Moving to Jurupa Valley, CA?
Here are the local rules you need to know before you unpack.
Every city has its own set of local ordinances that go beyond state and federal law. From when you can mow your lawn to whether you can park your RV in the driveway, these rules affect daily life in ways most people do not expect. This guide covers the key ordinances in Jurupa Valley across 18 categories and 97 specific rules we track.
🔊 Noise OrdinancesFull noise ordinances guide →
Noise rules affect everything from weekend parties to lawn care schedules. Quiet hours, construction restrictions, and barking dog limits vary widely between cities.
Barking Dogs
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley has no dedicated barking-dog ordinance; persistent barking is regulated under JVMC Chapter 11.05's 45/55 dBA exterior limits and through Riverside County Department of Animal Services, which operates the Jurupa Valley Animal Campus on Mission Blvd.
Quiet Hours
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley Municipal Code Chapter 11.05 enforces nighttime quiet hours from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. with a 45 dBA Leq exterior limit at residential property lines (55 dBA daytime) per Section 11.05.040 Table 1.
Leaf Blower Rules
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley has no leaf-blower-specific ordinance. Gas leaf blowers fall under JVMC § 11.05.060(2) (power tools): no operation 10 p.m.-8 a.m. if audible inside a neighboring home, and never audible beyond 100 feet. California AB 1346 banned sale of new gas-powered leaf blowers statewide starting January 2024.
Vehicle Noise
Some RestrictionsVehicle exhaust and engine noise on public streets in Jurupa Valley is regulated almost entirely by California state law — not by Chapter 11.05. Cal. Vehicle Code §27150 requires every motor vehicle to have an adequate muffler in constant operation and prohibits cutouts/bypasses. Cal. Veh. Code §27151 caps modified-exhaust noise at 95 dBA (light vehicles, SAE test method). The Riverside County Sheriff (Jurupa Valley’s contract police agency) and the California Highway Patrol enforce these on public roads. The City’s Chapter 11.05 picks up vehicle activity on private property (truck yards, repair shops, idling, refrigeration units).
Construction Hours
Some RestrictionsPer JVMC § 11.05.020(8)-(9), private construction within 1/4 mile of an inhabited dwelling is prohibited between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m. (June-September) or 6 p.m. and 7 a.m. (October-May); construction farther than 1/4 mile is exempt from Chapter 11.05.
Amplified Music & Events
Some RestrictionsAmplified music in Jurupa Valley must meet JVMC § 11.05.040 limits (55 dBA day / 45 dBA night residential; 65/55 commercial). Recurring outdoor amplified events require a continuous-events exception from the Planning Commission under § 11.05.070(1)(b).
Aircraft Noise
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not regulate aircraft noise. Federal law (49 U.S.C. §§40101–47101) preempts virtually all local control of aircraft-in-flight noise, leaving regulation to the FAA. Jurupa Valley sits under the southwest arrival/departure paths for Ontario International Airport (ONT) and within general regional airspace served by Riverside Municipal Airport — noise complaints route to the airport operator and FAA, not the City.
Decibel Limits
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley Municipal Code §11.05.040 establishes a Table 1 of exterior sound-level standards (in dBA) measured at the property line of the receiving (impacted) property. The standards vary by the zoning of the receiving property and by time of day (a higher daytime number and a lower nighttime number). Section 11.05.060 layers "special sound source" rules on top. Always pull the live Table 1 from Municode before relying on a specific number — the table was set by Ordinance No. 2012-01 patterned after the Riverside County Noise Element and may have been amended.
Industrial Noise
Some RestrictionsIndustrial and warehouse facilities in Jurupa Valley must comply with the exterior sound-level standards in Jurupa Valley Municipal Code §11.05.040 (Table 1 — sound level standards) and the special sound source provisions in §11.05.060. Heavy logistics zones along the I-15/SR-60/Mira Loma freight corridor also fall under South Coast AQMD Rule 2305 (Warehouse Indirect Source Rule) for cumulative impacts. Riverside County is the noise-monitoring authority for permitted industrial uses through CEQA review.
Outdoor Music
Some RestrictionsOutdoor music, DJs, and amplified sound at residences, parties, and event venues in Jurupa Valley must comply with the Table 1 exterior sound-level standards in JVMC §11.05.040 and the special sound source standards in §11.05.060. Permitted special events (e.g. festivals, weddings under a Temporary Event Permit) remain subject to those standards — the permit does not waive Chapter 11.05 — and the City may impose additional conditions limiting hours, dBA, and direction of speakers.
🏠 Short-Term RentalsFull short-term rentals guide →
If you plan to rent out your home on Airbnb or VRBO - even occasionally - you need to know the local STR rules before listing.
Registration Rules
Heavy RestrictionsThere is no STR registration program in Jurupa Valley because Chapter 4.15 of the Jurupa Valley Municipal Code prohibits short-term rentals citywide. No business license, transient occupancy tax certificate, or owner registry exists for rentals of fewer than 30 consecutive days.
Host Presence Rule
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley has no hosted-versus-unhosted distinction. Chapter 4.15 of the Jurupa Valley Municipal Code prohibits short-term rentals citywide whether or not the owner or leaseholder is present during the guest's stay.
Permit Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not issue short-term rental permits. Chapter 4.15 of the Jurupa Valley Municipal Code (added by Ordinance No. 2023-10, introduced July 6, 2023 and adopted July 20, 2023) prohibits STRs (rentals of less than 30 consecutive days) citywide, and Section 9.35.070 bars STRs as a permitted or conditionally permitted use in every zone classification.
Primary-Residence-Only Rule
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not have a primary-residence STR rule because all short-term rentals are prohibited regardless of whether the dwelling is the owner's primary residence. Chapter 4.15 of the Jurupa Valley Municipal Code applies to any dwelling, in whole or in part, rented for less than 30 consecutive days.
Occupancy Limits
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley sets no STR occupancy cap because STRs are not allowed in any form. Municipal Code Section 4.15.020 makes it unlawful to rent, occupy, or advertise a dwelling (in whole or in part) for less than 30 consecutive days, and Section 9.35.070 bars STRs from every zone classification. The only "occupancy limit" is zero guests on a sub-30-day stay.
Taxes & Fees
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not collect Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT) on short-term rentals because STRs are prohibited citywide. Ordinance 2023-10 (Municipal Code Chapter 4.15) bans rentals of any dwelling for less than 30 consecutive days in every zone. There are no STR permits, business licenses, or tax registrations available because the use itself is unlawful.
Extended Home Share
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not offer an extended home-share track. Every rental under 30 consecutive days is prohibited by Chapter 4.15 of the Jurupa Valley Municipal Code, and rentals of 30 days or longer fall outside the ordinance and are treated as ordinary residential tenancies under California state law.
Insurance Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley imposes no STR-specific liability insurance requirement because operating a short-term rental is itself unlawful under Municipal Code Chapter 4.15. There is no permit process to attach an insurance condition to, and standard homeowner policies typically exclude commercial vacation-rental use anyway.
Night Caps
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not set an annual night cap (e.g., 90 or 120 nights) because STRs are prohibited every night of the year under Municipal Code Section 4.15.020. Any rental of a dwelling for fewer than 30 consecutive days is unlawful, whether for one night or 90 nights.
Parking Rules
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley has no STR-specific parking standard because STRs are prohibited under Municipal Code Chapter 4.15. Parking complaints — explicitly cited in §4.15.005(A) as a reason for the ban — are handled under Title 10 (Vehicles and Traffic) and Title 9 zoning parking requirements that apply to all residents.
Noise Rules
Heavy RestrictionsThere are no STR-specific noise rules in Jurupa Valley because STRs are prohibited under Municipal Code Chapter 4.15. Any noise complaint at a residential property is handled under the city-wide noise ordinance in Title 11, Chapter 11.05, which applies to all residents and is one of the reasons the Council banned STRs in the first place.
🔥 Fire RegulationsFull fire regulations guide →
Fire pit rules, fireworks restrictions, and brush clearance requirements are especially important if you are coming from a state with different fire risk profiles.
Fireworks
Heavy RestrictionsAll fireworks — including sparklers, fountains, and so-called 'Safe and Sane' fireworks — are illegal everywhere inside Jurupa Valley city limits under JVMC Chapter 11.40. The City participates in Riverside County's 'You Light It, We'll Write It' enforcement campaign, with civil penalties starting at $1,000 per Riverside County Ordinance 858.
Brush Clearance
Heavy RestrictionsParcels in or near the Jurupa Hills, Pedley Hills, and Santa Ana River bottom wildland-urban interface must maintain 100 feet of defensible space under California Public Resources Code §4291. Weed and brush abatement on improved lots citywide is enforced through Riverside County Fire's Hazard Reduction Program in coordination with City Code Enforcement.
Propane Storage
Some RestrictionsPropane storage in Jurupa Valley follows 2025 California Fire Code Chapter 61 (Liquefied Petroleum Gases), adopted by JVMC Ch. 8.10. Small residential tanks up to 125 gallons water-capacity are exempt from permit but require minimum setbacks from buildings, lot lines, and ignition sources; larger tanks require a Riverside County Fire Department operational permit.
Outdoor Burning
Heavy RestrictionsOpen burning of trash, leaves, brush, or any solid waste is prohibited in Jurupa Valley under South Coast AQMD Rule 444 and 2025 California Fire Code §307 (adopted via JVMC Ch. 8.10). Even agricultural burning requires SCAQMD authorization and a 'burn day' declaration, both of which are rare in the Riverside basin.
Fire Pit Rules
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley follows the 2025 California Fire Code as adopted by JVMC Chapter 8.10. Small recreational backyard fires and portable outdoor fireplaces (chimineas, gas patio fire features) are allowed within strict size and setback limits; open burning of yard waste and bonfires are prohibited by South Coast AQMD Rule 444 and require Riverside County Fire Department approval.
Wildfire Zones
Heavy RestrictionsCAL FIRE designates portions of Jurupa Valley — primarily the Jurupa Hills, Pedley Hills, and ridgeline-adjacent neighborhoods — as Moderate, High, or Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones in the Local Responsibility Area. New construction in VHFHSZ must meet 2025 California Building Code Chapter 7A and Fire Code Chapter 49 (Wildland-Urban Interface) requirements, and existing structures must maintain PRC §4291 defensible space.
🚗 Parking RulesFull parking rules guide →
Parking rules catch more new residents off guard than almost any other ordinance. RV storage, overnight parking bans, and driveway regulations vary significantly.
EV Charging
Few RestrictionsCalifornia state law preempts most local barriers to EV charging. Jurupa Valley must offer expedited, streamlined EV-charging-station permits under Government Code §65850.7, and HOAs/multifamily landlords within the City cannot prohibit residents from installing personal chargers under Civil Code §4745. The City's role is limited to a one-stop, checklist-based permit.
RV & Boat Parking
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley regulates recreational vehicle, boat and trailer parking through Municipal Code Title 10 (Vehicles and Traffic) layered over California Vehicle Code §22651(k), which authorizes removal of any vehicle left on a public highway for 72 or more consecutive hours. The Code Enforcement Problem-Oriented Policing (POP) Team actively enforces illegal RV camping/storage on residential streets, particularly in the Rubidoux, Glen Avon and Mira Loma corridors, and routinely cites RVs parked at locations such as 28th Street/Rubidoux Boulevard and Caterpillar Court/20th Street. Storage on a private residential lot is generally allowed only behind the front-yard setback and in compliance with Title 9 (Planning and Zoning) accessory-use and screening standards. Living/sleeping in a parked RV on a public street is prohibited, and the City has no public RV camping facilities.
Street Parking Limits
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley regulates on-street parking under Title 10 (Vehicles and Traffic) of the Municipal Code, supplemented by California Vehicle Code Division 11 (CVC §§ 22500 et seq.). The City Council sets time-limit, permit, and prohibited zones by resolution; statewide rules on curb color, no-stopping zones, and fire-hydrant clearance apply automatically.
Driveway Rules
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley restricts where vehicles may be parked on residential property: passenger vehicles must use a paved driveway or approved hardscaped surface, and parking on landscaped front-yard areas is prohibited. State law (CVC §22500(e)) makes it unlawful to block a public sidewalk by parking across a driveway.
Overnight Parking
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not impose a citywide overnight parking ban on standard passenger vehicles, but oversize vehicles (commercial trucks, trailers, RVs over the statutory threshold) face stringent restrictions on city streets and in residential zones. Any vehicle stationary for 72+ hours may be towed under CVC §22651(k).
Abandoned Vehicles
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley enforces abandoned-vehicle abatement under its Title 10 (Vehicles and Traffic) authority, exercising the power granted by California Vehicle Code §22660 for cities to declare wrecked, dismantled, inoperative, or abandoned vehicles a public nuisance on both public and private property. Vehicles left on a public street 72+ hours may be towed under CVC §22651(k).
Commercial Vehicle Restrictions
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley sits at the heart of the Inland Empire freight corridor (I-15, SR-60 and Union Pacific) and treats commercial-truck parking in residential neighborhoods as a high-priority enforcement issue. Under California Vehicle Code §22507.5, the City is authorized to prohibit or restrict on-street parking of commercial vehicles with a manufacturer's gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of 10,000 lbs or more in residential districts, and Title 10 of the Jurupa Valley Municipal Code implements that authority. Off-street commercial parking is governed by Title 9 (Planning and Zoning) - large trucks, tractors, semi-trailers and shipping containers may only be stored in industrial (M-SC, M-M, M-H) or designated commercial zones, not in residential or rural-residential (R-A, R-R) districts except for limited, incidental loading or unloading. South Coast AQMD Rule 2305 (Warehouse Indirect Source Rule) layers additional emissions obligations on warehouses 100,000 sq ft or larger.
🧱 Fence RegulationsFull fence regulations guide →
Planning to put up a fence? Height limits, material restrictions, and permit requirements differ by city - and sometimes by which side of the property the fence sits on.
Approved Materials
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley regulates fence materials primarily through the zoning standards in Title 9 and the construction standards in Title 8. The Planning Department FAQ specifically calls out concrete block and wood as 'solid' fence materials subject to the 42-inch front-yard cap. Masonry block walls must follow the City's published Freestanding Block Wall Standards, and walls over 3 feet (measured top of footing to top of wall) require a building permit.
Retaining Walls
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley requires a building permit for all retaining walls and freestanding block walls over three (3) feet in height measured from top of footing to top of wall. Walls must comply with the California Building Code (Title 24) as adopted in Jurupa Valley Municipal Code Chapter 8.05, and footings adjacent to slopes must extend at least 5 feet to daylight. The City publishes engineered Freestanding Block Wall Standards for typical CMU construction.
Neighbor Fence Rules
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not require fences between private residential properties unless one parcel has a swimming pool. The City's Code Enforcement Division explicitly does NOT mediate fence disputes between neighbors; per the Planning Department FAQ, those are civil matters governed by California Civil Code Section 841 (the Good Neighbor Fence Act of 2013), which presumes equal cost-sharing for shared boundary fences.
Height Limits
Some RestrictionsIn Jurupa Valley residential zones, the maximum fence height along side and rear property lines is six (6) feet. Within the street setback area (front yard), solid fencing such as concrete block or wood may not exceed forty-two (42) inches, with up to two (2) additional feet of open fencing permitted on top of the solid portion. Standards are administered by the Planning Department under Title 9 (Planning and Zoning) of the Jurupa Valley Municipal Code.
Pool Barriers
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley enforces the California Swimming Pool Safety Act (Health & Safety Code §§115920-115929, as amended by SB 442) through Municipal Code Title 8 Chapter 8.25 (Private Swimming Pools). New or remodeled residential pools and spas with water depth over 18 inches must have an enclosure at least 60 inches (5 feet) tall with self-closing/self-latching gates, plus at least two of the seven approved drowning-prevention safety features.
🐔 Animal OrdinancesFull animal ordinances guide →
Pet owners and aspiring chicken keepers should check local animal ordinances before signing a lease or closing on a home.
Dog Leash Laws
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley contracts animal control to Riverside County Department of Animal Services (RCDAS), which operates the Jurupa Valley Animal Campus on Mission Boulevard. Dogs must be restrained on a leash whenever off the owner's property under Riverside County Ordinance No. 630 (Dog Licensing) and Ordinance No. 771 (Dangerous Dogs), as applied within the incorporated city limits of Jurupa Valley (incorporated July 1, 2011).
Beekeeping
Some RestrictionsCalifornia requires every beekeeper in the state — including Jurupa Valley hobbyists — to annually register apiary locations with the county agricultural commissioner by January 1 under Cal. Food & Agricultural Code §29040. Locally, Jurupa Valley Title 9 (Planning and Zoning) treats apiaries as an accessory agricultural use, broadly permitted on Agricultural-zoned (A-1, A-2) and Light Agriculture parcels and conditional elsewhere. Riverside County is within California's established Africanized honey bee (AHB) range, so flyway barriers and water sources are practical necessities.
Breed Restrictions
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley has no breed-specific dangerous-dog ordinance. California Food & Agricultural Code §31683 expressly preempts local breed-based dangerous or vicious dog laws statewide: cities and counties may regulate dangerous dogs, but "no program regulating any dog shall be specific as to breed." The sole statutory carve-out (H&S Code §122331) lets a city adopt a mandatory spay/neuter or breeding-permit program targeted at a specific breed; Jurupa Valley has not adopted one.
Wildlife Feeding
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley's hillside neighborhoods (Jurupa Hills, Pedley Hills, Rubidoux bluff) abut the Santa Ana River corridor and open chaparral that supports coyote, bobcat, raccoon, skunk, mule deer, and occasional mountain lion activity. California 14 CCR §251.3 prohibits intentional feeding of big-game mammals (deer, bear, elk, etc.) statewide. Locally, Jurupa Valley Title 10 Animals and Title 8 nuisance provisions treat food sources that habituate wildlife as a public-safety nuisance.
Animal Hoarding
Heavy RestrictionsCalifornia addresses animal hoarding primarily through Cal. Penal Code §597 (animal cruelty/neglect — a felony or misdemeanor wobbler with fines up to $20,000) and §597.9 (mandatory 5-year ownership ban after misdemeanor cruelty conviction, 10-year ban after felony). Jurupa Valley Title 10 Animals layers per-household animal limits, licensing, and dangerous-animal provisions on top; Riverside County Department of Animal Services — operating the Western Riverside County/City Animal Shelter at 6851 Van Buren Blvd in Jurupa Valley — handles seizure and sheltering.
Chickens & Livestock
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley is one of the most livestock-friendly cities in the Inland Empire — the city inherited rural ranch parcels and active equestrian communities (Mira Loma, Glen Avon, Rubidoux, Pedley) when it incorporated in 2011. Title 9 Planning and Zoning sets numerical caps for chickens and livestock by lot size, while Title 10 Animals and a contract with Riverside County Department of Animal Services handle field enforcement. Hens are explicitly allowed on residential lots; roosters and other crowing fowl are restricted to large agricultural parcels.
Exotic Pets
Heavy RestrictionsCalifornia has one of the most restrictive exotic-pet regimes in the country: Cal. Fish & Game Code §2118 and 14 CCR §671 bar private possession of nearly all non-domesticated mammals (primates, foxes, ferrets, most carnivores other than dogs/cats), many non-domesticated birds, and various reptiles without a Restricted Species Permit from CDFW. Jurupa Valley does not override this state floor; Title 10 Animals layers local dangerous-animal and licensing rules on top of state law, and Riverside County Department of Animal Services handles enforcement.
🌿 Landscaping RulesFull landscaping rules guide →
From grass height limits to tree removal permits, landscaping rules can surprise new homeowners, especially in drought-prone areas with water restrictions.
Grass Height Limits
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not set a specific inch-based grass height limit in its municipal code. Overgrown vegetation, dead grass, and weeds are addressed as a public nuisance under the City's property maintenance and code enforcement program, and dry vegetation in foothill areas falls under Riverside County Fire's hazard reduction program enforced under County Ordinances 695 and 772 and California Public Resources Code §4291 defensible space rules.
Water Restrictions
Heavy RestrictionsMost of Jurupa Valley is served by the Jurupa Community Services District (JCSD), which is currently at Drought Response Level 1 — Drought Watch under Resolution No. 3283 (adopted April 24, 2023). Parts of the city served by Western Municipal Water District (WMWD) sit under WMWD's Stage 1 of its Water Shortage Contingency Plan (Resolution 3206). Both agencies also enforce permanent prohibitions on water waste under California Water Code §996 and the State Water Resources Control Board's emergency conservation regulations.
Tree Trimming
Some RestrictionsStreet trees in the public right-of-way are regulated under Jurupa Valley Municipal Code Title 7, Chapter 7.55 (Street Trees), which requires City approval before planting, pruning, or removing trees in the public right-of-way. There is no general heritage- or protected-tree ordinance for private property, so trees on private parcels are largely governed by Title 9 zoning landscape standards, the Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance (CCR Title 23 §§490 et seq.), and (for fire areas) defensible space pruning under PRC §4291.
Weed Ordinances
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley addresses weeds through its Code Enforcement Division as a property maintenance / public nuisance issue, with administrative penalty authority under Municipal Code Ch. 1.20. In the wildland-urban interface portions of the city, Riverside County Fire Department enforces brush and weed clearance under Riverside County Ordinances 695 and 772, in coordination with Cal. Public Resources Code §4291.
Artificial Turf
Few RestrictionsArtificial turf is broadly allowed in Jurupa Valley. Cal. Civil Code §4735 — as amended by AB 349 (2015) — expressly prohibits HOAs from banning artificial turf or low-water-using plants. The City does not have a specific artificial-turf prohibition, though Title 9 zoning landscape standards still require landscaped front yards (i.e., artificial turf can be part of the landscape design but cannot turn a front yard into bare gravel or pavement).
Rainwater Harvesting
Few RestrictionsRainwater collection is broadly legal in Jurupa Valley and California. Under the Rainwater Capture Act of 2012 (AB 1750), residential, commercial, and governmental landowners can capture rooftop rainwater for non-potable uses without a state water-right permit. Jurupa Valley has no separate local prohibition. Small rain barrels under 360 gallons used for outdoor non-potable purposes are exempt from building-permit requirements; larger cisterns may trigger California Plumbing Code (Title 24 Part 5) permitting.
Native Plants
Few RestrictionsCalifornia state law strongly favors native and drought-tolerant landscaping. The Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance (MWELO, CCR Title 23 §§490 et seq.) caps turf at 25% of landscape area for residential prescriptive-compliance projects and requires climate-appropriate plant selection. Cal. Civil Code §4735 prohibits HOAs from banning low-water plants. Jurupa Valley applies MWELO through its zoning landscape standards in Title 9.
💼 Home BusinessFull home business guide →
Working from home is common, but running a business from home often requires permits and must comply with zoning restrictions on customer traffic and signage.
Customer Traffic Restrictions
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley home occupations must remain compatible with the surrounding residential neighborhood under JVMC §9.240.570 — meaning client visits, deliveries, and on-site circulation cannot exceed what is normal for a residence. The Community Development Director may impose specific traffic, parking, and hours-of-operation conditions on the Home Occupation Permit.
Cottage Food Operations
Some RestrictionsCottage Food Operations (CFOs) are governed by the California Homemade Food Act, Cal. Health & Safety Code §113758 (AB 1616/AB 1144). State law preempts Jurupa Valley from banning CFOs in residential zones. Operators need a Riverside County Department of Environmental Health (RCDEH) CFO Class A or B permit/registration plus a Jurupa Valley Home Occupation Permit (JVMC §9.240.570) and Business Registration Certificate.
Zoning Restrictions
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley allows home-based businesses as an accessory residential use, but requires a Home Occupation Permit (HOP) under Jurupa Valley Municipal Code (JVMC) §9.240.570 (Title 9, Chapter 9.240 General Provisions) plus a City Business Registration Certificate under Title 5. The use must remain incidental to the dwelling's residential character.
Signage Rules
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley home occupations must not change the residential character of the dwelling. Under JVMC §9.240.570 the business must remain incidental and not visibly identifiable from the exterior, and Chapter 9.240's sign code (§9.240.330) does not authorize commercial business-identification signs in residential zones — effectively prohibiting exterior signage for a home business.
Home Daycare
Few RestrictionsCal. Health & Safety Code §1597.45 (as amended by SB 234, 2019) preempts Jurupa Valley zoning. Small and large family daycare homes are a residential use 'by right' in any residential zone — no Home Occupation Permit, no conditional use permit, and no local business license, fee, or tax may be required.
🏊 Swimming Pools & SpasFull swimming pools & spas guide →
Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.
Above-Ground Pools
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley has no separate ordinance distinguishing above-ground from in-ground pools. State law treats them identically: any pool with water more than 18 inches deep is a 'pool' under Health & Safety Code §115921 and triggers permit, barrier, and SB 442 two-feature requirements. The pool wall itself can satisfy the barrier rule only if it is at least 60 inches tall and has no climbable features on the outside.
Fencing Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley enforces California's statewide pool-barrier standard from Health & Safety Code §115923. A perimeter enclosure (fence/wall) is one of seven approved drowning-prevention features under H&S §115922, but if you use a fence, it must be at least 60 inches tall, have less than 2 inches of clearance below, have no climbable handholds on the outside, and have a self-closing gate with a self-latching device placed at least 60 inches above the ground that opens away from the pool.
Hot Tub Rules
Some RestrictionsHot tubs and spas are 'pools' under California Health & Safety Code §115921 and are subject to the same permit, barrier, and SB 442 two-feature rules as in-ground pools. Jurupa Valley does NOT have a separate hot-tub ordinance. A factory-built portable spa with a locking safety cover meeting ASTM F1346-23 satisfies one of the two required safety features; the second is typically a perimeter fence, door alarm, or self-closing door device. Spa equipment must also meet Chapter 11.05 noise limits at the property line.
Pool Permits
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley has no stand-alone pool-permit chapter. Permits are issued under Title 8 (Buildings and Construction), which adopts the California Building Code and California Residential Code, and under state law (Health & Safety Code §115920 et seq., the Swimming Pool Safety Act). A building permit is required for any new pool or spa over 18 inches deep, and the city's Building & Safety Division (via Riverside County contract services) performs plan check and inspection.
Safety Rules
Heavy RestrictionsCalifornia's Swimming Pool Safety Act (Health & Safety Code §115920 et seq.) — strengthened by SB 442 in 2017 — requires every new or remodeled residential pool/spa to have at least TWO of seven approved drowning-prevention features. Jurupa Valley enforces this through Title 8 building permits; no separate municipal pool-safety chapter exists.
🏗️ Accessory StructuresFull accessory structures guide →
Thinking about an ADU, shed, or garage conversion? Local rules on accessory structures have changed rapidly in recent years, especially in California.
ADU Rental Restrictions
Some RestrictionsSec. 9.240.290(G)(2) prohibits using an ADU for short-term rentals of less than 31 days. The ADU may be rented long-term, but Sec. 9.240.290(G)(1) prohibits sale, transfer, or assignment of the ADU separately from the primary dwelling. These restrictions are recorded as a covenant before the certificate of occupancy is issued.
Carport Rules
Some RestrictionsCarports in Jurupa Valley are regulated as accessory structures under Title 9 Planning and Zoning and must comply with the California Building Code adopted in Title 8 Ch 8.05. Building permits are required for permanent carports regardless of size, and zoning setbacks apply. State ADU law also protects conversion of an existing carport to an ADU without replacement parking.
Garage Conversions
Few RestrictionsCalifornia state law (Government Code §§66313-66342, replacing former §65852.2 effective 2025) strongly preempts local restrictions on converting an existing garage to an Accessory Dwelling Unit. Jurupa Valley implemented its updated ADU ordinance through Ordinance No. 2025-22 (adopted October 2025), codified at Title 9 §9.240.490.
ADU Rules
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley Municipal Code Section 9.240.290 (adopted via Ordinance No. 2025-22, effective November 2025) implements California Government Code Sections 66313 et seq. Detached new-construction ADUs are capped at 850 sq ft (or 1,000 sq ft if more than one bedroom), 16 ft height (18-20 ft near transit), with 4-foot side and rear setbacks. JADUs are limited to 500 sq ft within an existing single-family dwelling.
ADU Permits
Few RestrictionsPer Sec. 9.240.290(C) and (D), Jurupa Valley issues ADUs ministerially through the Building and Safety Department. Statewide-statute-conforming ADUs (within an existing structure, or detached up to 800 sq ft) need only a building permit. Other ADUs require an accessory dwelling unit application reviewed by the Community Development Director and decided within 60 days under Cal. Gov. Code Sec. 66317.
ADU Impact Fees
Few RestrictionsPer Sec. 9.240.290(H)(2)(a)-(b), ADUs less than 750 square feet are exempt from impact fees entirely. ADUs of 750 sq ft or more are charged impact fees proportional to the square footage of the primary dwelling, as required by Cal. Gov. Code Sec. 66314(f). Utility connection fees must also be proportionate to burden per Cal. Gov. Code Sec. 66324.
ADU Owner Occupancy
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley imposes no owner-occupancy requirement for stand-alone ADUs, consistent with Cal. Gov. Code Sec. 66314(a)(6)(B). However, Sec. 9.240.290(G)(3) requires the property owner to live in either the primary dwelling or the JADU whenever a junior accessory dwelling unit exists on the lot. This is recorded as a covenant prior to certificate of occupancy.
Shed Rules
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley regulates accessory sheds through Title 9 Planning and Zoning development standards. California Building Code (Title 24) generally exempts one-story detached accessory structures (tool/storage sheds) under 120 sq ft from building permits, but zoning setbacks, height limits, and electrical/plumbing permits still apply.
Tiny Homes
Some RestrictionsCalifornia state law treats permanently-installed tiny homes on foundations as ADUs (Gov. Code §§66313 et seq., adopted locally as Title 9 §9.240.490 via Ord. 2025-22), while tiny homes on wheels are regulated as recreational vehicles under H&S Code §18010 and generally cannot be used as permanent dwellings outside of a licensed mobilehome/RV park.
🌍 Environmental RulesFull environmental rules guide →
Stormwater Management
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley Municipal Code Title 13, Chapter 13.40 (Urban Runoff and Stormwater Protection) prohibits non-stormwater discharges to the MS4 and implements the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board's MS4 NPDES permit (Order R8-2010-0033) for Riverside County co-permittees. Construction sites disturbing 1 acre or more must obtain coverage under the State Construction General Permit (SWRCB Order 2022-0057-DWQ) and prepare a Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP).
Erosion Control
Heavy RestrictionsConstruction sites in Jurupa Valley must implement erosion and sediment control BMPs under Title 13 Ch. 13.40 (stormwater) and the California Building Code Appendix J (grading). Sites disturbing 1+ acre require coverage under the State Construction General Permit (CGP) Order 2022-0057-DWQ and a Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP) prepared by a Qualified SWPPP Developer (QSD). Smaller sites must still implement effective erosion and sediment controls per the Riverside County Water Quality Management Plan (WQMP).
Coastal Development
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley has no coastal-development ordinance because the city is entirely inland — located in western Riverside County in the Inland Empire, approximately 50 miles east of the Pacific Ocean. The California Coastal Act (Public Resources Code §30000 et seq.) and California Coastal Commission jurisdiction do not extend to Jurupa Valley. No Coastal Development Permit (CDP) is required for any project in the city.
Grading & Drainage
Heavy RestrictionsGrading and drainage in Jurupa Valley is regulated under the California Building Code Appendix J (adopted via Title 8 Building Code) and city/county engineering standards. A grading permit is generally required for excavation/fill exceeding 50 cubic yards, cuts/fills deeper than 5 feet, or any grading within a hillside or floodplain area. Drainage design must comply with Riverside County Flood Control District's hydrology and hydraulic standards.
Flood Zones
Heavy RestrictionsJurupa Valley participates in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) — CID 060702. Properties in Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHA, Zones A/AE/AO/AH along Santa Ana River, Mission Boulevard tributaries, and Pyrite Channel) must meet floodplain development standards including base flood elevation (BFE) + 1 ft freeboard for new construction. FEMA effective FIRM panels for Riverside County (panel numbers in the 06065C series) govern.
🪧 Sign RegulationsFull sign regulations guide →
Garage Sale Signs
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley regulates garage sales under Municipal Code Title 5, Chapter 5.40 (Garage Sales) and treats garage-sale signs as temporary signs under Chapter 9.248. Signs may be posted only during the permitted sale dates, must be on private property with owner permission, and must not be affixed to utility poles, traffic signs, or placed in the public right-of-way.
Political Signs
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley regulates temporary signs (including political/campaign signs) under Jurupa Valley Municipal Code Title 9, Chapter 9.248 (Temporary Signs). Off-site placement is governed by the California Outdoor Advertising Act (Bus. & Prof. Code §5405.3), which sets the 90-day pre-election / 10-day post-election window and a 32 square foot statewide maximum for temporary political signs along state highways.
Holiday Displays
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not have a dedicated holiday-display ordinance. Seasonal lighting and decorations on private residential property are generally permitted without a permit, but must comply with the City's electrical/building code (Title 8, Ch. 8.05 – California Electrical Code), nuisance and light-trespass standards, and noise regulations (Ch. 11.05). Title 9 sign rules (Ch. 9.248) apply only to commercial holiday signage.
🗑️ Trash & RecyclingFull trash & recycling guide →
Yard Waste Collection
Some RestrictionsYard trimmings — grass clippings, leaves, small branches, and prunings — must go in the green organics cart along with food waste, per Jurupa Valley Municipal Code Chapter 6.77 (Recyclables and Organics Collection) implementing SB 1383. Green-waste in the black trash cart is prohibited; bagging yard debris in plastic for the trash cart is a contamination violation. Branches larger than the cart can be cut to fit, scheduled as part of a bulky-item pickup, or hauled to the Agua Mansa Resource Recovery Center.
Bulk Item Disposal
Few RestrictionsBurrtec offers Jurupa Valley single-family residential customers up to two free bulky-item pickups per year, with up to 6 items per request and a combined volume not exceeding 1.5 cubic yards. Acceptable items include furniture, mattresses, appliances (including refrigerators/freezers with refrigerant — Burrtec handles CFC recovery), e-waste, and scrap wood. Construction and demolition (C&D) debris and any item requiring more than two people to handle are excluded and must use a separate C&D pathway (Green Halo plan, see JVMC).
Pickup Rules & Schedules
Some RestrictionsBurrtec Waste Industries holds the exclusive solid-waste franchise for Jurupa Valley under Municipal Code Chapter 6.75 (Solid Waste Code) and Chapter 6.76. Single-family residents get three carts (black trash, blue recycling, green organics) all serviced the same weekday. All carts must be at the curb by 6:00 a.m. on the service day and removed within 12 hours after collection. Collection is suspended on six holidays (New Year's Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas) and pickups for the remainder of that week slide one day later.
Illegal Dumping
Heavy RestrictionsIllegal dumping of trash, furniture, mattresses, appliances, or yard debris on public streets, alleys, vacant lots, washes, or rights-of-way is prohibited in Jurupa Valley under JVMC Chapter 6.75 (Solid Waste Code) §6.75.030 (Prohibitions) and §6.75.040 (Violations and Penalties), plus state law (California Penal Code §374.3, which carries fines of up to $1,000 for a first offense, $5,000 for a second, and $10,000 for a third within 12 months, with potential community service). Reports can be made through the My Jurupa Valley mobile app, the City's online Service Request portal, or by phone to Code Enforcement at 951-332-6464.
Bin Placement Rules
Some RestrictionsUnder Jurupa Valley Municipal Code Chapter 6.80 (Collection of Solid Waste — Container Decals/Set-Out) and the city's residential program rules, carts must be placed at the curb by 6:00 a.m. on service day with lids closed, wheels facing the house, and roughly 3 feet of clearance around each cart so the automated truck arm can grab them. Carts must be moved back behind the front-yard setback line or into a screened side/rear yard within 12 hours after collection. Storing carts in public view between collection days is treated as a nuisance / property-maintenance violation.
Recycling Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsRecycling is mandatory in Jurupa Valley under Municipal Code Chapter 6.77 (Recyclables and Organics Collection), which codifies California AB 341 (mandatory commercial recycling), AB 1826 (mandatory commercial organics), and SB 1383 (statewide organic-waste reduction). Single-family residents must use the blue cart for recyclables and the green cart for food waste / food-soiled paper / yard trimmings; food waste in the trash has been prohibited since July 1, 2024. Businesses generating 4+ cubic yards of solid waste per week, and multifamily complexes of 5+ units, must subscribe to recycling and organics service through Burrtec. The local implementation ordinance is No. 2019-22.
🚁 Drone RulesFull drone rules guide →
Commercial Drones
Some RestrictionsCommercial drone work in Jurupa Valley (real-estate photography, warehouse roof inspections, freight-yard surveying, film crews) is preempted by FAA Part 107 for the operational rules — the FAA holds sole authority over the navigable airspace. Operators need a valid Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate, current aircraft registration, and Remote ID broadcast. Jurupa Valley´s logistics corridor (I-15/SR-60/Union Pacific) sits within or adjacent to controlled airspace for Riverside Municipal, Flabob, and March ARB — expect LAANC requirements. The city has a Film Permit process for commercial production that may trigger if drone work is part of a shoot using city facilities, public rights-of-way, or city parks.
Recreational Drones
Some RestrictionsNo standalone Jurupa Valley drone ordinance was located in the Municode-published municipal code. Recreational drone flight in the city is governed by the FAA Recreational Flyer rules (49 U.S.C. §44809) and FAA Part 107 for any non-recreational use, layered with statewide California restrictions — most notably Penal Code §402 (interference with first responders), Penal Code §§647(j), 632 (privacy/peeping), and Civil Code §1708.8 (physical/constructive invasion of privacy via aircraft). Standard ´airspace´ rules apply: under 400 ft AGL, daytime, line-of-sight, away from emergency response and manned aircraft, with TRUST certificate carried.
Park Drone Restrictions
Some RestrictionsMost parks within Jurupa Valley city limits are operated by the Jurupa Area Recreation and Park District (JARPD), an independent special district, not the City. JARPD posts and enforces park-use rules including park hours (typically dawn until 10:00 p.m. per the District´s posted signage and the curfew framework). The Jurupa Valley Municipal Code itself does not contain a standalone drone-in-parks prohibition. California State Parks (e.g., Crestmore Heights area features, regional reserves) prohibit unmanned aircraft except in designated areas per the CDPR Superintendent´s Order. Riverside County Regional Park & Open-Space District land in or near the city (Rancho Jurupa Park, Hidden Valley Wildlife Area, Louis Robidoux Nature Center) prohibits drone takeoff/landing without written permission.
🍔 Food Trucks & Mobile VendorsFull food trucks & mobile vendors guide →
🚪 Soliciting & Door-to-DoorFull soliciting & door-to-door guide →
🌙 Curfew LawsFull curfew laws guide →
🌳 Tree ProtectionFull tree protection guide →
Heritage & Protected Trees
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley has not adopted a heritage tree, landmark tree, or significant tree ordinance. There is no city registry of protected individual trees, no protected species list, and no diameter-based protection threshold in the Municipal Code. California has no statewide heritage tree law; protection is purely local. Trees on private property may be removed without city designation review unless they were planted as a condition of a Title 9 development approval. Trees in the public right-of-way are protected by virtue of city ownership rather than heritage status.
Protected Tree Species
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley has not adopted a list of protected tree species in its Municipal Code. There is no city-level designation for coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia), California sycamore (Platanus racemosa), valley oak (Quercus lobata), or any other native species. Statewide, federally listed endangered or threatened tree species are protected under the federal Endangered Species Act and California Endangered Species Act regardless of local ordinance — though no common Inland Empire ornamental tree currently appears on those lists. CEQA may impose oak woodland mitigation for woodland conversions of one acre or more under Public Resources Code §21083.4. Trees with raptor or migratory bird nests are seasonally protected under the federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act and California Fish and Game Code §3503.
Tree Removal Permits
Few RestrictionsJurupa Valley has no standalone heritage or general private-property tree removal permit ordinance in its Municipal Code. Removing a tree on private residential property generally does not require a city permit, but trees that are part of an approved landscape plan, located in a public right-of-way, parkway, or required as a condition of a development entitlement under Title 9 Planning and Zoning, may not be removed without prior city approval. Trees in the public right-of-way (parkway strip between curb and sidewalk) are city-controlled and require an encroachment or public works approval before removal. California has no statewide private-property tree removal permit; CCR Title 14 governs commercial timber operations, which do not apply in this urbanized Inland Empire setting.
Tree Replacement Requirements
Some RestrictionsJurupa Valley does not impose a 1:1 or higher tree replacement ratio for removal of privately owned trees, because no heritage tree ordinance exists. However, trees installed under an approved landscape plan (residential subdivision, multifamily, commercial, industrial, parking lot shade) must be maintained and, if removed or lost, replaced in kind to keep the site in conformance with Title 9 Planning and Zoning conditions. Parking lot shade tree replacement is typically required by conditions of approval to maintain the 50% shade canopy target consistent with statewide design guidance. State MWELO (CCR Title 23 §490 et seq.) governs landscape water budgets but does not set a tree replacement ratio.
Parkway Planting
Some RestrictionsParkway trees (the strip between the curb and sidewalk in the public right-of-way) belong to the City of Jurupa Valley. Property owners may not plant, remove, or significantly prune parkway trees without Public Works authorization through an encroachment permit. Species selection is governed by city street tree standards in Title 9 Planning and Zoning landscape design provisions and Title 13 Streets, Sidewalks and Public Places. New development typically must install street trees at 30-foot on-center spacing as a condition of subdivision or commercial entitlement. State law (Streets and Highways Code §22000 et seq.) authorizes cities to manage trees within the public right-of-way.
Overall: What to Expect in Jurupa Valley
Jurupa Valley has 97 ordinances on file across 18 categories. Of these, 20 are rated permissive, 45 moderate, and 32 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Jurupa Valley compared to other cities.
Rules can change, and enforcement varies. Always verify specific requirements with the city directly before making major decisions like building a fence, listing on Airbnb, or starting a home business.