Pop. 52,388 Β· Sacramento County
Florin ADUs are regulated by Sacramento County Zoning Code Β§5.4.5 (Residential Accessory Structures and ADUs) and the state ADU statute (Gov. Code Β§65852.2). The County allows one ADU plus one JADU on a single-family lot, with detached ADUs typically capped at 850 sq ft (1 bedroom) or 1,000 sq ft (2+ bedrooms).
Detached accessory structures up to 120 sq ft are typically exempt from a building permit in Sacramento County (per CBC Β§105.2). Larger structures require permits and must comply with Zoning Code Β§5.4.5 setbacks and height limits.
Converting an existing garage into a habitable space (bedroom, ADU, JADU) requires a building permit and must meet Zoning Code Β§5.4.5 ADU standards or Building Code habitability standards. The converted space typically counts toward residential floor area and lot coverage limits.
A foundation-built tiny home meeting the California Residential Code can qualify as an ADU under Sacramento County Zoning Code Β§5.4.5 - up to 850 sq ft (1BR) or 1,000 sq ft (2BR+). Tiny homes on wheels (THOWs) are recreational vehicles and cannot be occupied as a permanent residence on a residential Florin lot.
In unincorporated Sacramento County, a detached residential carport is treated as an accessory structure under Zoning Code Section 5.4.5.A: maximum 16 feet tall, 3-foot interior side and rear setbacks, and a 20-foot front setback. The county does not mandate covered parking for existing single-family homes, so a carport is optional.
Florin is an unincorporated CDP in Sacramento County and is governed by Sacramento County Code Chapter 6.68 (Noise Control). SCC 6.68.070 caps residential exterior noise at 55 dBA between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. and 50 dBA between 10 p.m. and 7 a.m. measured at the receiving residential property line.
Amplified music in Florin is regulated under Sacramento County Code Chapter 6.68. The Β§6.68.070 residential cap (55 dBA day / 50 dBA night) applies at the neighbor's property line, and the Β§6.68.150 general noise rule independently prohibits loud, unnecessary or unusual noise that disturbs the peace.
Sacramento County Code Β§6.68.070 sets cumulative dBA standards by receiving zone. In Florin (single-family residential zones such as RD-5 and RD-7), the limit is 55 dBA day / 50 dBA night. Multi-family receivers, commercial and industrial receivers have higher caps.
Sacramento County does not ban gas-powered leaf blowers but limits their use to the Β§6.68.090(h) maintenance window: 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekdays and 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekends. Outside those hours, leaf blowers must comply with the residential noise caps (55 dBA day / 50 dBA night).
Sacramento County Code Β§6.68.090(e) exempts construction noise from the residential decibel limits provided work does not take place between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. on weekdays, with tighter weekend restrictions. The EMD Noise Control Program confirms property-maintenance and similar activities are allowed 6 a.m.-8 p.m. weekdays and 7 a.m.-8 p.m. weekends.
Sacramento County Code Β§8.08.050 prohibits any animal from making loud or disturbing noises, including chronic howling, yowling, barking, whining, or other utterances. Florin complaints route to Sacramento County Animal Care and Regulation (916-368-PETS / 7387).
On-road vehicle noise in unincorporated Sacramento County is governed mainly by California Vehicle Code muffler and exhaust laws (Sections 27150-27151), while the County Code addresses vehicle alarms and limits refuse-collection trucks to 75 dB at 50 feet.
Outdoor music in unincorporated Sacramento County is held to the Chapter 6.68 exterior noise standards, with the residential limit reduced 5 dBA because it is music. After 10 p.m. the effective cap at a neighbor's property is roughly 45 dBA, so evening outdoor sound is tightly limited.
Industrial and commercial mechanical noise in unincorporated Sacramento County is regulated under County Code Chapter 6.68 exterior noise standards, measured at the affected residential property. EMD specifically investigates habitual or mechanical sources such as pool pumps, HVAC systems and commercial equipment.
Aircraft noise around unincorporated Sacramento County is addressed through the General Plan Noise Element and airport Land Use Compatibility Plans rather than the dBA noise ordinance. New residential uses within the 60 CNEL contour are generally treated as incompatible, with interior noise limited to 45 CNEL.
Sacramento County allows the use of 'safe and sane' fireworks in unincorporated Florin only between 12:00 noon on June 28 and 9:00 p.m. on July 4. All other fireworks - rockets, firecrackers, roman candles, squibs, torpedoes - are prohibited year-round.
Sacramento County enforces the California Building and Residential Codes, which require smoke alarms in every sleeping room, outside each sleeping area, and on every story including basements. CO alarms are also required in homes with fuel-burning appliances or attached garages.
Open agricultural and yard-waste burning in unincorporated Sacramento County requires a Sacramento Metro AQMD permit and is only allowed on declared 'permissive burn days.' Residential yard-waste burning is generally prohibited in the urban Florin area.
Open burning is regulated by Sacramento Metro Air Quality Management District (SMAQMD) and the Sacramento County Fire Code. Residential recreational fires in approved devices (gas patio heaters, propane fire pits, and small wood-fueled chimineas) are generally allowed except on Spare-the-Air (no-burn) days called by SMAQMD November 1 - February 28.
Sacramento County's Weed Abatement program (Title 17 Fire Prevention) requires property owners to clear flammable weeds, brush, and combustible vegetation. Statewide PRC Β§4291 requires 100 feet of defensible space around structures in State Responsibility Areas, with stricter Zone 0 (0-5 ft), Zone 1 (5-30 ft), and Zone 2 (30-100 ft) standards.
Backyard recreational fires are allowed in most unincorporated Sacramento County under Sacramento Metro Fire's California Fire Code rules - 3 feet by 2 feet maximum, 25 feet of clearance, constantly attended, with extinguishing equipment on hand. Burning trash, leaves, or yard waste in the backyard is prohibited by Sac Metro Air District, and no-burn days apply in winter.
Propane (LP-gas) storage in unincorporated Sacramento County follows the California Fire Code Chapter 61 as enforced by the local fire agency. Small portable cylinders for grills and camping have permit exemptions, but LP-gas may not be stored inside buildings except small approved cylinders, and larger tanks require setbacks and a fire-code permit.
Most of unincorporated Sacramento County is low-lying valley floor with low wildfire hazard, so the majority of parcels are not in a Fire Hazard Severity Zone. However, the 2025 CAL FIRE maps added Moderate, High, and Very High FHSZ designations in south, southeast, and eastern county areas, triggering defensible space and, in higher zones, WUI building standards.
Sacramento County Zoning Code Β§5.2.5 limits solid front-yard fences in residential zones to 3 feet, semi-open picket fencing to 4 feet, open chain link to 4 feet, and open wrought iron to 7 feet. Side-street, interior side, and rear fences may be up to 7 feet.
Retaining walls over 4 feet (measured from bottom of footing to top of wall) require a building permit per the California Residential Code adopted via SCC Title 16. Any retaining wall supporting a surcharge (additional structural load like a driveway, building, or pool) requires a permit regardless of height.
Fences up to 7 feet in interior side and rear yards generally do not need a building permit in unincorporated Sacramento County. Front-yard fences must comply with Β§5.2.5 height limits; retaining walls over 4 feet (or any height supporting a surcharge) require a permit.
Sacramento County Zoning Code Β§5.2.5.A.2 requires perimeter fences around private pools not otherwise restricted from unauthorized public access, built to California Building Code Β§3109.4.4.3. The standard CBC barrier is at least 60 inches tall with self-closing, self-latching gates and openings no greater than 4 inches.
Sacramento County's Zoning Code does not assign cost between neighbors. Shared boundary fences are governed by California's Good Neighbor Fence Law (Civil Code Section 841), which presumes adjoining owners share construction and maintenance costs equally and requires 30 days' written notice before incurring shared costs.
Sacramento County recognizes solid walls, semi-open picket, open chain link or woven wire, and open ornamental wrought iron as fence types, each with its own front-yard height. Required screening walls for non-residential uses must be solid wood or masonry; makeshift materials are prohibited.
Beyond height, Sacramento County requires fences near intersections and driveways to meet visibility requirements of the County Improvement Standards, and certain commercial, industrial, and multifamily uses adjacent to residential property must screen with a solid fence or masonry wall at least 6 feet tall.
Sacramento County prohibits temporary or makeshift fence materials such as plywood, particle board, paper, and plastic tarps, and requires a Minor Use Permit for barbed wire, concertina wire, or electric fencing, with limited agricultural and industrial exceptions.
A Florin STR operator must hold THREE separate licenses: (1) Short-Term Rental Permit from Planning & Environmental Review, (2) Business License from the Department of Finance, and (3) Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT) registration with Finance.
Florin STRs require a Short-Term Rental Permit from Sacramento County Planning & Environmental Review under SCC Chapter 4.08 and Zoning Code Β§3.9.3.AA. The property owner (or long-term renter) must occupy the home as their primary residence for at least six months per year, and only one STR may be operated per applicant.
Sacramento County limits Florin STRs to no more than two adults per bedroom, one rental party at a time, with no public or commercial events, and a maximum 29-day stay per rental party.
Florin STRs must provide off-street parking consistent with Sacramento County Zoning Code Β§5.9, typically two spaces for a single-family residence. STR permits also require operators to manage guest parking so it does not spill into adjacent residential streets in violation of the 72-hour street-storage rule.
Sacramento County imposes a 12% Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT) on every Florin STR booking of 29 days or less under SCC Chapter 3.08. The host must register with the Department of Finance, collect the tax, and remit it monthly.
STR operators in Florin are responsible for guest noise. Chapter 6.68 residential caps (55 dBA day / 50 dBA night) and the Β§6.68.150 general nuisance standard apply to STR guests just like to homeowners. Sacramento County's STR program allows permit suspension for repeated noise complaints.
Unincorporated Sacramento County allows short-term rentals only at a primary residence. The owner or a long-term renter must live at the property at least six months a year, the short-term rental must remain accessory to that full-time occupancy, and only one short-term rental permit may be held per applicant. Investor-owned, non-owner-occupied whole-home STRs are not eligible.
Sacramento County does not require the host to be present during every unincorporated-area short-term rental stay, but the program is anchored to owner occupancy: the home must be a primary residence lived in at least six months a year. A Local Contact Person must be available 24 hours by phone and able to reach the property within 60 minutes.
Sacramento County's short-term rental program for unincorporated areas requires operators to carry liability insurance covering the rental use, with published guidance describing a minimum on the order of $500,000 to $1,000,000 per occurrence. Operators should confirm the exact required coverage limit with the Office of Planning & Environmental Review, as it is set through Sacramento County Code Chapter 4.08 and permit conditions.
Sacramento County limits short-term rentals in unincorporated areas to stays of 29 consecutive days or less, and caps each rental party at no more than 29 total days per year. Stays of 30 days or more are not short-term rentals and need no STR permit. The day limits keep short-term rental an accessory use to a primary residence.
Sacramento County's parking rule prohibits anyone from parking or storing a vehicle on any highway or alley for more than 72 consecutive hours. Moving the vehicle and re-parking within 300 feet of the original spot still counts as storage unless the vehicle was actually driven.
Commercial vehicles over a certain weight (typically 10,000 lbs GVW) generally cannot be parked overnight in residential zones in unincorporated Sacramento County. Box trucks, semis, and heavy commercial vehicles must be stored at a commercial yard or permitted location.
Sacramento County Zoning Code does NOT allow anyone to occupy a recreational vehicle as a residence on a residential property. RVs and boats may be parked on the owner's property within zoning setbacks but cannot be used as permanent housing outside a permitted RV/trailer park.
It is unlawful in Sacramento County to park or store automotive vehicles or trailers without current registration, or in an inoperable condition, on any lot in any residential zone unless they are stored in a fully enclosed building. Nuisance vehicles include abandoned, wrecked, dismantled, inoperative, unregistered (over 6 months) and unmoved (over 72 hours) vehicles.
Unincorporated Sacramento County does not impose a blanket overnight street-parking ban. Instead, County Code Section 10.24.070 prohibits parking any vehicle on a highway or alley for more than 72 continuous hours, with the same 72-hour cap on motor homes, trailer coaches, and truck-and-camper rigs in residential districts.
Oversized vehicles in unincorporated Sacramento County are addressed mainly through the 72-hour street limit and the heavy commercial-vehicle restriction. Motor homes, trailer coaches, and truck-and-camper rigs may not stay on a residential-district highway more than 72 hours, and commercial vehicles of 10,000+ pounds GVWR are barred from residential parking except for active loading or service.
Unincorporated Sacramento County requires residential vehicles to be parked on a surfaced area, not on bare ground in the required yard. Front and side-street yards generally must be improved with an impervious surface (asphalt or concrete) on parcels under 15,000 square feet; larger parcels may use permeable surfaces.
Sacramento County has no separate ordinance reserving EV-charging spaces; the controlling law is California Vehicle Code Section 22511. It lets local authorities and lot owners designate charging-only stalls, and a non-charging vehicle occupying a properly posted EV stall may be towed. Section 22511.2 lets EV spaces count toward minimum parking.
Loading zones in unincorporated Sacramento County are set under County Code Chapter 10.24. The Director marks loading zones with yellow or white curbs. Yellow zones allow only loading/unloading from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. (except Sundays and holidays), with passenger loading limited to about one minute and material loading to roughly 20 minutes; white zones limit stops to five minutes.
Curb colors in unincorporated Sacramento County follow California Vehicle Code Section 21458, which says only local authorities may mark curbs to indicate parking rules. County Code Section 10.24.010 lets the County's Director place red, yellow, white, green, and blue curb markings. Private parties cannot lawfully paint public curbs.
Removal of any heritage California oak (60+ inches girth measured 4.5 ft above ground) or designated landmark tree on private property in unincorporated Sacramento County requires a Tree Permit under SCC Chapter 19.04 and Chapter 19.12.
Routine trimming of trees in Florin generally does not require a permit unless the tree is a heritage California oak or landmark tree under Chapter 19.04/19.12. Even for protected trees, light pruning (less than 10-25% of canopy) typically falls under the exempt maintenance category.
Florin water service is provided by the Sacramento County Water Agency (SCWA) Zone 40 / Florin Resource Conservation District and California Water Service. Year-round watering restrictions limit landscape irrigation to assigned days and prohibit watering between 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Sacramento County Code Chapter 16.18 (Neighborhood Nuisance) makes overgrown grass, weeds, or vegetation a nuisance when over 12 inches tall, completely dead, or covering more than 50% of the front or side yard visible from the street. Code Enforcement can order abatement.
Sacramento County Code Title 17 (Fire Prevention) and Chapter 17.12 (Weed Control) authorize the County Fire Warden and Fire Districts to order abatement of overgrown, dead, dry, decayed, diseased, or hazardous vegetation that creates a fire hazard.
Rainwater harvesting is legal in California and not separately restricted by Sacramento County. Under the Rainwater Capture Act of 2012 (AB 1750), residential roof-to-barrel/cistern systems for outdoor use generally need no building or plumbing permit. Larger or non-standard systems may require permits and must avoid creating mosquito breeding or nuisances.
Sacramento County encourages native and drought-tolerant landscaping. The County zoning code's landscape standards emphasize native and water-wise plants, and the Sacramento County Water Agency's Cash for Grass program pays $1.00 per square foot (up to $2,000 residential) to replace lawn with low-water, non-invasive landscaping plus drip irrigation.
Artificial turf is allowed in unincorporated Sacramento County but is not counted as required landscaping by right. Under the Zoning Code landscape standards, artificial turf and other artificial-surface materials may be combined with required landscape areas only when approved through Design Review, and cannot replace required planting areas.
Under state law SB 1383, Sacramento County provides mandatory weekly curbside organics collection for unincorporated residents. The green-waste cart became an organics cart accepting food scraps, food-soiled paper, untreated wood, and yard trimmings starting July 4, 2022. Home (backyard) composting is encouraged as a complementary option.
California Fish and Game Code Β§251.1 prohibits harassment of wildlife, and Sacramento County's nuisance rules prohibit conditions that attract rodents and predators. Intentional feeding of deer, coyotes, raccoons, or feral cats is discouraged and can trigger code-enforcement action when it creates a nuisance.
Sacramento County allows beekeeping in residential zones subject to County Agricultural Commissioner registration. Hives must be set back from property lines and located to direct bee flight paths away from neighbor activity areas.
Sacramento County Code Title 8 (Animal Control) requires dogs to be on leash or otherwise under restraint when off the owner's premises. Off-leash dogs in public are an infraction enforceable by Animal Care and Regulation.
Sacramento County allows backyard chickens in residential zones with restrictions. On lots under 10,000 sq ft, the limit is one egg-laying chicken/duck per 1,000 sq ft of parcel area OR one per 200 sq ft of rear yard area, whichever is less. Lots of 10,000 sq ft or more may keep an unlimited number subject to nuisance rules. Roosters are heavily restricted due to crowing noise.
Sacramento County publishes no separate exotic-pet ordinance for unincorporated areas; exotic and wild animals are governed mainly by California law. Under Fish & Game Code 2118 and CCR Title 14 section 671, 'restricted species' (big cats, primates, alligators, venomous snakes such as rattlesnakes and other Viperidae) may not be kept as pets, and the state issues no exotic-pet permits.
Sacramento County bans no dog breed. Under California Food & Agricultural Code 31683, no local dangerous-dog program may be breed-specific β except a mandatory spay/neuter program authorized by Health & Safety Code 122331. Acting on that exception, the County requires unaltered pit-bull-type dogs to be sterilized. General dog rules (licensing, leash, dangerous-dog declarations) apply to all breeds equally.
In unincorporated Sacramento County, horses and large livestock are generally allowed on parcels over 20,000 sq ft, incidental to a residence, with Zoning Code stable standards. Pigs are tightly limited by zone β three in AR2 and one on AR1 through RD-7 parcels, all needing 20,000+ sq ft. Animals must be kept in healthy, sanitary, nuisance-free conditions.
Unincorporated Sacramento County allows up to four mature dogs and four mature cats per lot, building, structure, enclosure, or premises. 'Mature' means four months or older for dogs and six months or older for cats. Keeping more than the limit requires a conditional use permit for a kennel or cattery. All dogs and cats must be licensed and rabies-vaccinated.
Unincorporated Sacramento County requires every cat over four months old to be licensed and currently rabies-vaccinated. Such cats must also be spayed or neutered unless the owner holds an unaltered (intact) license or qualifies for an exemption. Up to four mature cats (six months or older) are allowed per premises. Altered-cat license fees run about half the intact fee.
Animal hoarding in unincorporated Sacramento County is addressed through the County's four-dog/four-cat pet limit and animal-care duties plus California's cruelty law. Keeping more than four mature dogs or cats without a kennel/cattery permit is a code violation, and overcrowding that harms animals can be prosecuted under California Penal Code 597, with mandatory ownership bans under Penal Code 597.9.
New swimming pools in Florin require a building permit from Sacramento County Building. The permit covers pool structure, electrical, plumbing, and the California Building Code Β§3109 perimeter barrier. Construction must comply with Zoning Code Β§5.2.5 walls and fences and the Pool Safety Act (SB 442).
California Pool Safety Act (Health and Safety Code Β§115920 et seq., SB 442) requires every newly constructed or remodeled swimming pool at a private single-family home to include at least two of seven listed drowning-prevention safety features.
Outdoor pools in unincorporated Sacramento County must be enclosed by a barrier at least 60 inches high (measured from the side facing away from the pool), with a maximum 2-inch gap at the bottom. Gates must be self-closing and self-latching. The barrier is set by County Code Section 16.36.130.
Above-ground pools holding water over 18 inches deep are regulated like other pools in unincorporated Sacramento County. Where the pool wall or a top-mounted fence serves as the barrier, ladders or steps must be securable, lockable, or removable, and any opening created must be protected by a conforming barrier (County Code 16.36.130).
In unincorporated Sacramento County, a spa or hot tub with a locking safety cover meeting ASTM F1346-91 is not required to provide other barriers. Without such a cover, the spa or hot tub must meet the full pool barrier requirements of County Code Section 16.36.130.
Sacramento County Zoning Code allows home occupations in residential zones if they remain clearly secondary to the residential use. Sacramento County Code Enforcement's Home Business page lists key restrictions: limited employees, no off-site clients without parking, no signage, and no nuisance from noise, traffic, dust, or odor.
California Cottage Food Law (AB 1616 / Health & Safety Code Β§113758 et seq.) allows home production of approved low-risk foods. Florin operators register or obtain a permit from Sacramento County Environmental Management Department (EMD) - Class A (direct sales only) is registration only; Class B (indirect sales) requires a permit and inspection.
Home occupations in unincorporated Sacramento County are limited to minimal customer visits and may not generate traffic, parking demand, or deliveries greater than normal residential use. Most businesses must operate without on-site clients.
Home occupations are permitted in unincorporated Sacramento County under Zoning Code Section 3.9.3.F, subject to standards designed to keep their effects undetectable from normal residential activity. The business must be incidental to the home, use no more than 20% of the habitable floor area, and generate minimal traffic.
Under Sacramento County Zoning Code Section 3.5.1.F, the use of a legally permitted, lawfully occupied dwelling as a family day care home is a permitted use in all zoning districts and requires no County zoning permit. This mirrors California's preemption of local zoning over family day care homes (Health & Safety Code 1597.40 et seq.).
A home occupation in unincorporated Sacramento County may have no more than one sign, not exceeding four square feet, attached flat against the building or in a front window, and not illuminated (Zoning Code Section 5.10.1.E). Section 3.9.3.F otherwise requires no visible evidence of the business outside the dwelling.
Tree removal permits in Florin (unincorporated Sacramento County) are issued by Planning & Environmental Review under Chapter 19.04 (heritage trees) and Chapter 19.12 (tree preservation). Applications typically require an arborist report justifying removal and a replacement plan.
Sacramento County Code Chapter 19.04 designates California oaks with trunk girth β₯60 inches measured 4.5 ft above grade as 'heritage trees' on any land including private. Landmark trees - especially prominent or stately trees - are likewise protected.
Commercial cannabis activity, including dispensaries, is prohibited in unincorporated Sacramento County under Chapter 6.88. Florin residents may purchase cannabis only at licensed retailers within incorporated cities (City of Sacramento, Rancho Cordova, Isleton) that have adopted permitting frameworks.
Sacramento County Code Β§6.88 prohibits outdoor cannabis cultivation in unincorporated areas, including Florin. Indoor personal cultivation is capped at six (6) plants per residence regardless of the number of occupants, must occur in a single room or fully enclosed secure structure, and lighting must not exceed 1,000 watts per light.
Residential rooftop solar in Florin requires a building/electrical permit from Sacramento County Building. The County offers expedited solar permitting under California Government Code Β§65850.5 (SB 379 / AB 2188) - small residential systems generally process within 1 business day.
California Solar Rights Act (Civil Code Β§714) limits HOA authority to restrict solar installations. An HOA may impose only reasonable architectural restrictions that do not significantly decrease system efficiency (defined as more than 10% efficiency loss or more than $1,000 added cost).
Most of Florin sits in FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) Zone X (minimal flood hazard) but pockets near Morrison Creek and Florin Creek can fall in Zone AE (1% annual chance / 100-year floodplain). Buyers should check the FEMA Flood Map Service Center for property-specific status.
Sacramento County's Stormwater Quality Program operates under the state-issued NPDES Phase I MS4 permit. Construction sites disturbing 1 acre or more require a state Construction General Permit. Residential property owners must not allow dirt, paint, oil, fertilizer, or other pollutants to enter storm drains.
Sacramento County grading regulated under County Code Chapter 16.44. Permits required for earthwork exceeding 50 cu yd, cuts/fills over specified depths, or work on steep slopes. Drainage must not be diverted onto neighboring properties. County drainage standards follow the Sacramento County Improvement Standards and Hydrology Manual.
Sacramento County requires erosion and sediment control BMPs on all grading and construction sites. County Code Chapter 16.44 implements the Grading, Erosion, and Sediment Control Ordinance. Wet-season (October 1 to April 30) requires enhanced measures including stabilization of disturbed areas. Violations can stop work and trigger penalties.
The California Coastal Act, Public Resources Code sections 30000 through 30900, requires Coastal Development Permits for nearly all work in the coastal zone and gives the Coastal Commission appeal jurisdiction over local decisions.
Sacramento County Parks have a published curfew - generally closed from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. unless otherwise posted. The minor curfew in SCC Chapter 9.28 also bars persons under 18 from being in any public place (including parks) between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. without parental supervision.
Sacramento County juvenile curfew prohibits minors under 18 from public places between 10 PM and 5 AM (Sun-Thu) and midnight to 5 AM (Fri-Sat) without adult or exemption.
Sacramento County Code Chapter 16.18 (Neighborhood Nuisance Code) declares as nuisance any property with overgrown vegetation, exterior trash, debris, junk, or graffiti not regularly removed, as well as conditions that violate the Building, Plumbing, Electrical, Mechanical, Housing, or Zoning Codes.
Sacramento County requires residential trash, recycling, and green-waste containers to be stored out of public view between collection days. Containers may be placed at the curb the evening before pickup and must be returned by end of collection day.
Snow is extremely rare in the Sacramento Valley. No county sidewalk snow removal ordinance exists. Owners must keep sidewalks free of debris and hazards under Streets and Highways Code 5610.
Vacant and foreclosed properties in unincorporated Sacramento County must be kept free of overgrown and dead vegetation, weeds, junk, and fire hazards. The fire district conducts dry-season weed inspections, and Code Enforcement handles vacant-property nuisances.
Unincorporated Sacramento County treats overgrown and dead weeds/grass as a nuisance when dead vegetation exceeds 12 inches over more than 50% of the visible yard. During the dry season the fire district also requires weeds cut to no more than one inch for fire safety.
Unincorporated Sacramento County allows up to 3 garage sales per year at the operator's residence, each lasting no more than two consecutive days. Signs may be placed only on your own property and cannot exceed 12 square feet total, per Zoning Code Section 3.9.3.M.
Political signs on private residential property in unincorporated Sacramento County are protected speech under the First Amendment and California Outdoor Advertising Act (Bus. & Prof. Code Β§5400 et seq.). Sacramento County Zoning Code Β§5.10 allows temporary political signs without permit subject to size and placement limits.
Seasonal holiday lights and displays permitted on private property with no permit required. Inflatables and roof displays must not create traffic hazards or violate fire or electrical codes.
Unincorporated Sacramento County has no specific 'garage sale sign' provision. Under Zoning Code Section 5.10.1, portable A-frame and off-site directional signs are generally prohibited (5.10.1.I), and signs in the public right-of-way may be removed by county personnel without notice. Only limited open-house directional signs are expressly allowed.
California SB 1383 requires every Florin household and business to subscribe to organics (food and yard waste) collection in addition to trash and recycling. Sacramento County implements the state mandate through Waste Management & Recycling and contracted franchise haulers.
Subscription to garbage, recycling, and organics collection is mandatory for improved parcels in unincorporated Sacramento County. Garbage and organics are collected weekly and recycling every other week by DWMR or a County franchisee, with carts out by 6 a.m. on collection day.
Unincorporated Sacramento County residents get one bulky waste pickup appointment per 12 months for up to five cubic yards, included in standard service. Items go out by 6 a.m., no more than 24 hours before pickup, one foot from the curb on a flat surface.
Unincorporated Sacramento County requires carts at the curb by 6 a.m. on collection day, out no more than 24 hours before and returned within 24 hours after. Carts must sit at least 6 feet from objects, 3 feet apart, with 14.5 feet of overhead clearance.
Under California SB 1383, unincorporated Sacramento County provides weekly organics collection. Since July 2022 the green cart accepts food scraps, food-soiled paper, and yard trimmings. Keeping organic waste out of the trash is required by state law for residents and businesses.
Sacramento County Zoning Code requires outdoor lighting to be shielded and directed to prevent glare and light trespass onto adjacent residential properties. Chronic light trespass can be cited as a nuisance under SCC Chapter 16.18.
Unincorporated Sacramento County has no comprehensive dark-sky ordinance for single-family homes. However, the Zoning Code requires full cut-off, shielded, downward-directed lighting for multifamily, commercial, and parking-area fixtures (Sec. 5.4.3, 5.9.4.G) to reduce light pollution and glare, referencing IESNA standards.
Sacramento County Zoning Code Β§5.2.1 sets residential setbacks by zone. Typical RD-5 single-family setbacks are 20 ft front, 5 ft side, 15 ft rear (or 10 ft rear for RD-7). Encroachments (eaves, mechanical equipment) up to 2-3 ft into setbacks are typically allowed.
Typical single-family homes in unincorporated Sacramento County may be up to about 30 feet tall, and residential accessory structures are typically 16 feet or less, with exact limits set by zoning district. Certain larger institutional buildings may reach 75 feet with increased yards, and aircraft approach zones impose additional caps.
Lot coverage and intensity in unincorporated Sacramento County are controlled through the development standards tables of Zoning Code Chapter 5 and, for commercial and industrial buildings, a floor-area-to-lot-area ratio that shall not exceed 2.5:1. Residential intensity is shaped by setbacks, height, and density rather than a single countywide coverage cap.
Drone operations in Florin are governed primarily by FAA Part 107 (commercial) and Part 101/44809 (recreational). California Civil Code Β§1708.8 creates a private right of action for invasion of privacy by drone. Sacramento County Parks prohibits drone operations in regional parks without permit.
Commercial drone pilots need FAA Part 107 certification. LAANC required for SMF, Mather, and McClellan airspace. County parks require Special Use Permit plus liability insurance.
California Tenant Protection Act (AB 1482 / Civil Code Β§1946.2) applies to most Florin rentals: tenants in possession 12+ months have just-cause eviction protection and rent caps. The annual rent increase cap is the lesser of 5% + regional CPI or 10%.
Unincorporated Sacramento County has NO local rent cap. Statewide AB 1482 (Tenant Protection Act of 2019) applies: annual rent increases capped at 5 percent plus CPI, or 10 percent maximum, whichever is lower. Just-cause eviction required for tenants of 12+ months. Single-family homes owned by individuals and buildings under 15 years old are generally exempt.
No countywide rental registration program in unincorporated Sacramento County. Landlords must comply with state disclosure laws but no local registry or annual fee exists.
California evictions run through the unlawful detainer process. Under Code of Civil Procedure Β§ 1161, nonpayment requires a 3-day notice to pay rent or quit (excluding weekends and holidays), and lease violations require a 3-day notice to cure or quit. No-fault terminations of covered tenancies require 30, 60, or 90 days. Self-help lockouts are illegal.
California landlords must keep rentals fit to live in. Civil Code Β§Β§ 1941 and 1941.1, reinforced by Green v. Superior Court, imply a warranty of habitability covering plumbing, heat, water, electricity, and sanitation. If repairs fail after notice, a tenant may repair and deduct up to one month's rent under Β§ 1942 or withhold rent.
California Civil Code Β§ 1954 limits when a landlord may enter a rented home. Except in emergencies, abandonment, or with tenant consent, the landlord must give reasonable written notice (24 hours is presumed reasonable) and may enter only during normal business hours, for specific permitted reasons such as repairs, inspections, or showings.
California sets no fixed dollar or percentage cap on rent late fees, but a late fee in a residential lease is treated as liquidated damages. Under Civil Code Β§ 1671, such a fee is valid only if it reasonably estimates the landlord's actual loss from late payment; arbitrary penalty fees are unenforceable.
To end a California month-to-month tenancy, a tenant gives 30 days' written notice. A landlord gives 30 days if the tenant has lived there under a year, or 60 days if a year or more, under Civ. Code Β§ 1946.1. AB 1482 requires just cause after 12 months; military and DV tenants may exit early.
California requires written notice before raising a month-to-month tenant's rent. Under Civ. Code Β§ 827, increases of 10% or less in 12 months need 30 days' notice; increases above 10% need 90 days' notice. AB 1482 separately caps yearly increases on covered units.
As of July 1, 2024, California landlords may collect no more than one month's rent as a security deposit, regardless of whether the unit is furnished. The deposit, minus any lawful deductions, must be returned with an itemized statement within 21 days after move-out, or the landlord risks penalties of up to twice the deposit.
California adverse possession requires five years of continuous, open, hostile possession AND payment of all property taxes during that period under Code of Civil Procedure Β§ 325. A squatter or trespasser who has not paid taxes gains no ownership and can be removed by unlawful detainer, ejectment, or a police trespass action.
Sacramento sits east of the major Bay Area faults, so seismic risk in Florin is lower than coastal California but not zero. Current California Residential Code R403 / R404 anchoring standards apply to new construction. Earthquake Brace + Bolt (EBB) program incentives are available for older pre-1980 wood-frame homes statewide.
California does not require automatic seismic gas shut-off valves in residential construction (unlike Los Angeles which requires them at any improvement over $10,000). Sacramento County follows the state minimum, so seismic gas valves are optional in Florin.
HOAs in Florin subdivisions are governed by the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (Civil Code Β§4000 et seq.). HOAs can enforce CC&Rs through fines, lien, and ultimately judicial foreclosure, subject to statutory notice and hearing procedures.
California HOA assessments are governed by Civil Code 5605. Regular increases over 20 percent or special assessments over 5 percent require member approval.
Davis-Stirling Act requires Internal Dispute Resolution (Civ Code 5900) and Alternative Dispute Resolution (Civ Code 5925) before most HOA lawsuits.
HOA architectural review in California is governed by Civil Code 4765. Boards must provide fair, reasonable, and timely review with written decisions.
HOAs in Sacramento County operate under the Davis-Stirling Act (Civil Code 4000-6150). Board meetings, notices, and elections must follow statutory rules.
California HOAs may fine members for rule violations, but only under a published schedule of fines and after strict due-process steps. Civil Code section 5855 requires written notice and a hearing before any monetary penalty, and section 5725 bars fines from becoming a foreclosable lien on the home.
California overrides HOA governing documents on several owner protections. The Davis-Stirling Act and related Civil Code sections bar HOAs from prohibiting solar systems, U.S. flag displays, drought-tolerant landscaping, EV charging stations, and most noncommercial signs, even where local city rules are silent.
Food trucks in unincorporated Sacramento County need a Mobile Food Facility permit from Sacramento County Environmental Management (health) plus a county business license. SB 946 (2018) limits local regulation of sidewalk vendors. Trucks must operate from an approved commissary and follow CA Retail Food Code (CalCode) for mobile facilities.
Sacramento County permits food trucks in most commercial, industrial, and mixed-use zones with property owner consent. Residential zones generally restrict vending except for special events. SB 946 requires objective health, safety, or traffic justification for sidewalk vendor location restrictions. Parks allow vending with permits.
Sacramento County Environmental Management enforces pest and vector control under County Code Chapter 6.36 and CA Health and Safety Code 2270+. Sacramento-Yolo Mosquito and Vector Control District handles mosquito abatement. Fumigation requires licensed structural pest control operators registered with the CA Structural Pest Control Board.
Unincorporated Sacramento County scaffolding must comply with CA Building Code Chapter 33 and Cal/OSHA Title 8 standards. Scaffolds over 35 feet require engineering and permits through Community Development. Public right-of-way encroachment needs a separate encroachment permit from DOT.
Sacramento County enforces CA HSC 17920.10 (lead hazard as substandard housing) and federal EPA RRP Rule for renovations in pre-1978 homes.
Elevators in Sacramento County are regulated by Cal/OSHA Division of Occupational Safety and Health Elevator Unit. Annual state inspection and permit required.
Sacramento County honors posted No Soliciting and No Trespassing signs. Solicitors who ignore signs can be cited for trespass under Penal Code 602 in addition to county peddler violations.
Commercial door-to-door solicitors must obtain a Sacramento County Peddler permit through the Sheriff. Hours typically limited 9 AM to sunset or 8 PM. Religious and political canvassing exempt.
Wood and charcoal smokers in unincorporated Sacramento County are treated as open-flame cooking devices under the California Fire Code: they cannot be operated on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction (with single-family and sprinklered exemptions). Smoke that becomes a public nuisance is independently regulated by Sac Metro Air District Rule 402.
In unincorporated Sacramento County, the California Fire Code governs outdoor cooking. Section 308.1.4 prohibits operating charcoal burners and other open-flame cooking devices on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction. One- and two-family dwellings and fully sprinklered buildings are exempt, so most single-family backyard grilling is unaffected.
Common code violations in unincorporated Sacramento County include junk and debris accumulation, overgrown vegetation, junk vehicles, unpermitted construction, substandard housing conditions, illegal fencing materials, and zoning violations.
Sacramento County Code Enforcement investigates violations of housing, zoning, and vehicle abatement laws in unincorporated areas. Complaints can be filed by calling 916-874-6444 or through the county's online complaint system.
Sacramento County Code Enforcement responds to complaints based on severity. Initial investigations typically begin within 5-10 business days for standard complaints. Health and safety hazards receive priority response. The division processes over 6,000 investigations annually.
Most renovation work in unincorporated Sacramento County requires building permits. Cosmetic changes are exempt. Structural, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work all require permits and inspections through the Building Permits and Inspection Division.
Fences that comply with Sacramento County zoning standards (Section 5.2.5) are exempt from building permits. Standard residential fences up to 6 feet are typically exempt. Fences must use approved materials and comply with height restrictions.
In unincorporated Sacramento County, storage sheds under 120 sq ft without electrical or plumbing are generally exempt from building permits. Sheds must meet setback, height, and placement requirements per county zoning standards.
Small ground-level decks and patios in Sacramento County may be exempt from permits under certain conditions. Elevated decks over 30 inches above grade require building permits. Guardrails are required on decks 30+ inches above grade.
Sacramento County does not have a specific bamboo ban, but running bamboo that encroaches onto neighboring properties is considered a nuisance. Property owners are responsible for installing root barriers and preventing spread under California civil law.
Sacramento County follows California's CDFA noxious weed list and Cal-IPC invasive plant inventory. Key invasive species in the Sacramento region include yellow starthistle, Scotch broom, giant reed (Arundo donax), and water hyacinth.
Front-yard food gardens are protected under California law (AB 2561) and cannot be banned by Sacramento County. Gardens must be maintained and not create nuisance conditions. Water-efficient landscaping standards apply to new landscapes over 500 sq ft.
Security cameras are legal on private property in Sacramento County. Video-only recording in public-facing areas is permitted without consent. Audio recording triggers California's strict two-party consent law (Penal Code 632), requiring all parties' consent.
California is a two-party (all-party) consent state under Penal Code 632. Recording any confidential communication without all parties' consent is a crime. This applies to phone calls, in-person conversations, and audio on security cameras throughout Sacramento County.
Sacramento County allows residential fences up to 6 feet in rear and side yards. Front yard fences are regulated by the zoning code (Section 5.2.5). Privacy fences help establish legal privacy expectations under California recording and surveillance law.
California sets a statewide minimum wage floor under Labor Code 1182.12, currently $16.50 per hour for all employers as of 2025. Local governments are not preempted and may set higher minimums; many cities exceed the state rate substantially.
California's Healthy Workplaces, Healthy Families Act under Labor Code 245-249 mandates paid sick leave for nearly all employees statewide. SB 616 (2023) raised the minimum to 40 hours or five days annually effective January 2024, applying universally.
California regulates concealed carry weapons licenses statewide under Penal Code 26150 through 26225. Senate Bill 2 (2023) imposes uniform sensitive-place restrictions and applicant standards, preempting local variations on issuance criteria and qualifications.
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.
California broadly prohibits open carry of firearms statewide under Penal Code 25850 (loaded firearms in public) and Penal Code 26350 (open carry of unloaded handguns). The prohibition applies uniformly across all California cities and counties without local variation.
California prohibits carrying loaded firearms in vehicles statewide under Penal Code 25400 and 25850. Unloaded handguns transported in private vehicles must be in a locked container or the vehicle's locked trunk; long guns must be unloaded but need not be locked.
California prohibits state and local governments from requiring private employers to use the federal E-Verify system except where federal law mandates it, under Government Code 7285.1 and 7285.3. The restriction applies uniformly to every California city and county.
The California Values Act (SB 54, 2017) codified at Government Code 7284-7284.12 limits state and local law enforcement cooperation with federal immigration authorities. It applies uniformly to every California agency and bars participation in most civil immigration enforcement.
The California Land Conservation Act of 1965 (Williamson Act), Government Code 51200-51297.4, allows landowners to enter contracts with counties restricting land to agricultural use for ten-year minimum terms in exchange for reduced property tax assessment based on farming income.
The California Right to Farm Act under Civil Code 3482.5 protects established agricultural operations from nuisance lawsuits brought by neighbors who moved in after farming began. The law applies statewide and limits both private and local government nuisance actions.
California prohibits grocery stores and large retailers from providing single-use plastic carryout bags under Public Resources Code 42280-42288, enacted by SB 270 (2014) and ratified as Proposition 67 in 2016. Recycled paper or reusable bags require a 10-cent minimum charge.
California restricts expanded polystyrene food containers statewide through SB 54 (2022) packaging requirements under Public Resources Code 42040-42081. The law mandates that polystyrene foodware achieve 25 percent recycling by 2025 or face statewide sales prohibition.
California Public Resources Code 42270-42273, enacted by AB 1884 (2018), prohibits full-service restaurants from providing single-use plastic straws unless requested by the customer. The on-request rule applies uniformly to dine-in restaurants statewide.
California prohibits sale of tobacco and vapor products to anyone under 21 statewide under Business and Professions Code 22958, enacted by SBX2-7 in 2016. The Tobacco 21 standard applies uniformly across all California jurisdictions.
California bans retail sale of most flavored tobacco products statewide under Health and Safety Code 104559.5, enacted by SB 793 (2020) and upheld by voters via Proposition 31 in November 2022. The ban applies uniformly to all California retailers.
California requires statewide licensing of tobacco and vape retailers under the STAKE Act and the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Licensing Act. Business and Professions Code 22970 establishes uniform retailer licensing, while local governments may adopt stricter rules.