Unincorporated Tulare County has no separate smoke-alarm ordinance; requirements come from the adopted 2022 California Building/Residential Code and state law. Smoke alarms are required in each sleeping room, outside sleeping areas, and on every level of a dwelling, plus carbon monoxide alarms. The Tulare County Building (Resource Management) division enforces these at construction, sale, and remodel.
Tulare County does not maintain a stand-alone smoke-detector chapter. Ordinance Code Section 7-15-1000 and Section 7-15-1066 adopt the 2022 California Building Standards Code (including the California Building Code and, through it, the California Residential Code) in their entirety for the unincorporated county. Under the adopted code and California Health & Safety Code 13113.7, smoke alarms must be installed in every sleeping room (bedroom), outside each separate sleeping area in the immediate vicinity of the bedrooms, and on each story of a dwelling, including basements. Newly constructed dwellings require hard-wired, interconnected alarms with battery backup; alarms must also be added or upgraded when a dwelling is altered, repaired, or has an addition requiring a permit. Carbon monoxide alarms are likewise required in dwellings with fuel-burning appliances, fireplaces, or attached garages under Health & Safety Code 13260-13263. The Tulare County Resource Management Agency (Building division) verifies compliance during plan review and inspection, and Health & Safety Code 13113.8 requires working smoke alarms in dwellings offered for sale or rent.
Failure to provide required smoke or carbon monoxide alarms is a violation of the adopted Building Code, an infraction under Code Section 7-15 (penalty per Code Section 125), and can hold up permit finals and certificates of occupancy. State law makes the owner responsible for installing and maintaining required alarms in rental and for-sale dwellings.
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