Moving to Pleasanton, 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 Pleasanton across 18 categories and 100 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.
Quiet Hours
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's noise code (Chapter 9.04) sets fixed dBA limits at the property line rather than a single overnight curfew. A daytime exemption for moderate noise runs 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekdays and only 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sundays and holidays, so the practical quiet period is everything outside those windows.
Construction Hours
Some RestrictionsPermitted construction in Pleasanton is allowed 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekdays and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sundays and holidays. Even within those hours, work must meet a noise cap of 83 dBA at 25 feet per piece of equipment or 86 dBA at the project's property line.
Barking Dogs
Some RestrictionsPleasanton has no separate barking-dog statute; animal noise is handled under the general noise code. Chapter 9.04 expressly covers noise produced by any 'machine, animal, or device' and caps it at 60 dBA outside residential property, so a persistently barking dog can be a noise violation.
Leaf Blower Rules
Heavy RestrictionsPleasanton bans gasoline-powered leaf blowers citywide. The City Council adopted the ban in December 2023, and enforcement against gas blowers began June 1, 2024. Electric and battery leaf blowers remain legal but are still subject to the city's general noise limits.
Amplified Music & Events
Some RestrictionsAmplified music in Pleasanton is governed by the general noise limits of Chapter 9.04, which cap noise at 60 dBA outside residential property and 70 dBA outside commercial property. Downtown venues are addressed separately under special downtown accessory entertainment rules, with outdoor music generally permitted until 9 p.m.
Vehicle Noise
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's noise code restricts vehicle horns to genuine emergencies, and loud vehicle noise is caught by the general 60 dBA residential and 70 dBA commercial property-line limits. Equipment standards for mufflers and exhaust on public roads are largely set by the California Vehicle Code and enforced by police.
Decibel Limits
Some RestrictionsPleasanton sets numeric noise limits at the property line by zoning type: 60 dBA outside residential property, 70 dBA outside commercial property, and 75 dBA outside industrial property. A daytime exemption lets noise reach 70 dBA at 25 feet during defined hours.
Outdoor Music
Some RestrictionsOutdoor music in Pleasanton must satisfy the general property-line noise limits of Chapter 9.04 (60 dBA residential, 70 dBA commercial). Downtown is regulated separately: section 9.04.043 covers special downtown accessory entertainment uses, with outdoor entertainment generally permitted until 9 p.m.
Industrial Noise
Some RestrictionsPleasanton caps noise at 75 dBA at any point outside industrial property, higher than the 60 dBA residential and 70 dBA commercial limits. Chapter 9.04 also includes specific provisions for stationary equipment such as electricity generators, fuel cells and wind energy facilities.
Aircraft Noise
Few RestrictionsPleasanton has no aircraft noise ordinance because aircraft operations and airspace are regulated by the FAA, which preempts local curfews. Overflights are largely from nearby Livermore Municipal Airport, which has only a voluntary night-flying restraint, not a binding curfew.
🏠 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.
Permit Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsPleasanton does not license whole-home Airbnb-style short-term rentals. Rentals of less than 30 days are not an allowed residential use; the only permitted overnight-lodging pathway in residential zones is a small bed and breakfast (3-5 guest rooms) or bed and breakfast inn (6-15 rooms), each of which requires a discretionary conditional use permit under the Title 18 zoning code.
Registration Rules
Heavy RestrictionsThere is no standalone short-term rental registry in Pleasanton. Instead of registering a vacation rental, a host must obtain a discretionary conditional use permit for a bed and breakfast under Chapter 18.124, complete a zoning compliance review, secure a city business license from the Finance Department, and register to collect and remit the city's transient occupancy tax.
Taxes & Fees
Some RestrictionsPleasanton levies a transient occupancy tax under Municipal Code Chapter 3.32 on guests staying 30 days or less. The city's TOT rate is 8 percent, in place since 1983 and among the lowest in Alameda County. A November 2026 ballot measure proposes raising it to 10 percent (July 2027) then 12 percent (July 2028).
Occupancy Limits
Heavy RestrictionsBecause whole-home short-term rentals are not a permitted residential use, Pleasanton's overnight-lodging caps come from its bed-and-breakfast definitions. A small bed and breakfast is limited to between three and five guest sleeping rooms; a bed and breakfast inn is limited to between six and 15 guest sleeping rooms. These caps are set in Municipal Code Chapter 18.08.
Parking Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton requires off-street parking for bed-and-breakfast operations under its off-street parking chapter. At least two parking spaces, one of which must be covered, must be provided for the residents of small bed and breakfasts and bed and breakfast inns. Parking is reviewed as part of the conditional use permit so guest parking does not spill into the neighborhood.
Noise Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton has no short-term-rental-specific quiet-hours schedule because whole-home STRs are not a permitted use. Guests at any code-recognized bed and breakfast - and occupants generally - are subject to the citywide noise regulations in Municipal Code Chapter 9.04, which set decibel limits and a daytime exemption window roughly between 8:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m.
Primary-Residence-Only Rule
Heavy RestrictionsPleasanton effectively requires owner occupancy for residential overnight lodging. The Municipal Code states that small bed and breakfasts must be owner-occupied, and a small bed and breakfast may locate in the R-1 district only with a conditional use permit and a finding that it will not erode neighborhood character. There is no pathway for a non-owner-occupied whole-home short-term rental.
Host Presence Rule
Heavy RestrictionsPleasanton's permitted residential lodging is effectively hosted. Because small bed and breakfasts must be owner-occupied under Chapter 18.124, the operator lives on-site while guests stay - functioning as a host-presence requirement. Unhosted, entire-home short-term rentals are not a permitted use, so there is no remote-host vacation-rental pathway in the city.
Night Caps
Heavy RestrictionsPleasanton imposes no per-year night cap on vacation rentals because whole-home short-term rentals are not a permitted use. The controlling line is the 30-day threshold: under-30-day rental of an entire dwelling is not allowed, and the transient occupancy tax under Chapter 3.32 applies to stays of 30 days or less. A permitted bed and breakfast operates year-round under its conditional use permit.
Insurance Requirements
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's Municipal Code does not publish a specific liability-insurance dollar amount for short-term rentals, because the city has no whole-home STR program. Insurance for a permitted bed and breakfast is handled through the conditional-use and business-license process and standard commercial-lodging coverage, rather than a code-mandated minimum coverage figure visible in the public code.
🔥 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 RestrictionsPleasanton bans all consumer fireworks. The Livermore-Pleasanton Fire Department cites Pleasanton Municipal Code Section 13.08.050, which prohibits the possession, sale, and use of all fireworks, including sparklers, firecrackers, bottle rockets, and aerial shells. The city Fire Code (PMC 20.24.250) separately prohibits possession, manufacture, storage, sale, handling, and use of fireworks.
Fire Pit Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton has no city ordinance banning backyard fire pits outright, but use is governed by the adopted California Fire Code (PMC Chapter 20.24), Livermore-Pleasanton Fire Department fire-danger-level restrictions, and Bay Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD) wood-smoke rules. Wood-burning fire pits are illegal during a Spare the Air Alert.
Outdoor Burning
Heavy RestrictionsOpen burning in Pleasanton is tightly restricted. The Bay Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD) Regulation 5 generally prohibits open burning across the region, allowing only limited categories on designated permissive burn days with an Air District permit. The city's adopted California Fire Code (PMC Ch. 20.24) also governs open and recreational fires.
Brush Clearance
Heavy RestrictionsThe Livermore-Pleasanton Fire Department runs an Annual Vegetation Management Program requiring property owners to clear hazardous vegetation, generally by May 31 each year. Parcels in the Wildland-Urban Interface (Moderate, High, Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones) face stricter defensible-space standards. Weed abatement on developed lots is enforced by city Code Enforcement.
Backyard Fires
Some RestrictionsPleasanton does not have a standalone ordinance banning backyard recreational fires, but they are governed by the adopted California Fire Code (PMC Ch. 20.24), Livermore-Pleasanton Fire Department fire-danger restrictions, and BAAQMD air rules. Wood-burning backyard fires are illegal on Spare the Air Alert days, and burning trash or yard waste is always prohibited.
Smoke Detectors
Some RestrictionsSmoke and carbon monoxide alarm requirements in Pleasanton come from the city's adopted California Residential and Building Codes (PMC Title 20) and California state law. California Health and Safety Code Sections 13113.7, 13113.8, and 17926 require State Fire Marshal-listed smoke and CO alarms in dwellings, with point-of-sale operability requirements.
Propane Storage
Some RestrictionsPropane storage in Pleasanton follows the city's adopted California Fire Code (PMC Ch. 20.24), which incorporates the statewide LP-gas provisions (CFC Chapter 61). Larger installations require permits and clearance/quantity limits, and the California Fire Code restricts where portable LP-gas cylinders may be used and stored, especially on combustible balconies of multifamily buildings.
Wildfire Zones
Heavy RestrictionsParts of Pleasanton lie in the Wildland-Urban Interface and are mapped Moderate, High, or Very High on California's Fire Hazard Severity Zone (FHSZ) maps. The city adopted the 2025 California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (PMC Ch. 20.22), imposing stricter building standards and defensible-space requirements, with FHSZ disclosure required when selling a property.
🚗 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.
RV & Boat Parking
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's zoning code bars storing trailers, campers, and boats in a residential front yard and on the street side of a corner-lot side yard. When kept elsewhere on a lot they must be screened from street view. On public streets, the citywide 72-hour rule applies.
Street Parking Limits
Some RestrictionsPleasanton allows general street parking but enforces a 72-hour movement rule, posted time-limited zones (20-minute, 2-hour, 3-hour, 4-hour), curb-color restrictions, and residential permit zones. The city traffic engineer sets and signs these limits under Chapter 11.36.
Overnight Parking
Few RestrictionsPleasanton has no citywide overnight parking ban. Vehicles may park overnight on most streets, subject to the 72-hour movement rule, posted limits, colored-curb restrictions, and residential permit zones. Permit-zone signs may restrict overnight parking in specific neighborhoods.
Commercial Vehicle Restrictions
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's zoning code limits commercial vehicles stored on residential sites to one-ton capacity, with no trailer over 25 feet. On streets, commercial deliveries get short loading windows at yellow curbs, and large vehicles face the over-20-foot and over-5-foot posted restrictions.
Abandoned Vehicles
Some RestrictionsPleasanton treats vehicles left on a street for 72 or more consecutive hours as subject to removal. Police may tow under Chapter 11.40 and California Vehicle Code Section 22651. Residents can report abandoned vehicles to the Police Department's vehicle-abatement hotline.
Driveway Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's zoning code keeps required off-street parking and recreational-vehicle storage out of the required front yard and corner-lot street-side yard. California Vehicle Code Section 22500 separately bars blocking any public or private driveway from the street side.
Oversized Vehicle Parking
Some RestrictionsPleasanton restricts oversized vehicles on streets: parking a vehicle over 20 feet long where posted is a $60 violation (PMC 11.36.180), and the traffic engineer may bar vehicles over five feet tall where they block sight lines (PMC 11.36.200). Oversize-load moves require a permit.
EV Charging
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's Municipal Code Section 11.36.230 protects signed EV charging spaces. Where a space is posted under California Vehicle Code Section 22511, no non-electric vehicle, non-connected EV, non-charging EV, or EV charging more than four hours may occupy it.
Loading Zones
Some RestrictionsPleasanton designates loading zones under Municipal Code Section 11.36.020, marked by colored curbs. Yellow curbs allow commercial loading (about 20 minutes for materials, 3 minutes for passengers); white curbs allow brief passenger/mail loading. A loading-zone violation is a $35 citation.
Curb Color Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton uses standard colored curbs under Chapter 11.36: red (no stopping), yellow (commercial loading), white (passenger/mail loading), green (20-minute limit), and blue (disabled parking). Only the city traffic engineer may install curb markings; private painting is not authorized.
🧱 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.
Height Limits
Some RestrictionsPleasanton Municipal Code Chapter 18.84 caps fences, walls, and hedges in side and rear yards at six feet. Front yards are limited to 30 inches for solid fencing and 42 inches for open fencing. Taller fences up to eight feet require zoning administrator approval and design review.
Permit Requirements
Few RestrictionsPleasanton requires Administrative Design Review for fences, walls, and hedges over six feet but not over eight feet in side or rear yards. Under the California Residential Code, wood fences up to seven feet and retaining walls up to four feet are exempt from a building permit, though zoning height limits still apply.
Neighbor Fence Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's Municipal Code sets fence heights and placement, but cost-sharing for a boundary fence between neighbors is governed by California's Good Neighbor Fence Law (Civil Code 841). Adjoining owners are presumed equally responsible for reasonable costs, and 30 days' written notice is required before incurring expenses.
Retaining Walls
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's zoning code (PMC 18.84.090) allows retaining walls to occupy required side and rear yards along with walks and driveways. Under the California Residential Code, a retaining wall not over four feet (bottom of footing to top of wall) is exempt from a building permit unless it supports a surcharge.
Fence Requirements
Some RestrictionsPleasanton fences must comply with Chapter 18.84 height limits, with corner-lot sight-line restrictions of 30 inches (solid) and 42 inches (open) on the street side. Over-height fences (6-8 feet) require Administrative Design Review. Pool barrier fencing is separately governed by the adopted building code.
Material Restrictions
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's Chapter 18.84 references specific fence materials and styles, distinguishing solid fencing (chainlink, brick, screen block) from open fencing (wrought iron, split rail, picket). Over-height fences require Administrative Design Review, which evaluates materials and design. Pleasanton does not publish a standalone residential barbed-wire ban in the sections reviewed.
Approved Materials
Few RestrictionsPleasanton allows common residential fence materials including wood, wrought iron, chainlink, brick, and split-face block, regulated through the solid-versus-open distinction in Chapter 18.84. Material choice affects allowed height, and over-height fences are subject to design review. Planned-development and HOA standards may impose stricter material rules.
🐔 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 RestrictionsPleasanton Municipal Code makes it unlawful for an owner to allow a dog to be 'at large.' Dogs in public or on others' property must be restrained by a substantial leash no longer than six feet (non-retractable) or 30 feet (retractable), and physically controlled by the owner.
Chickens & Livestock
Some RestrictionsPleasanton regulates poultry through its zoning code and miscellaneous animal regulations rather than a simple hen-count rule. Livestock and poultry raising is a permitted use in the Agricultural (A) district; in residential zones, fowl keeping is limited and any enclosure for animals or fowl other than household pets must meet setback rules.
Wildlife Feeding
Some RestrictionsPleasanton does not appear to have a stand-alone ordinance specifically banning the feeding of wildlife, but feeding wild animals can violate California Fish and Wildlife rules (Title 14 CCR Section 251.1) and trigger the city's nuisance authority when it attracts coyotes, rodents, or other pests.
Breed Restrictions
Few RestrictionsPleasanton has no breed-specific ban. California Food and Agricultural Code Section 31683 prohibits any city or county dog-control program from being breed-specific, except for spay/neuter or breeding programs. Pleasanton instead regulates dangerous and vicious dogs based on individual behavior under Chapter 7.20.
Beekeeping
Some RestrictionsPleasanton allows backyard beekeeping under a city beekeeping ordinance (Municipal Code Chapter 18.103) that requires a permit and limits hive numbers by zone: no more than two hives in R-1, RM, and the Downtown Specific Plan area, and up to 10 hives in the Agricultural (A) district.
Exotic Pets
Heavy RestrictionsExotic and wild animals are controlled chiefly by California state law, which Pleasanton enforces locally. California Fish and Game Code Section 2118 and Title 14 CCR Section 671 make it illegal to possess many 'restricted' species - including ferrets, hedgehogs, sugar gliders, and most non-native wildlife - without a state permit that is not issued for pet keeping.
Livestock
Some RestrictionsLivestock keeping in Pleasanton is controlled by the zoning code. Livestock and poultry raising for private, noncommercial use, along with private stables and kennels, is a permitted use in the Agricultural (A) district, where any animal enclosure (other than household pets) must sit at least 100 feet from neighboring residential, commercial, or other sensitive districts.
Pet Limits
Some RestrictionsPleasanton requires every dog over four months old to be licensed and addresses problem animals through nuisance, noise, and dangerous-animal provisions rather than a single published cap on the number of pets. Excessive numbers that create sanitation or noise problems can be abated as a nuisance.
Cat Rules
Few RestrictionsPleasanton's leash-at-large rules apply to dogs, not cats, so there is no cat leash requirement. Cats are still subject to the city's general nuisance, sanitation, and noise standards, and to California state protections against animal cruelty and abandonment.
Animal Hoarding
Heavy RestrictionsAnimal hoarding is addressed mainly through California's animal-cruelty laws, which Pleasanton enforces locally. Penal Code Section 597 criminalizes neglect such as depriving animals of food, water, or shelter, and overcrowding that harms animals can be prosecuted as cruelty. Local nuisance and sanitation rules add another layer.
🌿 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 RestrictionsPleasanton requires all premises and exterior property to be kept free of weeds or uncontrolled plant growth exceeding 20 inches in height. The rule comes from the city's adopted Property Maintenance Code and is enforced by the Code Enforcement Division of Community Development.
Tree Trimming
Some RestrictionsNormal maintenance pruning of a Protected Tree does not require a permit in Pleasanton, but all pruning must follow ISA Best Management Practices and ANSI A300 standards. Topping is prohibited unless specifically approved, and improper pruning of a Protected Tree can trigger civil penalties.
Tree Removal & Heritage Trees
Heavy RestrictionsRemoving a 'Protected Tree' in Pleasanton requires a permit from the Community Development Director. Listed native species are protected at 37 inches trunk circumference; other species at 55 inches. Unlawful removal carries a civil penalty of $100 per inch of circumference or the appraised value, whichever is greater.
Weed Ordinances
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's Property Maintenance Code bars weeds or uncontrolled plant growth over 20 inches and prohibits all noxious weeds on developed properties. After notice, the city can abate overgrowth and bill the owner. Code Enforcement in Community Development handles complaints.
Water Restrictions
Heavy RestrictionsPleasanton, supplied by wholesaler Zone 7 Water Agency, restricts outdoor irrigation to between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. and prohibits watering during and within 48 hours of measurable rainfall. Potable water may not be used to power-wash hardscapes, and irrigation runoff must be eliminated.
Rainwater Harvesting
Few RestrictionsPleasanton does not prohibit residential rainwater harvesting, and California law broadly authorizes rain barrels and rooftop catchment for landscape use without a water-rights permit. The city promotes drip irrigation and low-water landscaping; new irrigation in rebated conversions must include a rainfall shut-off valve.
Native Plants
Few RestrictionsPleasanton actively encourages California native and low-water plants and pays an Eco-Friendly Lawn Conversion rebate for replacing front lawns with natives via sheet mulching. State Civil Code section 4735 bars HOAs from prohibiting low-water plants or fining homeowners for drought landscaping.
Artificial Turf
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's Eco-Friendly Lawn Conversion Rebate excludes artificial turf and non-permeable hardscapes from the rebated converted area. However, California Civil Code section 4735 bars HOAs from prohibiting synthetic turf, and AB 1572's potable-water turf ban does not apply to artificial turf.
Composting
Some RestrictionsUnder California SB 1383 and Pleasanton's Organics Reduction and Recycling Ordinance (adopted October 2021), residents and businesses must keep food scraps and plant debris out of the landfill and use the organics (green) cart. Home composting is allowed, and the city offers free compost to residents.
💼 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.
Zoning Restrictions
Some RestrictionsPleasanton allows home occupations in agricultural and residential districts under Municipal Code Chapter 18.104. The business must be incidental and subordinate to residential use, operated by residents only, and may occupy no more than one room of the dwelling or 50 square feet of a garage or accessory building. Vehicles over one ton are prohibited.
Signage Rules
Heavy RestrictionsPleasanton prohibits signs for home occupations. Section 18.104.030 requires that no signs are permitted in connection with a home occupation (referencing the sign rules in Section 18.96.040), and the activity must not be visually apparent beyond the boundaries of the site. Permit-exempt home offices likewise may use no on-premises signing.
Home Occupation Permits
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's Zoning Administrator issues home occupation permits under Municipal Code Chapter 18.104. Applicants submit forms and receive a zoning certificate once the Administrator finds the use complies with the chapter. Purely office-type or minor arts-and-crafts activities with no clients, no signs, and one room of use are exempt from needing a permit.
Cottage Food Operations
Some RestrictionsPleasanton has no separate cottage food ordinance; selling homemade food is governed by California's Homemade Food Act (Health & Safety Code 114365 et seq.), which requires cities to treat a cottage food operation as a permitted home occupation. Operators register or permit through Alameda County Environmental Health and follow Pleasanton's Chapter 18.104 rules.
Home Daycare
Few RestrictionsUnder California's SB 234, Pleasanton must treat both small and large family daycare homes as a residential use by right and cannot require a conditional use permit, business license, fee, or tax. A state license from the Department of Social Services is required; small homes serve up to 8 children, large homes 7 to 14.
🏊 Swimming Pools & SpasFull swimming pools & spas guide →
Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.
Pool Permits
Some RestrictionsPleasanton requires a building permit to construct a residential swimming pool or spa, processed over the counter or through plan review and submitted through the city's Accela Citizen Access portal. Plans must show pool dimensions, distances to property lines and structures, equipment location, and the selected drowning-prevention measures.
Fencing Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsPleasanton requires a minimum 60-inch tall fence, barrier, or enclosure completely surrounding every pool holding water over 18 inches deep. The ground gap must be under 2 inches, no opening may pass a 4-inch sphere, and gates must open away from the pool and be self-closing with a latch at least 60 inches up.
Safety Rules
Heavy RestrictionsPleasanton requires at least two of seven drowning-prevention safety features for any new or remodeled residential pool or spa, per its pool and spa review requirements (Municipal Code Chapter 20.55 / CBC 3109 / HSC 115921-115929). Options include an isolating enclosure, ASTM mesh fence, safety cover, door alarms, self-latching door devices, and pool alarms.
Above-Ground Pools
Some RestrictionsPleasanton's swimming pool definition expressly includes above-ground and on-ground pools holding water over 18 inches deep, so the same 60-inch barrier and two-of-seven drowning-prevention rules apply. Above-ground pools must also be shown on plans with distances to property lines, structures, and trees.
Hot Tub Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton treats hot tubs, spas, and portable spas as swimming pools when they hold water over 18 inches deep, so the 60-inch barrier and two-of-seven drowning-prevention rules apply. Equipment must meet California Electrical Code Article 680 bonding and GFCI rules, and new homes after Jan 1, 2023 cannot use gas heaters.
🏗️ 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 Rules
Few RestrictionsPleasanton allows one ADU plus one JADU on single-family lots under Municipal Code Section 18.106, consistent with California ADU law. New detached ADUs may be up to 1,000 sq ft, capped at 16 feet tall with 4-foot side and rear setbacks. Owner occupancy is not required for ADUs approved between 2020 and 2025.
Shed Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton treats sheds as Class I or Class II accessory structures under Municipal Code Section 18.84.160. They may sit in a rear or interior side yard within 35 feet of the rear lot line, and Class II structures may be built to the property line. No accessory structure is allowed in a front yard.
Garage Conversions
Some RestrictionsPleasanton allows garage-to-ADU conversions under Municipal Code Section 18.106. When a garage is converted to an ADU, the lost off-street parking spaces do not have to be replaced. A converted accessory structure may keep its existing height and setbacks, but any addition must meet current ADU development standards.
Carport Rules
Some RestrictionsUnder Pleasanton Municipal Code Chapter 18.84, carports are limited to the rear yard. A garage or carport serving a dwelling needs a 23-foot front yard (15 feet if entered parallel to the street) and a 20-foot side yard on a corner lot's street side. Demolishing a carport for an ADU does not require replacing the parking.
Tiny Homes
Heavy RestrictionsPleasanton has no dedicated tiny-home ordinance. A tiny home on wheels meets the city's recreational-vehicle definition (400 sq ft or less, single chassis) and cannot be used for permanent living. Under Chapter 18.84, no trailer may be occupied for living unless in a licensed trailer park. A permanent tiny home generally must meet ADU standards under PMC 18.106.
🍖 Outdoor CookingFull outdoor cooking guide →
BBQ & Propane Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton has no ordinance banning backyard barbecues, but multifamily grilling is restricted by the city's adopted California Fire Code (PMC Ch. 20.24). California Fire Code Section 308.1.4 prohibits charcoal and open-flame cooking devices on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction, with limited exceptions for small propane grills, one- and two-family homes, and sprinklered buildings.
Smoker Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton has no ordinance specifically regulating backyard smokers, but wood- and charcoal-fired smokers fall under the adopted California Fire Code (PMC Ch. 20.24) and, for wood-burning units, BAAQMD air-quality rules. Smokers using solid fuel are restricted on combustible multifamily balconies, and wood smokers may be limited on Spare the Air Alert days.
🪧 Sign RegulationsFull sign regulations guide →
Political Signs
Few RestrictionsPleasanton allows political campaign signs on private property without a permit under Municipal Code Chapter 18.100. In a residential (R) district, each sign may not exceed 6 square feet and total signs on a parcel may not exceed 24 square feet. In other zoning districts the limits are 16 square feet per sign and 64 square feet per parcel.
Garage Sale Signs
Some RestrictionsPleasanton has no separate garage-sale sign ordinance; temporary and real-estate signs fall under Municipal Code Chapter 18.96. Open house A-frame signs are limited to 36 inches by 24 inches, up to 4 per open house, and are barred from medians. Improperly placed signs may be removed, with fines of $100 per sign for flagrant violations.
🏚️ Property MaintenanceFull property maintenance guide →
Property Blight
Some RestrictionsPleasanton Municipal Code Chapter 9.28 (Property Maintenance) prohibits visual blight, including accumulated dirt, sand, gravel, concrete, junk and debris that reduces neighborhood appearance. The Code Enforcement Division investigates complaints, and blighted property may be declared a public nuisance and abated by the city.
Trash Bin Storage
Some RestrictionsPleasanton requires garbage and recycling cart lids to stay closed when not in use, prohibits overfilling carts, and bars placing discarded items on the ground around carts. Carts must be kept sanitary and covered. Accumulated garbage and trash are also code enforcement matters under the property maintenance rules.
Vacant Lot Maintenance
Some RestrictionsOn undeveloped/vacant lots, hazardous vegetation (weed) abatement is handled by the Livermore-Pleasanton Fire Department's Vegetation Management Program, with hazards to be cleared no later than May 31 each year. Accumulated dirt, gravel and debris on lots is also addressed as blight under Municipal Code Chapter 9.28.
Weeds & Overgrown Grass
Some RestrictionsPleasanton Municipal Code Chapter 9.28 requires premises to be kept free of weeds or uncontrolled plant growth over 20 inches in height and prohibits noxious weeds on developed property. Overgrown vegetation that harbors vermin, obstructs sightlines, or is visible from the street as unsightly is a code violation.
Garage Sale Rules
Few RestrictionsPleasanton's Municipal Code does not publish a standalone garage-sale or yard-sale ordinance with a per-year limit. Occasional residential garage sales are generally treated as a permitted residential activity, while ongoing or commercial-scale resale uses fall under the zoning code's temporary-use and home-boutique provisions (Chapter 18.116).
💡 Outdoor LightingFull outdoor lighting guide →
Dark Sky Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton has no stand-alone dark-sky ordinance. Exterior lighting must comply with the California Energy Code (Title 24), and the city's Objective Design Standards discourage excessive parking-lot lighting and encourage smart controls to reduce nighttime light pollution. ADU exterior lighting must be shielded, directed downward, and limited to doorways and paths of travel.
Light Trespass
Some RestrictionsPleasanton has no numeric light-trespass standard for existing homes. New projects are conditioned through design review (Chapter 18.20) to avoid glare, and ADU lighting must be shielded and directed downward under PMC 18.106. Beyond these, light spilling onto a neighbor's property is generally handled as a private nuisance under California law rather than a specific city code.
🗑️ Trash & RecyclingFull trash & recycling guide →
Pickup Rules & Schedules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton requires every residential, commercial and industrial unit to have solid waste, recyclables and organic waste service from the contracted hauler, Pleasanton Garbage Service. Carts must be set out the night before scheduled pickup. It is unlawful to interfere with collection by the contracted collector.
Bin Placement Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton Garbage Service requires carts to be placed in the street with wheels at the curb or road edge, set out the night before pickup, with three feet of clearance between carts and away from low trees and carports. Cart lids must remain closed and carts must not be overfilled.
Bulk Item Disposal
Few RestrictionsSingle-family customers in Pleasanton get three on-call bulky item pickups per year through Pleasanton Garbage Service, scheduled by calling (925) 846-2042. Service is provided within seven business days, up to 5 cubic yards, covering furniture, mattresses, carpets, tires, appliances and e-waste. Illegal dumping of waste is prohibited.
Recycling Requirements
Some RestrictionsPleasanton requires every household and business to separate recyclables into the designated blue cart and prohibits interfering with collection. Recyclable material must be kept in suitable watertight carts and sorted from garbage and organics. Recycling service is part of the mandatory bundled collection under Municipal Code Chapter 9.20.
Mandatory Organics Recycling
Heavy RestrictionsUnder California SB 1383, adopted in Pleasanton via the Alameda County WMA organics ordinance (effective January 1, 2022), residents and businesses must separate food scraps and yard waste into the green cart. Covered food businesses must also recover edible food. Plastic bags are banned from the green organics cart.
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📐 Building Setbacks & ZoningFull building setbacks & zoning guide →
Structure Height Limits
Some RestrictionsPleasanton sets maximum building and structure heights by zoning district in Table 18.84.010, supplemented by height-limit exceptions in Chapter 18.84. Exact maximum heights vary by district and are not uniform citywide, so homeowners should verify the limit for their specific zoning district with the Planning Division.
Setback Rules
Some RestrictionsPleasanton sets minimum front, side, and rear yard setbacks by zoning district under Chapter 18.84 and Table 18.84.010. In the R-1-6,500 district, the front yard is generally 20 feet, side yards 5 feet minimum with 12 feet total, the corner street-side at least 10 feet, and the rear yard 20 feet. Standards vary by district.
Lot Coverage Limits
Some RestrictionsPleasanton regulates lot coverage and usable open space through Chapter 18.84 and the district standards in Table 18.84.010. Coverage and required open-space figures vary by zoning district. In R-1-6,500, certain one-story additions must preserve about 1,040 square feet of unobstructed usable open space.
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Overall: What to Expect in Pleasanton
Pleasanton has 100 ordinances on file across 18 categories. Of these, 13 are rated permissive, 66 moderate, and 21 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Pleasanton 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.