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🚷 Public Conduct/Public Urination

Public Urination: San Jose vs Sunnyvale

How do public urination rules compare between San Jose, CA and Sunnyvale, CA?

San Jose and Sunnyvale have similar restriction levels.

San Jose, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

Urinating or defecating in public view violates San Jose Municipal Code Chapter 10.06 and California Penal Code section 647(c) when conduct is offensive, with citations issued downtown, near bars, and during major events.

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Sunnyvale, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

Santa Clara County Code Title D public-health provisions and California Penal Code Section 647(c) prohibit urinating or defecating in any public place or on private property visible from a public way. Violations are infractions starting around $250, enforced by the Sheriff and the County Public Health Department.

View full Sunnyvale rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactSan JoseSunnyvale
City chapterSJMC 10.06 offensive conduct-
State statutePenal Code section 647(c)-
Hot enforcement zonesDowntown, SAP Center, transit-
Typical first-offenseDiversion or community service-
Indecent exposure escalationPenal Code section 314-
Primary code-SCC Title D health code
Health authority-SCC Public Health Department
State backstop-CA Penal Code 647(c)
Base fine-Approximately $250 infraction
Enforcement-Sheriff and Public Health

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

San Jose FAQ

Will public urination put me on the sex offender registry?

Generally no. Simple urination cites under Penal 647(c) do not require registration. Only Penal 314 indecent exposure with intentional display of genitals can trigger registration.

Where are public urination citations most common in San Jose?

Downtown entertainment district near bars, around SAP Center after events, along VTA light rail platforms, and Santa Clara Street during major weekend nights and festivals.

Sunnyvale FAQ

What if no public restroom is available nearby?

Lack of a restroom is not a legal defense in Santa Clara County. Plan routes around businesses, parks, libraries, or transit stations with public facilities, particularly along El Camino Real and downtown corridors where enforcement is more active.

Does my fenced backyard count as a public place?

Yes if visible from a sidewalk, street, or neighbor's window. Title D and Penal Code 647 reach private property exposed to public view, treating visible exposure as a public-health and decency violation.

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