Smoke alarm requirements in unincorporated Sacramento County follow California law. Under Health and Safety Code Section 13113.7, dwellings must have smoke alarms in each bedroom, outside each sleeping area, and on every level. Carbon monoxide alarms are required under the Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Prevention Act (SB 183) in homes with fuel-burning appliances, fireplaces, or attached garages.
Sacramento County does not have a unique residential smoke-alarm standard; the requirements come from statewide California law applied through the adopted building and fire codes. California Health and Safety Code Section 13113.7 requires that smoke alarms be installed in every dwelling intended for human occupancy, with alarms inside each bedroom, outside each separate sleeping area (such as a hallway), and on each level of the unit including basements. On and after January 1, 1986, every single-family dwelling and factory-built home that is sold must have an operable smoke alarm approved and listed by the State Fire Marshal and installed per the State Fire Marshal's regulations. Carbon monoxide alarms are required by the Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Prevention Act of 2010 (SB 183, codified in Health and Safety Code Section 17926 et seq.) in all dwelling units that have a fuel-burning appliance (gas furnace, water heater, stove), a fireplace, or an attached garage; CO alarms must be placed outside each sleeping area and on every level including basements. Combination smoke/CO alarms are allowed if listed by the State Fire Marshal. For rentals, the owner must ensure alarms are operable at the start of each tenancy (Civil Code Section 1941.1 also makes working smoke alarms part of habitability). New construction triggers additional placement and power-source requirements (hard-wired with battery backup, or 10-year sealed-battery devices) under the California Building/Residential Code.
Smoke-alarm non-compliance is enforced through code enforcement and habitability law; for rentals it can support a habitability claim under Civil Code Section 1941.1, and Health and Safety Code Section 13113 provides for penalties for violations of the smoke-alarm requirements. At point of sale, sellers of single-family homes must certify smoke-alarm compliance. Failure to maintain required CO alarms exposes owners to liability under the Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Prevention Act.
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