water-efficiency calculations. California law prohibits cities from banning drought-tolerant plants.

View full San Mateo rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactRedwood CitySan Mateo
Homeowner mandateNone - voluntary/incentivized-
Lawn replacement rebateUp to $4 per square foot-
Rain garden bonus$300-
WELO plant factorWUCOLS 0.3 favors natives-
ProgramFlows To Bay / BAWSCA / Office of Sustainability-
MWELO-New landscapes 500+ sq ft
State Protection-Cannot ban drought-tolerant plants
Water Provider-Cal Water Service
Climate Zone-USDA 10a-10b β€” Mediterranean
Tree Protection-Ch. 13.40 β€” Protected Trees

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Redwood City FAQ

Am I required to plant native plants in unincorporated San Mateo County?

No. Native planting is encouraged and incentivized, not mandated. WELO's low-water plant-factor standard for regulated projects, however, effectively steers new landscapes toward natives and other drought-tolerant species.

Is there money to replace my lawn with natives?

Yes. BAWSCA's Lawn Be Gone rebate pays up to $4 per square foot to swap lawn for drought-tolerant plants, with an extra $300 if you add a rain garden, through the County's water-pollution-prevention partners.

San Mateo FAQ

Can I replace my lawn with native plants?

Yes. California law protects your right to install drought-tolerant landscaping. Cal Water Service may offer rebates for turf replacement.

What native plants grow well in San Mateo?

San Mateo's Mediterranean climate supports coast live oak, toyon, manzanita, California fuchsia, ceanothus, and native bunch grasses.

Does MWELO apply to my project?

MWELO applies to new or renovated landscapes over 500 square feet. Smaller projects and existing landscapes are exempt.

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