Small backyard recreational fires are allowed under the adopted California Fire Code but must stay 25 feet from structures and combustibles and be constantly attended. Burning yard debris is different - it requires CAL FIRE and MBARD permits, the open burn season, and a permissive burn day.
Backyard fires in unincorporated Santa Cruz County fall into two regulatory tracks. A recreational fire (a small fire for warmth, ambiance, or cooking, including in a fire pit or chiminea) is governed by the California Fire Code adopted through County Code Chapter 7.92. Under CFC Section 307.4.2 it must be kept at least 25 feet from any structure or combustible material and be constantly attended with an extinguishing method ready; portable outdoor fireplaces have a 15-foot rule with an exception for one- and two-family dwellings. By contrast, burning yard waste or brush piles is 'open burning,' which requires a CAL FIRE residential burn permit, a Monterey Bay Air Resources District smoke-management permit, the open burn season (about December 1 to May 1), and a permissive burn day; pile size is capped at 4 by 4 by 4 feet. Because the unincorporated county is overwhelmingly within High and Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones and the Wildland-Urban Interface, the fire authority (CAL FIRE / county fire districts) can suspend all outdoor burning during fire season, red-flag warnings, or local burn bans. Always confirm the current burn-day status with MBARD at 1-800-225-2876 before lighting any outdoor fire, and never leave a fire unattended.
Recreational fires within 25 feet of structures, unattended fires, or any open burning of debris without permits and on a no-burn day violate county and state rules. Fires lit during a burn ban or red-flag warning are prohibited and can carry citations and suppression-cost liability.
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See how Santa Cruz County's backyard fires rules stack up against other locations.
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