Shared boundary fences in California are governed by the Good Neighbor Fence Act (CA Civil Code §841), presuming adjoining owners share the cost equally after 30 days' notice — particularly relevant for rural and ranching parcels.
Contact your local code enforcement office for specific penalty information.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Marin County, CA
Driveway approaches onto county roads in unincorporated Marin County require an encroachment permit from County Public Works and must meet sight-distance, dr...
Marin County, CA
All new buildings and intensified uses in unincorporated Marin must provide minimum off-street parking per Marin County Code Chapter 24.04, with ratios rangi...
Marin County, CA
On County roads designated by Board of Supervisors resolution and posted with signs, oversized commercial vehicles (commercial-plated vehicles or combination...
Marin County, CA
Marin County has no county-wide overnight parking ban; on County roads designated by Board of Supervisors resolution and posted with signs, no vehicle may pa...
Marin County, CA
In unincorporated Marin County, it is unlawful to park a vehicle on any street or highway for more than 72 consecutive hours; signed roads carry additional p...
Marin County, CA
California restricts exotic pets through the Fish & Game Code and CDFW regulations — ferrets and hedgehogs are illegal statewide, and many wild/exotic specie...
See how Marin County's neighbor fence rules rules stack up against other locations.
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