Any development in the Monterey County Coastal Zone requires a Coastal Development Permit (CDP) under MCC Title 20 Chapter 20.70 and the California Coastal Act (Cal. Public Resources Code section 30600). The Coastal Zone covers Big Sur, Carmel Highlands, Carmel Valley coastal portions, Pebble Beach (Del Monte Forest), the Monterey Peninsula coast, Marina, Moss Landing, and Pajaro Dunes. The Big Sur Land Use Plan is among the most restrictive in California.
Monterey County's Coastal Zone covers roughly 90 miles of coastline from the Santa Cruz County line at the Pajaro River south to the San Luis Obispo County line south of Big Sur. Under Cal. Public Resources Code section 30600, any 'development' in the Coastal Zone - construction, demolition, change of intensity of use, grading, vegetation removal, or land division - requires a Coastal Development Permit. The County administers CDPs through MCC Chapter 20.70 under its certified Local Coastal Program. Permit types include: Categorical Exclusion (minor projects in pre-approved categories), Coastal Administrative Permit (most ministerial projects including ADUs), Coastal Development Permit (most discretionary projects), and Combined Development Permit (where multiple Title 20 permits are combined). Decisions are appealable to the California Coastal Commission for development between the sea and first public road (statewide appeal area), within 100 feet of wetlands, within 300 feet of the mean high tide line, and certain other 'appeal zone' areas. Big Sur projects face additional scrutiny under the Big Sur Coast LUP (1986), which preserves the area as 'open space, a small residential community, and agricultural ranching' and severely limits viewshed-visible development. Pebble Beach (Del Monte Forest LUP) has its own LUP coordinated with the Pebble Beach Company. Vegetation removal of native species in Environmentally Sensitive Habitat Areas (ESHA) requires CDP and CEQA review.
Unpermitted Coastal Zone development is enforceable under MCC Title 20 general penalty provisions and Cal. Public Resources Code sections 30820-30822. Coastal Commission penalties can reach $15,000 per day per violation plus restoration. Properties with unpermitted development cannot close escrow until cleared.
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Monterey County, CA
Curb-color meanings in unincorporated Monterey County follow California Vehicle Code Section 21458: red = no stopping/parking, yellow = freight/passenger loa...
Monterey County, CA
Monterey County zoning requires off-street loading spaces for larger commercial and industrial buildings (Section 20.58.050(H)). On public streets, loading-z...
Monterey County, CA
Monterey County reviews EV-charging installations through its building and planning permit process; the county has no special on-street EV ordinance, so EV-c...
Monterey County, CA
Unincorporated Monterey County has no blanket oversized-vehicle street ban. The California Vehicle Code controls: Section 22507 lets local authorities restri...
Monterey County, CA
Fences on unincorporated Monterey County land must comply with Title 21 (inland) or Title 20 (coastal): generally no taller than 6 ft unless the accessory-st...
Monterey County, CA
Monterey County requires a construction permit for any retaining wall 4 feet or greater in height, measured bottom of footing to top of wall, OR a retaining ...
See how Monterey County's coastal development rules stack up against other locations.
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