Backyard fires for cooking or recreation are allowed in unincorporated Shasta County and are exempt from AQMD open-burning permits under Rule 2:6 and Health & Safety Code 41704. Burning yard debris or trash, however, is regulated open burning requiring a permit and a permissive burn day, and CAL FIRE/Shasta County Fire can restrict all open flame during high fire danger.
Shasta County draws a clear line between recreational/cooking fires and waste burning. A genuine backyard fire used only for cooking or recreation is exempt from the Air Quality Management District's open-burning rules: Rule 2:6 (Open Burning: General Provisions), subsection b.8, exempts 'open outdoor fires used only for cooking food for human beings or for recreational purposes per CH&SC 41704.' So a campfire-style backyard fire burning clean firewood does not need an AQMD burn permit or a permissive burn day. The moment a backyard fire is used to dispose of yard debris, leaves, brush, or trash, it becomes regulated 'open burning' under Rule 2:6 - that requires a valid burn permit, a permissive burn day, and compliance with the elevation-based ignition hours (9 a.m.-3 p.m. below 1,000 feet; 9 a.m.-10 p.m. above 1,000 feet), and it excludes prohibited materials like plastics, tires, treated wood, and garbage. Because the unincorporated county is largely State Responsibility Area with very high wildfire hazard, CAL FIRE/Shasta County Fire's fire-safety authority overlays all of this: during declared high fire danger, red-flag warnings, or burn suspensions, open flame can be restricted or prohibited regardless of the air-quality exemption. Responsible practice is to keep recreational fires small and contained, burn only dry firewood, maintain clearance to vegetation and structures, keep water and a shovel on hand, never leave the fire unattended, and check the daily fire-danger and burn-day status before lighting.
A true cooking or recreational fire is exempt from AQMD open-burning permits (Rule 2:6.b.8; H&SC 41704). Using a backyard fire to burn yard debris or trash without a permit, on a non-burn day, or with prohibited materials violates Rule 2:6 and can be cited by the AQMD. An open flame that violates a CAL FIRE/Shasta County Fire restriction, or that escapes and starts a wildfire, triggers fire-code enforcement and liability for suppression costs.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Redding, CA
Redding requires every outdoor residential pool to be enclosed by a permanent barrier at least 60 inches (5 feet) tall, with a maximum 2-inch bottom clearanc...
Redding, CA
Redding's Zoning Code §18.40.180 governs allowed fence materials in residential and other districts, while RMC §18.51.040(D) outright prohibits fences and wa...
Redding, CA
Redding's Zoning Code (RMC §18.40.180) regulates fence height, location, and materials, but private boundary-fence disputes are governed by California Civil ...
Redding, CA
Redding does not require a building permit for fences seven feet or shorter located at least 10 feet from a public right-of-way, per California Building Code...
Redding, CA
Redding does not impose an absolute numerical cap on the number of dogs or cats per household. Title 7 of the Redding Municipal Code regulates licensing, vac...
Redding, CA
Redding does not have a dedicated wildlife-feeding ordinance, but feeding wildlife in ways that draw nuisance conditions is reachable under Zoning Ordinance ...
See how Redding's backyard fires rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.