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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Native Plants

Native Plants: Rocklin vs Roseville

How do native plants rules compare between Rocklin, CA and Roseville, CA?

Roseville has fewer restrictions than Rocklin.

Rocklin, CA

Placer County

Some Restrictions

AB-1572 prohibits using potable water to irrigate non-functional turf at commercial, institutional, and HOA-common areas, accelerating native and low-water landscape conversions statewide.

View full Rocklin rules β†’

Roseville, CA

Placer County

Few Restrictions

Roseville may encourage or require native and drought-tolerant landscaping. Some areas restrict traditional grass lawns in favor of water-efficient alternatives.

View full Roseville rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactRocklinRoseville
StatuteAB-1572 Water Code 10608.14-
Full effectBy 2031-
HOA protectionCivil Code 4735-
Landscape standardMWELO Gov Code 65591-
Xeriscaping-Encouraged or required
HOA-Cannot ban in many states
Rebates-May be available
Invasive Species-Removal may be required

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Rocklin FAQ

Can my HOA require a green lawn?

No. Civil Code 4735 voids HOA rules that prohibit low-water-using plants or require living turf during declared drought conditions.

Does this ban apply to single-family homes?

No. AB-1572 covers commercial, institutional, industrial, and HOA-common areas. Single-family front and back yards are not subject to the potable-turf ban.

Roseville FAQ

Can my HOA force me to keep a grass lawn?

Many states prohibit HOAs from banning xeriscaping or native plant gardens. Check your state laws and Roseville ordinances.

Are there rebates for replacing my lawn?

Roseville or your water utility may offer rebates for lawn replacement with drought-tolerant landscaping. Contact your local water provider.

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