Apple Valley requires fences to sit entirely on the owner's property (or on the line with written consent), be maintained in good condition, and respect corner-lot sight triangles. Front-yard fences are limited to about 3 1/2 feet; rear and side fences to about 8 feet. Temporary fences are not allowed more than 30 days.
The Town of Apple Valley sets fence requirements through its Development Code (Title 9) and published fence guidance, which apply town-wide as an incorporated municipality. Fences must be built entirely on the owner's property, or directly on a shared property line only with the adjoining owner's written consent. Front-yard fences are limited to roughly 3 1/2 feet, while rear and interior side-yard fences may reach about 8 feet, all measured from adjacent grade. On corner lots, fences within the intersection sight triangle must stay low to maintain traffic visibility. A Building Permit is required for any wall over 6 feet, and a Wall/Fence Height Permit under Development Code Section 9.37.070(B) governs walls from 6 to 8 feet that separate commercial or industrial uses from residential property. Temporary fences are not permitted for more than 30 days. The Town also expects fences to be maintained in good condition, and code enforcement can address fences that are dilapidated, leaning, or hazardous. For homes built after June 2007 in the Single-Family (R-SF) and Equestrian (R-EQ) zones, chain-link fencing is prohibited in front and front street-side yards. Because requirements differ by zone, lot configuration, and recorded-map conditions, property owners should confirm the rules for their specific parcel with the Community Development Department before installing or replacing a fence.
Fences that exceed height limits, encroach over a property line without consent, block corner sight triangles, or fall into disrepair can trigger a Town code-enforcement notice requiring correction. Temporary fences left up beyond 30 days are also a violation.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Apple Valley provides curbside organic-waste collection through Burrtec, using a green barrel for food scraps, grass clippings, and yard trimmings, as requir...
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Artificial turf is allowed in Apple Valley and cannot be banned. California Government Code section 53087.7 (from AB 1164) prohibits any city or county from ...
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Apple Valley encourages desert-adapted, drought-tolerant landscaping and protects native Mojave vegetation. Development Code Chapter 9.76 (Plant Protection a...
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Apple Valley does not prohibit residential rainwater harvesting, and California broadly encourages it. Rain barrels and small rooftop catchment for landscape...
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Most Apple Valley homes are served by Liberty Utilities (Apple Valley Ranchos Water). Its Water Shortage Contingency Plan is in Stage 1 ("Water Alert"), wher...
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Apple Valley runs an annual weed-abatement program, driven by High Desert wildfire risk. Owners must remove weeds, dry grasses, brush, and dead trees posing ...
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