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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Beekeeping

Beekeeping: South Gate vs Torrance

How do beekeeping rules compare between South Gate, CA and Torrance, CA?

South Gate and Torrance have similar restriction levels.

South Gate, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

South Gate does not enumerate beekeeping as a permitted residential use, and Chapter 7.22 (Animal Control) treats stinging insect colonies as a potential public nuisance. California Food & Agricultural Code §29040 et seq. (Apiary Registration) requires every apiary owner to register hives annually with the Los Angeles County Agricultural Commissioner and identify each hive with the owner's name/address. Because South Gate is a dense urban LA County city with R-1/R-2/R-3 lots typically under 6,000 sq ft, hobby beekeeping is at most informally tolerated on a setback/nuisance basis — and a single sting complaint can trigger SEAACA abatement.

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Torrance, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

Torrance Municipal Code Chapter 41 (Animals and Fowl) prohibits beekeeping in the city except on land zoned for industrial uses with a permit from the Environmental Quality and Energy Conservation Commission. A 'colony' is defined as one hive and its contents including bees, comb, honey, pollen, brood, and appliances.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactSouth GateTorrance
Local codeNot enumerated in South Gate Title 4 / Ch. 11.25 — handled as Ch. 7.22 nuisance-
State registrationCal. Food & Ag Code §29040–29057 (annual apiary registration with county ag commissioner)-
Registering authorityLos Angeles County Agricultural Commissioner / Weights & Measures-
Hive identificationEach hive must bear owner's name and address (FAC §29040 et seq.)-
Inspection authorityCal. Food & Ag Code §29200–29213-
Residential-Prohibited
Industrial Zone-Permit required
Permit From-Environmental Quality Commission
Code-TMC Div. 4, Ch. 1

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

South Gate FAQ

Can I legally keep bees in my South Gate backyard?

Title 4 and Chapter 11.25 do not expressly authorize residential beekeeping. If you proceed, you must (1) register annually with the LA County Agricultural Commissioner under Cal. Food & Ag Code §29040 and (2) maintain hives in a way that does not generate a Chapter 7.22 nuisance — which is difficult on typical South Gate lot sizes.

Do I need to register my hives?

Yes. California Food & Agricultural Code §29040 requires every apiary owner to register annually with the county agricultural commissioner (LA County) and to identify each hive with the owner's name and address.

What if neighbors complain about my bees?

SEAACA can abate stinging-insect colonies as a public nuisance under South Gate Municipal Code Chapter 7.22 even if your hives are state-registered. Bee colonies near schools, sidewalks or shared yards are particularly likely to be ordered removed.

Who handles a wild bee swarm?

Call SEAACA at 562-803-3301 first. Africanized swarms in LA County are also handled by LA County Vector Control and licensed bee-removal contractors.

Torrance FAQ

Can I keep bees at my home in Torrance?

No. Beekeeping is prohibited in residential areas. It is only allowed on industrial-zoned land with a permit from the Environmental Quality and Energy Conservation Commission.

How do I get a beekeeping permit in Torrance?

Apply to the Environmental Quality and Energy Conservation Commission. The property must be zoned for industrial use.

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