California preempts most local firearm regulation under Government Code 53071 and Penal Code 25605, reserving licensing, registration, and manufacture authority to the state. However, local governments retain limited authority over discharge, sensitive places, and zoning of gun businesses.
Government Code Section 53071 expressly occupies the field of registration and licensing of commercially manufactured firearms. Penal Code Section 25605 authorizes residents to keep firearms in their homes or businesses. Cities and counties cannot impose their own licensing schemes or registration requirements that conflict with state law. Local governments retain authority over discharge of firearms, zoning of firearms dealers, and prohibitions in municipally-controlled sensitive places. After the 2022 Bruen decision and SB 2 (2023), California revised concealed carry rules but kept preemption of local licensing intact.
Local ordinances inconsistent with statewide registration or licensing schemes are unenforceable and may be challenged as preempted in California courts.
Contra Costa County, CA
Contra Costa County Noisy Animal Ordinance (Code Β§416-12.202) makes it unlawful to have an animal that creates noise for 30 continuous minutes (incessant) or...
Contra Costa County, CA
Gas and electric lawn equipment in unincorporated Contra Costa County may generally be operated between 7:00 AM and 7:00 PM on weekdays and 8:00 AM to 5:00 P...
Contra Costa County, CA
Unincorporated Contra Costa County generally observes quiet hours from 10:00 PM to 7:00 AM, during which loud residential noise (parties, amplified music, po...
Contra Costa County, CA
Amplified music in unincorporated Contra Costa County is regulated under Title 716. Outdoor speakers, live bands, and DJ equipment must not produce sound pla...
El Cerrito, CA
El Cerrito limits on-street parking to 72 consecutive hours and prohibits overnight parking (2 AM-6 AM) of trailers, RVs, motor homes, utility trailers, and ...
Contra Costa County, CA
Unincorporated Contra Costa County regulates street parking under California Vehicle Code and Ordinance Code Title 4, Division 46. The statewide 72-hour limi...
See how El Cerrito's local firearms preemption rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.