Sacramento County's Zoning Code does not assign cost between neighbors. Shared boundary fences are governed by California's Good Neighbor Fence Law (Civil Code Section 841), which presumes adjoining owners share construction and maintenance costs equally and requires 30 days' written notice before incurring shared costs.
Sacramento County's Zoning Code (Section 5.2.5) regulates how tall and what type of fence you may build, but it does not decide who pays for a fence on a shared property line. That question is governed by California state law, the Good Neighbor Fence Law at Civil Code Section 841. Under that statute, adjoining landowners are presumed to share an equal benefit from any fence dividing their properties and, unless they otherwise agree in writing, are presumed equally responsible for the reasonable costs of construction, maintenance, or necessary replacement of the fence. The law also imposes a notice step: a landowner who intends to incur costs for such a fence shall give 30 days' prior written notice to each affected adjoining landowner. That notice must describe the problem with the shared fence, the proposed solution, the estimated costs, the proposed cost-sharing approach, and a proposed timeline. The equal-share presumption can be rebutted; where a neighbor shows by a preponderance of the evidence that an equal split would be unjust, a court may order a lesser share or none. For boundary-line and survey questions, the County recommends a licensed surveyor, as fences should sit on or within your own property line. This is general information, not legal advice.
Building a shared fence without the 30-day notice can undermine a claim for contribution from a neighbor. Encroaching a fence onto a neighbor's land is a private civil matter (trespass/boundary dispute), separate from County zoning enforcement.
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