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πŸ”§ Building Safety/Green Building Code

Green Building Code: San Jose vs Santa Clara

How do green building code rules compare between San Jose, CA and Santa Clara, CA?

San Jose and Santa Clara have similar restriction levels.

San Jose, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

San Jose's Green Building Ordinance (SJMC Chapter 17.84) plus its CALGreen Tier 1/Tier 2 reach code require new construction to meet enhanced energy, electrification, water-efficiency, and EV-readiness standards beyond statewide California Green Building Standards Code Title 24 Part 11.

View full San Jose rules β†’

Santa Clara, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

Santa Clara County Title B adopts the California Green Building Standards Code (CALGreen, Title 24 Part 11) plus reach-code amendments requiring all-electric new construction, EV-ready parking, and heat-pump water heating in unincorporated areas effective 2023.

View full Santa Clara rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactSan JoseSanta Clara
State baselineTitle 24 Part 11 CALGreen-
Local codeSJMC Chapter 17.84-
All-electricRequired new constructionRequired new construction 2023+
Tier 2 threshold10+ units or 25k sq ft-
Climate goalCarbon neutral by 2030-
Code section-SCC Title B (CALGreen + reach)
Waste diversion-65% construction debris
Water reduction-20% below baseline
EV-ready-Expanded over CALGreen baseline

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

San Jose FAQ

Do I need EV chargers in my new home?

Yes. New single-family homes must include at least one EV-ready Level 2 circuit in the garage. Multifamily and commercial projects require higher percentages of EV-installed and EV-capable spaces.

Can I install gas appliances in new construction?

Generally no. San Jose's all-electric reach code requires new buildings to be wired for and use only electric heating, cooking, and water systems. Limited exemptions exist for restaurants and emergency power.

Santa Clara FAQ

Does the all-electric requirement apply to remodels?

Most reach-code measures apply only to new construction and major additions. Like-for-like appliance replacements in existing buildings remain allowed; check the SCC Office of Sustainability reach-code guidance for specific remodel triggers.

Are cities in the county subject to the same reach code?

No. Each city adopts its own reach code separately. Many Santa Clara County cities, including San Jose, Mountain View, Palo Alto, and Cupertino, have parallel all-electric reach codes with varying effective dates.

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