Section 83.06.070 of the County Development Code prohibits certain fence materials in the unincorporated area. Tarp fencing is banned in all zoning districts. Chain link is restricted in residential Valley Region zones, barbed/razor wire is restricted in residential and certain commercial/industrial areas, and electrified fencing along property lines is generally prohibited.
San Bernardino County's Development Code Section 83.06.070 (Prohibited Fence Materials) restricts fence materials by region and zoning district in the unincorporated area. Permanent chain link fencing (and similar materials like chicken wire or hog fencing) is prohibited in residential districts in the Valley Region, except where it is not visible from the public right-of-way, or does not extend in front of the primary structure and is camouflaged with plantings; chain link is allowed for temporary uses, allowed in the Mountain Region when combined with other materials (such as split-rail) and camouflaged, and is not prohibited at all in the Desert Region. Barbed wire and razor wire are prohibited in residential districts and adjacent to public rights-of-way in commercial and industrial districts; barbed, razor, or other sharp-pointed material may only be used if it is at least 6 ft above ground level. Tarp fencing is prohibited in all land use zoning districts. Electrified fencing or wires - in conjunction with any fence, wall, roof, or hedge, or by itself along property lines - is prohibited in any district unless required by law or as a condition of approval, though it may be allowed within a parcel's interior if buffered from other properties by a separate barrier. These prohibitions apply alongside the height limits in Section 83.06.030.
Installing prohibited materials - tarp fencing anywhere, chain link in restricted Valley residential locations, low barbed/razor wire in restricted areas, or property-line electrified fencing - can result in a code-enforcement notice, fines, and an order to remove or replace the fencing with conforming materials.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Hesperia, CA
Hesperia's Development Code (Title 16) does not prohibit residential artificial turf. State law (AB 1164, codified at Cal. Government Code §53087.7) prohibit...
Hesperia, CA
Hesperia Municipal Code §16.24.110 requires preservation of native desert plants per San Bernardino County Code §88.01.060, including Joshua trees, Mojave yu...
Hesperia, CA
Rainwater harvesting is broadly legal in California under AB 1750 (Rainwater Capture Act of 2012, codified at Water Code §10574). Hesperia has no specific lo...
Hesperia, CA
Hesperia's Weed Abatement Program is administered under contract by San Bernardino County Fire Hazard Abatement. Each parcel is inspected spring (weeds/grass...
Hesperia, CA
Hesperia parks are operated by the Hesperia Recreation and Park District (a separate special district, not the city). The Hesperia Municipal Code has no Titl...
Hesperia, CA
Commercial drone work in Hesperia is governed by FAA 14 CFR Part 107 — operators must hold a Remote Pilot Certificate, register the drone, comply with Remote...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in San Bernardino County.
See how other cities in San Bernardino County handle material restrictions.
See how Hesperia's material restrictions rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.