Moving to Rocklin, 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 Rocklin across 15 categories and 99 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 RestrictionsRocklin's General Plan Noise Element treats 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. as daytime and 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. as nighttime, with stationary sources held to roughly 55 dBA Leq during the day and 45 dBA Leq at night at sensitive receptors. Loud and unreasonable noise that disturbs the peace is enforceable as a 'disturbance' under Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 9.40, which lets the city recover police call-back costs after a first warning.
Construction Hours
Some RestrictionsThe City of Rocklin's published Construction Noise Policy prohibits construction-related noise on weekdays before 7 a.m. or after 7 p.m. and on weekends before 8 a.m. or after 7 p.m. in or near residential areas. Violations can trigger a Stop Work Order from Rocklin Building or Code Enforcement.
Barking Dogs
Some RestrictionsRocklin Animal Control investigates barking and nuisance-animal complaints under Title 6 of the Rocklin Municipal Code; in unincorporated Placer County the threshold is 20 minutes of continuous barking in one hour. Repeat violations can trigger citations and call-back cost recovery if a police response is required under Chapter 9.40.
Decibel Limits
Some RestrictionsRocklin does not publish a single numerical decibel ordinance in its Municipal Code. Instead, noise standards are set by the General Plan Noise Element (Chapter IV.E) using California's land-use compatibility matrix: residential exterior 60 dBA Ldn/CNEL 'normally acceptable,' 60–65 dBA 'conditionally acceptable' (mitigation required), 65–70 dBA 'normally unacceptable,' >70 dBA 'clearly unacceptable.' Interior residential standard is 45 dBA Ldn (California Building Code Title 24 Part 11 §1207). Construction noise is regulated by hours (weekdays 7 a.m.–7 p.m., weekends 8 a.m.–7 p.m.) rather than dB caps. Persistent unreasonable noise is cited under Cal. Penal Code §415 and the General Plan compatibility framework.
Leaf Blower Rules
Few RestrictionsRocklin has no city ordinance banning or limiting gas-powered leaf blowers; use is regulated under the City's general Construction Noise Policy hours and the Chapter 9.40 'loud and unreasonable noise' standard. California's statewide AB 1346 phaseout of new small off-road engines, including leaf blowers, took effect for engine sales beginning Jan. 1, 2024.
Outdoor Music
Some RestrictionsRocklin does not impose a stand-alone amplified-music decibel chapter. Outdoor music at private parties, restaurants, and events is governed by (1) Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 9.40 'Disturbance Call Back Cost Recovery,' which charges responsible parties for repeat police calls to loud gatherings, (2) Cal. Penal Code §415 (disturbing the peace by loud and unreasonable noise — misdemeanor), and (3) General Plan Noise Element exterior compatibility standards (60 dBA Ldn residential 'normally acceptable'). Commercial venues with regular amplified entertainment generally require a Conditional Use Permit under Title 17 zoning, which includes site-specific noise conditions.
Amplified Music & Events
Some RestrictionsRocklin enforces amplified music as a 'disturbance' under Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 9.40 when it creates 'loud and unreasonable noise.' Vehicle-mounted amplified sound is regulated under California Vehicle Code Section 27007 (audible from 50+ feet), and stationary amplified sound at residences is held to the General Plan's 45 dBA Leq nighttime / 55 dBA Leq daytime performance standards.
Aircraft Noise
Few RestrictionsRocklin has no local ordinance regulating aircraft-in-flight noise. Aircraft operations and overflight noise are preempted by federal law (49 U.S.C. §40103 federal navigable-airspace sovereignty and §41713 airline-route/service preemption) and administered by the FAA. The nearest general-aviation field is Lincoln Regional Airport (KLHM) to the north; Sacramento International (KSMF) sits ~25 miles southwest. Rocklin's General Plan Noise Element treats aircraft as a transportation noise source subject to standard exterior land-use compatibility thresholds (60 dBA Ldn/CNEL 'normally acceptable' for residential, 60–65 dBA conditionally acceptable with mitigation) rather than imposing source-specific limits on pilots.
Industrial Noise
Some RestrictionsRocklin regulates industrial and stationary-source noise primarily through General Plan Noise Element compatibility standards and zoning conditions, rather than a stand-alone numerical decibel ordinance. The General Plan exterior noise standard for residential receivers is 60 dBA Ldn/CNEL 'normally acceptable' (up to 65 dBA conditionally acceptable with mitigation); industrial uses themselves are 'normally acceptable' up to 75 dBA Ldn. New industrial projects abutting residential zones must include an acoustical analysis showing compliance at the property line. Persistent stationary noise affecting neighbors is enforced as a nuisance via Code Enforcement and the Police Department.
Vehicle Noise
Some RestrictionsVehicle noise (exhaust, muffler, modified-exhaust 'pops and bangs,' compression brakes on trucks, amplified car stereos audible from a distance) is regulated by California state law, not by a Rocklin-specific decibel chapter. Cal. Vehicle Code §27150 requires every motor vehicle to be equipped with an adequate muffler 'in constant operation' and prohibits muffler cutouts, bypasses, or similar devices. §27151 bans modifying an exhaust system to amplify noise. §27007 prohibits sound amplification from a vehicle audible at 50+ feet. Rocklin Police enforce these state-code sections; the state also sets passenger-vehicle limits at 95 dBA (CVC §27201) measured under SAE J1169 procedures.
Curfew
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 9.28 (Curfew Hours for Minors) sits in Title 9 Public Peace, Morals and Welfare. The chapter restricts persons under 18 from being in public places during late-night hours, with standard exceptions for travel with a parent, employment, or emergency. Rocklin also enforces Chapter 9.40 (Disturbance Call Back Cost Recovery), which allows the city to recover costs of repeat police response to disorderly gatherings - frequently used at house parties with curfew-age attendees.
Food Trucks
Some RestrictionsRocklin regulates mobile food trucks and sidewalk food vendors under Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 5.26 (adopted by Ordinance 1169, effective November 26, 2023) and a separate Mobile Food Operator program. Stationary vending carts are barred in residential zones; roaming carts are allowed. Vendors must keep at least 36 inches of unobstructed sidewalk, may not operate within 100 feet of a city-permitted special event, must use trash receptacles, and must follow approved permit hours. Vendors also need a Placer County Environmental Health mobile-food-facility permit under Cal. Health & Safety Code 113700 et seq. (California Retail Food Code).
Soliciting
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 5.28 (Solicitors) requires anyone going door-to-door for sales, donations, or pledges to obtain a Solicitor's Permit from the Rocklin Police Records Unit at $41 per person. Applicants must hold a current Rocklin business license, complete an eTRAKiT application, and sign acknowledgment of the ordinance. The U.S. Supreme Court holds that residents may post 'No Soliciting' signs and refuse contact (Watchtower v. Stratton). Religious and political speech are protected and not subject to the permit fee.
🏠 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.
Noise Rules
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Ch. 5.22 limits short-term rental guests in excess of the occupancy cap after 10:00 p.m. and prohibits 'special events.' The permittee or a designated secondary contact must respond on site within 30 minutes of a complaint. Repeat disturbance calls are billable to the property under RMC Ch. 9.40 (Disturbance Call Back Cost Recovery).
Occupancy Limits
Some RestrictionsUnder Rocklin Municipal Code Ch. 5.22, a short-term rental may host the greater of 6 guests total or 2 guests per bedroom. Guests in excess of that limit are not permitted on site after 10:00 p.m. The renter of record must be at least 21 years old and must actually lodge at the property.
Registration Rules
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin requires every STR permittee to maintain an on-site guest register for 18 months. The register must list each guest's name, address, vehicle year/make/model/color/plate/state, arrival and departure dates, number of guests in the party, and the nightly rent charged. The register must be produced for inspection by the Director of Community Development or the Rocklin Police Department on request.
Primary-Residence-Only Rule
Few RestrictionsRocklin's adopted RMC Chapter 5.22 does NOT require the operator to live in the home as a primary residence. The Planning Commission's draft included a primary-residence condition, but that requirement was struck before Council adoption. Investor-owned and non-owner-occupied whole-home STRs are legal in Rocklin so long as the 90-day annual cap, 6-person occupancy limit, and 30-minute response rules are satisfied.
Host Presence Rule
Some RestrictionsRocklin does not require the host to be physically present during the rental, but RMC 5.22.080 requires the permittee or a designated secondary contact be able to be on-site and respond to any complaint within 30 minutes of notification, regardless of the time of day. This effectively limits remote owners to operators or property managers within roughly 20-25 miles of the property.
Permit Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 5.22 requires every short-term rental operator to obtain BOTH a City of Rocklin business license AND a separate Short-Term Rental Permit before advertising or hosting any stay under 30 days. Application requires a floorplan, parking plan, proof of homeowner's insurance, and HOA CC&Rs (if applicable). The permit also imposes a hard 90-day-per-year rental cap and a 6-person (or 2-per-bedroom) occupancy ceiling.
Extended Home Share
Few RestrictionsRocklin's STR regulations apply only to rentals of less than 30 consecutive days. Extended home-shares and long-term rentals of 30 days or more are NOT short-term rentals under RMC Chapter 5.22, are not subject to the 90-day cap, the 6-person occupancy limit, or Transient Occupancy Tax under RMC 5.24. Stays of 30+ days are instead governed by California landlord-tenant law, including AB 1482 rent-cap and just-cause eviction protections (Civ. Code §§1946.2, 1947.12) once a 12-month tenancy is established.
Taxes & Fees
Some RestrictionsRocklin imposes a 10% Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT) on stays under 30 days under RMC Chapter 5.24, collected from the guest by the operator. Hosts must register for TOT (a prerequisite for the Business License), obtain a Rocklin Business License, and pay the Short-Term Rental Permit fee under RMC Chapter 5.22 before advertising.
Insurance Requirements
Some RestrictionsThe Rocklin Short-Term Rental Permit application under RMC Ch. 5.22 requires applicants to submit proof of a homeowner's insurance policy. The City does not publish a fixed liability minimum in code; standard hosts carry STR liability coverage of $500,000–$1,000,000 per occurrence, but the binding requirement in code is documented homeowner's coverage at application and renewal.
Night Caps
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Ch. 5.22 caps short-term rental activity at 90 days per calendar year per permitted property. A 'short-term rental' is a stay of less than 30 consecutive days; rentals of 30+ days are not counted as STR nights but are also not eligible for the STR exemption from longer-term landlord rules.
Parking Rules
Some RestrictionsUnder Rocklin Municipal Code Ch. 5.22, all parking associated with a short-term rental must be on the subject parcel or on the street directly in front of that parcel. STR applicants must submit a parking plan with the permit application, and the on-street portion must still comply with Title 10 vehicle/traffic rules.
🔥 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.
Propane Storage
Some RestrictionsPropane (LPG) storage in Rocklin is governed by the 2022 California Fire Code Chapter 61, adopted by reference under Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 15.04. Residential single-family use is limited by tank water capacity and setback to lot lines/structures per CFC Table 6104.3. Aggregate capacity at any one installation may not exceed 2,000 gallons water capacity without Fire Marshal review. Operational permits from the Rocklin Fire Department are required for LPG storage above CFC §105.5 thresholds.
Brush Clearance
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin requires year-round vegetation/weed abatement on all vacant parcels under RMC Chapters 8.10-8.12, plus 100-foot defensible space around structures consistent with Public Resources Code §4291 and Gov. Code §51182. Annual grass must be cut to a maximum 4 inches in Zone 2 (30-100 ft); Zone 1 (0-30 ft) requires removal of all dead vegetation, leaf litter, and 10-ft clearance between tree limbs and chimneys.
Fireworks
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin permits only State Fire Marshal-certified 'Safe and Sane' fireworks, and only from noon on June 28 through 11:59 p.m. on July 4. All aerial fireworks (bottle rockets, M-80s, firecrackers, mortars, anything that launches or explodes) are illegal year-round under California Health & Safety Code §12500 et seq. The City has adopted a Zero Tolerance Policy with social-host liability.
Outdoor Burning
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin's Fire Prevention Division states unambiguously that 'Outdoor burning is NOT ALLOWED within the city limits of Rocklin.' This is reinforced by Placer County Air Pollution Control District rules, which list Rocklin (along with Roseville and Lincoln) among the incorporated cities where residential open burning is prohibited. Yard debris must go to the Placer County chipping program or curbside green-waste collection.
Fire Pit Rules
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Fire Prevention prohibits open outdoor burning citywide, and Placer County Air Pollution Control District Rule 301 lists Rocklin among incorporated cities where residential burning is not allowed. Gas-fueled fire pits and chimineas are not banned by the City Fire Prevention page, but any open-flame device is subject to the 2022 California Fire Code adopted via Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 15.04 (CFC §307 recreational fires).
Wildfire Zones
Heavy RestrictionsUnder California Government Code §51179, CAL FIRE's Office of the State Fire Marshal designates Fire Hazard Severity Zones (Moderate, High, Very High) for Local Responsibility Areas. Rocklin's adopted FHSZ maps went into effect no later than June 10, 2025. Properties in High and Very High zones must comply with PRC §4291/Gov. Code §51182 defensible space, AB 38 point-of-sale disclosure, and new construction under California Building Code Chapter 7A (WUI ignition-resistant standards).
🚗 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
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code (RMC) section 17.08.130 (Outside Parking and Storage of Accessory Vehicles) prohibits storing campers, recreational vehicles, boats, and utility trailers in any front yard or street side yard setback (including the driveway) in any zoning district, and prohibits storage on public streets. 'Stored' means parked in the same location for three consecutive days or nine intermittent days within any 30-day period. Accessory vehicles must be kept in the interior side yard, rear yard, garage, or commercial storage facility, on a solid, impervious surface, outside required setbacks. A narrow exception lets owners park an RV/boat/trailer in the driveway or other front-yard solid surface for up to 2 consecutive days at a time for loading, unloading, cleaning, or maintenance, provided the vehicle is not parked there more than 9 days within any 30-day period. Residential occupancy or sleeping in a parked accessory vehicle is prohibited. On public streets, the Rocklin Police Department enforces the California 72-hour rule (Vehicle Code section 22651(k)) on top of these zoning limits.
Driveway Rules
Some RestrictionsRocklin's zoning code (Title 17 Ch. 17.08) restricts what can be parked or stored in residential driveways, especially in the front and street-side yard setbacks. Standard passenger vehicles may sit in a driveway, but recreational vehicles, trailers, boats and campers may only be in a front-yard or street-side-yard driveway for up to 48 hours at a time for loading, unloading, cleaning, or maintenance. Longer-term 'storage' (3 consecutive days or 9 intermittent days in 30) of accessory vehicles in those setbacks is prohibited.
Street Parking Limits
Some RestrictionsRocklin regulates on-street parking under Title 10 (Vehicles and Traffic), Chapter 10.24 (Stopping, Standing and Parking). California Vehicle Code §22651(k) caps a single on-street parked vehicle at 72 hours, which the Rocklin Police Department enforces; Code Enforcement does not handle street-parked vehicles. Recreational vehicles, trailers, and boats may sit on a public residential street for up to 72 consecutive hours and no more than 9 days in any 30-day window.
Overnight Parking
Few RestrictionsRocklin has no blanket ban on overnight on-street parking for ordinary passenger vehicles. The governing limit is the California Vehicle Code §22651(k) 72-hour rule plus any posted curb signage. Overnight RV, trailer, and boat parking on a public street is allowed but capped at 72 consecutive hours and 9 days in any 30-day period. Sleeping or camping in a vehicle on the street or in city parks/parking lots is not permitted.
EV Charging
Few RestrictionsRocklin operates under California's pro-EV statutory framework. Cal. Gov. Code §65850.7 requires every California city to adopt an expedited, streamlined permitting process for residential and small commercial EV charging stations, and the City of Rocklin publishes a formal EVSE (Electric Vehicle Service Equipment) Permitting and Installation Checklist to satisfy this. In condos and HOAs, Civil Code §4745 gives owners a state-protected right to install a charging station in their exclusive or assigned parking space, overriding most HOA prohibitions.
Abandoned Vehicles
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin abates abandoned, wrecked, dismantled, or inoperable vehicles on private property under Rocklin Municipal Code Title 8 Chapter 8.08 (Nuisance Vehicles). On public streets, abandoned vehicles are handled by the Rocklin Police Department under California Vehicle Code §22651 (72-hour tow) and §22669 (immediate removal of vehicles missing essential parts). Reconstruction of an abated vehicle is prohibited unless it qualifies for historic or horseless-carriage plates under Cal. Veh. Code §5004.
Commercial Vehicle Restrictions
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code section 17.08.130 (Outside Parking and Storage of Accessory Vehicles) bars overnight parking of large commercial vehicles and oversized trailers in residential zones. No 'commercial vehicle' as defined by California Vehicle Code section 15210, no 'trailer' as defined by Cal. Veh. Code section 630, and no utility trailer exceeding 9 feet in height or 25 feet in length (single vehicle) or 35 feet in combined length (with another vehicle or trailer) may be parked between 6:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. on private property or in the public right-of-way within any residential zoning district. The intent stated in the ordinance is to protect neighborhood appearance and prevent traffic hazards. During allowed daytime hours, the standard street-parking rules of Title 10, Chapter 10.24 still apply, and California Vehicle Code section 22651(k) imposes a 72-hour cap on any street-parked vehicle. Box trucks, tractor-trailers, dump trucks, and similar large equipment must therefore be parked at a business yard, industrial site, or off-street commercial facility outside the overnight window, not in residential driveways or curbside in front of homes.
🧱 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
Heavy RestrictionsChapter 17.76 of the Rocklin Municipal Code bans chain link, barbed wire, razor wire, and electrified fencing inside residentially zoned areas. When existing chain link is replaced in a residential zone, an alternative material listed in RMC 17.76.050 must be used.
Neighbor Fence Rules
Some RestrictionsBoundary-fence disputes between Rocklin neighbors are governed primarily by California Civil Code § 841 (the Good Neighbor Fence Act), which presumes equal cost sharing and requires 30 days' written notice before construction or replacement. Rocklin Code Enforcement does not mediate civil cost-sharing disputes but enforces height and material limits in RMC Ch. 17.76.
Pool Barriers
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Zoning Code §17.08.150 requires a 5-foot fence with self-latching gates around all pools, layered on top of California's Swimming Pool Safety Act (Health & Safety Code §§115920–115929). New and remodeled pools must use at least one of seven approved drowning-prevention barriers, and access gates must self-close, self-latch, and open away from the pool.
Retaining Walls
Some RestrictionsRocklin follows the California Building Code (adopted by RMC Title 15): retaining walls more than 4 feet tall measured from the bottom of the footing to the top, or any retaining wall supporting a surcharge (driveway, structure), require a building permit. Combined retaining-wall-plus-fence height still counts against the 6-foot RMC 17.76 zoning cap.
Height Limits
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.76 caps residential fences at 6 feet in side and rear yards and 30 inches within the required front-yard setback. Reverse corner-lot street-side yards also drop to 30 inches unless the Planning Director approves a 6-foot height through a variance.
Permit Requirements
Some RestrictionsA building/zoning permit is generally required in Rocklin for fences over 6 feet or masonry/retaining walls; pool barrier fences must meet the California Building Code. Standard residential fences at the height limit may be permit-exempt.
🐔 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.
Breed Restrictions
Few RestrictionsRocklin has no breed-specific dog ban. California Food and Agricultural Code §31683 preempts cities and counties from declaring any specific breed (or mixed breed) potentially dangerous or vicious, and Cal. Food & Ag. Code §31683 likewise bars breed-specific regulation generally. The only exception state law allows is a breed-specific mandatory spay/neuter or breeding-permit ordinance — and Rocklin has not adopted one. Rocklin's Title 6 Animals therefore treats dangerous and vicious dogs on a behavior basis under Chapter 6.12 (Care and Control) and Chapter 6.08 (Administration), consistent with Cal. Food & Ag. Code §§31601–31683 (Potentially Dangerous and Vicious Dogs). Pit bulls, Rottweilers, Dobermans, German Shepherds, and other commonly restricted breeds are lawful to own in Rocklin without breed-based limits; owners remain fully responsible for control under the leash law (RMC 6.12.020) and for any bite/attack liability under state law.
Beekeeping
Some RestrictionsRocklin does not have a stand-alone beekeeping chapter in Title 6 of its Municipal Code. Beekeepers in Rocklin are governed primarily by California state law: Food & Agricultural Code § 29040 requires every owner of an apiary to register with the Placer County Agricultural Commissioner annually by January 1 (or within 30 days of moving bees into the county). Registration is filed through CDFA's BeeWhere system following AB 1789 (2018). Local nuisance, sanitation, and zoning rules in Rocklin Mun. Code Titles 6, 8, and 17 still apply to hive placement.
Wildlife Feeding
Some RestrictionsRocklin does not have an express municipal-code section banning the feeding of wildlife, but California state law effectively prohibits the practice. Under California Code of Regulations Title 14, § 251.1 (Harassment of Animals), feeding game and nongame mammals or birds in a manner that disrupts their normal breeding, feeding, or sheltering patterns constitutes prohibited harassment. Intentional feeding of deer, bears, coyotes, raccoons, and other wildlife can result in fines up to $1,000. Rocklin Mun. Code Title 8 nuisance provisions also apply to feeding that creates rodent or odor problems.
Chickens & Livestock
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Title 6 regulates animals, with Chapter 6.36 covering livestock and Chapter 6.44 covering miscellaneous animals including domestic fowl. Domestic fowl must be kept in a sanitary enclosure located at least 20 feet from any building or property line. Hens are allowed in single-family residential zones; roosters and large livestock (cattle, horses, swine, goats, sheep) are restricted to properties with appropriate agricultural or large-lot zoning under Title 17. Placer County's countywide Fowl and Poultry Ordinance applies in unincorporated areas adjacent to Rocklin.
Dog Leash Laws
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 6.12 (Care and Control), §6.12.020 Animals at Large prohibits dogs from running at large anywhere in the city. The Rocklin Police Department's published policy clarifies that all dogs must be on a leash (maximum 6 feet) in every public area — parks, sidewalks, trails, and streets — with the only off-leash exception being the RRUFF Dog Park at Johnson-Springview Park (5480 5th St). The city's separate dog-park policy citation (RMC 6.04.050) reinforces that off-leash dogs are prohibited in City parks outside designated off-leash areas. Violators are subject to citation and a fine through Animal Control (916-625-5400). Owners must also carry waste bags — Rocklin adopted a pet-waste pickup requirement in 2018 — and dogs four months and older must be licensed under Chapter 6.16.
Exotic Pets
Heavy RestrictionsCalifornia has one of the strictest exotic-pet regimes in the country, and Rocklin defers primarily to state law. Cal. Code of Regulations Title 14, § 671 (Department of Fish and Wildlife - Importation, Transportation, and Possession of Wild Animals) prohibits possession of most wild and exotic species - including ferrets, hedgehogs, sugar gliders, monkeys, large cats, most parrots not captive-bred, and many reptiles - without a CDFW permit. Rocklin Municipal Code Ch. 6.32 (Potentially Dangerous and Vicious Animals) and Ch. 6.04 definitions provide local enforcement hooks; Title 6 generally tracks the state prohibition list.
Animal Hoarding
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin enforces animal hoarding primarily through California state animal cruelty law (Penal Code § 597) combined with local administration in Rocklin Mun. Code Ch. 6.08 (Administration) and Ch. 6.20 (Kennels). Keeping animals in conditions that cause unjustifiable suffering - including overcrowded, unsanitary, or under-nourished conditions typical of hoarding - is a violation of Pen. Code § 597 punishable as a misdemeanor or felony with up to $20,000 in fines and a one-year ban under Pen. Code § 597.9. Any owner of 4 or more dogs over four months old generally falls under Ch. 6.20 kennel licensing.
🌿 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.
Water Restrictions
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin treated water is supplied by Placer County Water Agency (PCWA), 144 Ferguson Road, Auburn. Under PCWA Stage 2 of its Water Shortage Contingency Plan, turf irrigation is limited to 3 days/week in July-September and 2 days/week in April-June and October-November, with watering only between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m. Washing down sidewalks and driveways is prohibited unless required for public safety.
Tree Trimming
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code 8.04.020 requires trees and bushes to be trimmed so branches clear sidewalks by 8 feet and streets by 14 feet, and prohibits limbs obstructing or encroaching on public rights-of-way. Removing or substantially pruning any oak tree with a 6-inch trunk diameter (measured 4.5 ft above root crown) requires a free Oak Tree Removal Permit under Chapter 17.77; heritage oaks (24 inches DBH) carry stronger mitigation.
Native Plants
Some RestrictionsRocklin requires all new-construction residential landscape plans to comply with the California Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance (MWELO), in effect since December 1, 2015. The City publishes Residential Landscape Templates that guide homeowners toward water-efficient and drought-tolerant plant choices, including native species. Civil Code 4735 preempts HOA bans on drought-tolerant landscaping during a declared drought.
Grass Height Limits
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Section 8.04.020(B) declares untended lawn or weeds exceeding 12 inches in height an unlawful property nuisance. Hazardous (dead) weeds must be kept under 4 inches to limit flame heights if ignited. Vacant parcels are notified each April and abated by City contractor if not cut by end of May, with costs invoiced to the owner and lien-secured if unpaid.
Artificial Turf
Some RestrictionsRocklin permits but strongly discourages artificial turf in residential landscape plans. Where used, the product and installation must conform to City and Synthetic Turf Council guidelines and meet MWELO landscape requirements. On lots over 5,000 sq ft, no more than 60% of the front yard (and corner-lot street-side yard) may be impermeable surface; at least 40% must be permeable (grass, soil, landscaping, rock aggregate, decomposed granite, or similar).
Weed Ordinances
Heavy RestrictionsUnder RMC 8.04.020, all vacant parcels in Rocklin must be maintained year-round by abating weeds, removing trash, and creating firebreaks. The City sends notice each April, a certified-mail reminder in May, and at the end of May Council declares non-compliant parcels a public nuisance. A City contractor then abates the property and the owner is invoiced; unpaid charges become a tax-roll lien.
Rainwater Harvesting
Few RestrictionsRocklin has no city-specific rainwater harvesting ordinance. Residential rainwater capture is governed by California Plumbing Code (Title 24 Part 5) Chapter 17 - Nonpotable Rainwater Catchment Systems and the California Rainwater Capture Act (Water Code 10574). Outdoor barrels under 360 gallons used for landscape irrigation generally require no permit; cistern systems with potable plumbing connections require a Building Division plumbing permit.
Tree Removal & Heritage Trees
Some RestrictionsRocklin's tree-preservation ordinance requires a permit to remove protected/native oak trees, even on private property; street-tree removal requires city approval. Replacement plantings may be required.
💼 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.
Signage Rules
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.68 prohibits all signage advertising a home business — on or off the premises — with one narrow exception: a single building-mounted, non-illuminated identification sign no larger than 2 inches by 10 inches. No yard signs, A-frames, window signs, vehicle-mounted advertising parked at the residence, or off-premises signs are permitted. Title 16 of the RMC (Signs) separately regulates signage in commercial zones but the home business rule in Title 17 controls residential use.
Zoning Restrictions
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.68 (Home Business) allows home-based businesses in any dwelling, but requires both a Home Business Permit issued by the Community Development Director and a separate City Business License (Business Tax Certificate) before commencing operation. Renters must submit written landlord authorization. The business is restricted to the dwelling unit, attached garage, or accessory structure and may not be conducted in the yard (private swim lessons excepted). Outside storage is prohibited, and storage of hazardous, toxic, explosive, combustible, or flammable materials beyond normal residential incidental use is banned. Massage businesses require an additional Massage Permit.
Cottage Food Operations
Few RestrictionsRocklin has no local cottage food ordinance. Home-based food businesses are governed by the California Homemade Food Act (AB 1616, codified at California Health & Safety Code §§113758, 114365, 114365.5 et seq.) and registered or permitted through the Placer County Environmental Health Division. Class A operations (direct sales only) are capped at $75,000 in gross annual sales; Class B operations (direct plus indirect retail) are capped at $150,000. Operators must use the home's kitchen, may employ one non-household full-time-equivalent employee, and must complete an approved food processor course.
Home Daycare
Few RestrictionsRocklin cannot restrict the operation of small or large family daycare homes through zoning. California Health & Safety Code §1597.45 (small family daycare) and §1597.46 (large family daycare) — as amended by SB 234 (2019), the Keeping Kids Close to Home Act — declare family daycare homes a residential use of property and a use by right in all residential zones, occupying the field and preempting local zoning, business license fees, and conditional use permits. The City may not impose a business license fee or tax for the privilege of operating a small or large family daycare home. Operators license through the California Department of Social Services, Community Care Licensing Division.
Customer Traffic Restrictions
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.68 limits customer/client visits to a home business to the hours of 7:00 a.m. through 10:00 p.m. Only one individual who does not live in the residence may be present at the home business at any one time — this functions as both an employee cap (one non-resident staffer) and a customer-density cap. Vehicles associated with the business may not park so as to overhang a sidewalk or create any safety hazard.
🏊 Swimming Pools & SpasFull swimming pools & spas guide →
Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.
Fencing Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Zoning Code §17.08.150 requires a five-foot fence with self-latching gates around all pools, and the City's published Pool Regulations specify enclosure minimums (5 ft height, 2 in maximum ground gap, voids less than 4 in, no climbable handholds, gates that open away from the pool with self-closing/self-latching hardware released no lower than 60 inches above the ground).
Safety Rules
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin enforces the California Swimming Pool Safety Act (SB 442) through its Pool Regulations: new or remodeled pools must isolate the pool from the home using two of seven approved features (enclosure, ASTM F2286 mesh fencing, ASTM F1346 safety cover, ASTM F2208 pool alarm, self-closing/self-latching doors with the latch at 54+ inches, exit alarms on doors providing direct pool access, or other approved equivalent). Existing pool drains must use ASME/ANSI A112.19.8 anti-entrapment covers when renovated.
Hot Tub Rules
Some RestrictionsRocklin's Pool Regulations exempt hot tubs and spas from the full pool-enclosure rule IF they are equipped with a locking safety cover meeting ASTM-ES 13-89 (ASTM Emergency Performance Specification for safety covers). Otherwise the spa is treated as a swimming pool and must comply with §17.08.150's 5-foot fence and the SB 442 dual-feature drowning-prevention rule. Electrical permits under CEC Article 680 are required for any 240V wiring.
Above-Ground Pools
Some RestrictionsAbove-ground pools deeper than 18 inches are 'swimming pools' under California Health & Safety Code §115921 and are subject to the same Rocklin enclosure rules (Code §17.08.150, 5-foot fence with self-latching gates) and the dual-feature drowning-prevention requirement of SB 442. A building permit under Title 15 / California Residential Code is required, and electrical bonding per CEC Article 680 must be inspected.
Pool Permits
Some RestrictionsRocklin requires a building permit for construction of any swimming pool, spa, or permanent hot tub under Title 15 of the Municipal Code, which adopts the California Building, Residential, and Plumbing Codes (2025 cycle). The City's Building Division publishes a Swimming Pool & Spa Submittal Checklist and Informational Packet that must accompany the plan submittal.
🏗️ 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 Permits
Some RestrictionsADUs and JADUs in Rocklin are approved ministerially (no discretionary review or public hearing) under RMC Chapter 17.67, consistent with Cal. Gov. Code §65852.2(b)'s 60-day review mandate. Applicants submit a building-permit application to the Rocklin Building Division (building@rocklin.ca.us) with a dimensioned site plan, floor plans, and Title 24 solar drawings; zoning questions go to the Planning Division (planner@rocklin.ca.us / (916) 625-5160). Rocklin's Permit-Ready ADU Program, adopted in response to AB 1332 (Gov. Code §65852.27), publishes pre-approved ADU plan sets reviewed by the Building Department; complete applications using these plans are targeted for approval within 30 days. An ADU may not be occupied until a Certificate of Occupancy (or Temporary CO) is issued by the Building Division. Address numbers for ADUs are assigned at building-permit issuance.
ADU Rental Restrictions
Some RestrictionsRocklin's ADU ordinance permits long-term rental of an ADU or JADU to a different party than the primary dwelling. Short-term rentals (under 30 days) of an ADU are also allowed, BUT — under RMC Chapter 17.67 — 'a short-term rental [permit] may not be issued for both a dwelling unit and accessory dwelling unit on the same parcel.' In practice, an owner must choose: STR the main house OR STR the ADU, not both. State law (Cal. Gov. Code §65852.2(a)(6)) prohibits any rental of an ADU for terms shorter than 30 days unless the local code permits it (which Rocklin partially does, subject to the dual-STR ban). Statewide rent cap and just-cause eviction protections under AB 1482 (Cal. Civ. Code §§1947.12 and 1946.2) apply to ADUs in the same way they apply to other residential rentals — single-family ADUs are typically exempt from AB 1482 if the §1947.12(d)(5) notice is given, but exemption is not automatic.
Shed Rules
Few RestrictionsRocklin exempts one-story detached tool/storage sheds, playhouses, and similar accessory structures from a building permit when the floor area is 120 square feet or less, consistent with the California Building Code adoption in Rocklin Municipal Code Title 15. Larger sheds require a building permit through the Building Division. All sheds must still meet Title 17 zoning setbacks for accessory structures, and separate plumbing, electrical, and mechanical permits are required if those utilities are run to the shed.
ADU Impact Fees
Few RestrictionsRocklin's ADU impact fees follow Cal. Gov. Code §65852.2(f)(3): ADUs with 750 sq ft or less of interior livable space are EXEMPT from all impact fees imposed by the City, special districts, school district, and water/sewer corporations. ADUs LARGER than 750 sq ft are charged impact fees 'proportionately in relation to the square footage of the primary dwelling unit' — i.e., the ADU's fees are scaled by ADU sq ft divided by primary-dwelling sq ft. Rocklin publishes an ADU rate-category fee schedule ('How Are Fees Charged on Accessory Dwelling Units — Rate Categories') showing which fees apply by ADU size, available on the Building Division page. Rocklin's impact fee categories include traffic, drainage, park, public-facility, fire-facility, and school fees (Rocklin Unified / Placer Union HSD), plus Placer County Water Agency connection charges. JADUs (≤500 sq ft) fall under the under-750-sq-ft exemption and pay no impact fees.
Garage Conversions
Few RestrictionsRocklin allows conversion of an existing attached or detached garage into living space, most commonly as an Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) or Junior ADU (JADU). Under Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.67 and California Government Code 65852.2/65852.22, no additional setback is required for a conversion that uses the existing structure, and no replacement parking is required when a garage is converted to an ADU or JADU. A building permit is still required, and the new living space must meet California Building Code and energy (Title 24) standards.
ADU Owner Occupancy
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.67 expressly states 'there is no owner occupancy requirement' for an ADU permitted on or after January 1, 2020. This tracks Cal. Gov. Code §65852.2(a)(6), which prohibits local owner-occupancy requirements on ADUs permitted between January 1, 2020 and January 1, 2025 (extended by AB 976 / 2023 to permanently bar such requirements for ADUs on single-family lots). Junior ADUs (JADUs) are different: under Cal. Gov. Code §65852.22(a)(2) and RMC Chapter 17.67, 'the owner must live in the primary residence or the JADU.' Owner occupancy for JADUs must be evidenced by a recorded deed restriction that runs with the land and includes the owner-occupancy covenant and the prohibition on separate sale (Gov. Code §65852.22(a)(5)).
Tiny Homes
Some RestrictionsRocklin allows fixed-foundation tiny homes only as Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) or Junior ADUs (JADUs) under Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.67 and California Government Code 65852.2/65852.22. Detached ADUs are capped at 1,200 sq ft and 16 feet in height (18 feet within a half-mile of major transit), and JADUs are capped at 500 sq ft. Movable tiny homes on wheels are not addressed in Rocklin's published ADU standards and would generally be regulated as recreational vehicles under Title 10/17, which do not authorize permanent occupancy outside a permitted RV park.
Carport Rules
Some RestrictionsCarports in Rocklin are regulated as accessory structures under Rocklin Municipal Code Title 17 zoning and the California Building Code adopted in Title 15. Unlike small sheds, carports almost always require a building permit because they are roofed structures attached to or near the dwelling and must meet wind/snow load standards under CBC. Carports must observe Title 17 accessory-structure setbacks (typically a 4-foot side/rear yard minimum and the standard front-yard setback for the underlying zone) and cannot exceed front-yard impervious-coverage limits (60% max on lots over 5,000 sq ft per Rocklin Planning guidelines).
ADU Rules
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.67 (effective March 20, 2020) authorizes Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) and Junior ADUs (JADUs) in conformity with Cal. Gov. Code §65852.2 and §65852.22. ADUs are allowed in all residential zones (and certain office/commercial zones with conditions) on lots with an existing or proposed residential use. Detached ADUs are capped at 1,200 sq ft, attached ADUs at 60% of the primary dwelling (with statutory floors of 850 sq ft for studio/1-BR and 1,000 sq ft for 2+ BR), and JADUs at 500 sq ft within an existing or proposed single-family dwelling. Required setbacks are 4 ft side/rear for new detached ADUs, with no additional setback for conversions of existing structures. Detached ADUs may be 16 ft tall (18 ft near transit/multifamily). ADUs are exempt from density calculations and from lot-coverage rules at 800 sq ft or less, and may not be sold separately from the primary residence.
🌍 Environmental RulesFull environmental rules guide →
Grading & Drainage
Some RestrictionsGrading and drainage in Rocklin are controlled by Municipal Code Ch. 15.28 (Grading) together with the City's Improvement Standards and January 2019 Post-Construction Manual, which implement Low Impact Development (LID) requirements from the State Phase II MS4 Permit (WQO 2013-0001-DWQ).
Flood Zones
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Ch. 15.16 (Flood Hazard Areas) implements the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) for the City. Development in FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs, 1% annual chance floodplain) requires a Flood Zone Development Permit from the Engineering Division and must meet base flood elevation (BFE) standards.
Coastal Development
Few RestrictionsRocklin is an inland Sacramento-metro city in Placer County roughly 90 miles from the Pacific Ocean. It lies entirely outside the California Coastal Zone, so the California Coastal Act (Pub. Res. Code Div. 20, §30000 et seq.) and the Coastal Commission's coastal development permit (CDP) requirements do not apply within the city.
Stormwater Management
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 8.30 (Stormwater Runoff Pollution Control) prohibits non-stormwater discharges into the City's storm drain system. Rocklin is a Phase II Small MS4 permittee under State Water Board Order WQO 2013-0001-DWQ (NPDES CAS000004) and enforces illicit discharge detection and elimination (IDDE) through the Environmental Services Division.
Erosion Control
Some RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Ch. 15.28 (Grading and Erosion and Sedimentation Control) regulates grading and erosion control on all property to prevent pollution of watercourses with nutrients, sediment, or earthen materials from surface runoff. Grading and erosion-control plans require City approval before work begins.
🪧 Sign RegulationsFull sign regulations guide →
Political Signs
Some RestrictionsRocklin treats political signs as 'temporary noncommercial signs' under Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.75 (Signs on Private Property). They may be posted on private property with the owner's permission, capped at 16 sq ft and 6 ft tall, displayed up to 45 days before the election and removed within 5 days after. Before posting, the responsible party must file a Statement of Responsibility with the City Clerk and post a $500 refundable deposit. Signs in the city right-of-way or on public property are removed by staff at $25 per sign deducted from the deposit.
Garage Sale Signs
Some RestrictionsGarage sale signs in Rocklin are exempt from a sign permit but must stay on private property with the owner's permission per Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.75. Signs may not be placed in the public right-of-way, on utility poles, or affixed to traffic signs — code enforcement removes those immediately and bills the responsible party for removal. The temporary noncommercial sign standards still cap them at 16 sq ft, 6 ft tall, set back 5 ft from property lines and 15 ft from hydrants, street signs, and traffic signals. The garage sale itself is also limited to three per property per year, three consecutive days, and is not allowed Monday through Thursday.
Holiday Displays
Few RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.75 (Signs on Private Property) exempts holiday decorations from the sign permit requirement on residential properties, with no specific size cap for typical seasonal displays. Nonresidential properties may use 'typical' holiday decorations without a permit; commercially-oriented holiday promotions (e.g., Christmas tree lots, holiday sales events) need a special advertising permit, which the city allows up to three times per calendar year. The city has no ordinance limiting decorative lighting hours, brightness, or display duration on private residential property, though the general nuisance and noise provisions in Title 8 still apply to any amplified sound, glare onto neighboring property, or traffic hazards.
🗑️ Trash & RecyclingFull trash & recycling guide →
Pickup Rules & Schedules
Some RestrictionsRecology Auburn Placer is the exclusive franchise hauler for residential garbage, recycling and green waste in Rocklin under Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 13.08 (Solid Waste and Refuse Collection). Customers receive two carts — one gray for trash/recyclables (sorted at the MRF under SB 1383) and one green for yard/organic waste. Carts must be at curbside by 5:00 a.m. on your collection day, and Recology operates as usual on every holiday except Christmas Day and New Year's Day (service is delayed one day for the rest of that week).
Yard Waste Collection
Some RestrictionsRocklin residents receive a separate green cart from Recology Auburn Placer for yard waste — grass clippings, leaves, prunings and similar plant material. Putting green waste in the gray trash cart is allowed because the MRF sorts it, but the green cart is the preferred route under California SB 1383 (PRC §42652 et seq.). Christmas trees are collected free at two parks December 26 through January 4, and accumulating yard debris on a property in public view violates RMC §8.04.020(D) (Dead Vegetation).
Bin Placement Rules
Some RestrictionsRocklin requires that refuse and recycling carts be set at the curb by 5:00 a.m. on your scheduled collection day. Between pickups, carts and any junk, trash or debris must be screened from public view per Rocklin Municipal Code §8.04.020(A) and (D). Carts placed in the street/right-of-way for extended periods, or stored in front yards visible from the street, can be cited by Code Enforcement.
Recycling Requirements
Some RestrictionsRocklin uses a single gray-cart, single-stream system: residents put trash and recyclables together, and the Western Placer Waste Management Authority Materials Recovery Facility (MRF) in Lincoln sorts out cans, bottles, glass, PETE plastic, cardboard and newspaper. California SB 1383 (Public Resources Code §42652 et seq.) requires organic waste diversion; in Rocklin compliance is achieved system-wide at the MRF and through the separate green-waste cart, so 'no behavior changes' are required of households per the City's SB 1383 page.
Bulk Item Disposal
Few RestrictionsRocklin does not run a routine curbside bulky-item pickup; instead, residents rent temporary dumpsters from Recology Auburn Placer (530-885-3735) or use the City's annual Clean Up Day drop-off events for furniture, mattresses, e-waste and household junk. Hazardous waste, appliances, car batteries and used motor oil go to the Western Placer Waste Management Authority (WPWMA) facility at 3195 Athens Avenue, Lincoln — contact (916) 645-5230 ext. 4.
Illegal Dumping
Heavy RestrictionsIllegal dumping in Rocklin is enforced under both the Rocklin Municipal Code (RMC §8.04.020(A)/(D) on junk, trash and debris) and California Penal Code §374.3. PC §374.3(e) imposes mandatory fines of $250–$1,000 for a first infraction, $500–$1,500 for a second, and $750–$3,000 for a third; commercial-quantity dumping under §374.3(h)(1) is a misdemeanor with up to six months in county jail and fines up to $10,000. Report dumping to Rocklin Public Works at (916) 625-5500 or, after hours/weekends, Police Dispatch at (916) 625-5400.
🚁 Drone RulesFull drone rules guide →
Park Drone Restrictions
Some RestrictionsRocklin city parks are governed by Rocklin Municipal Code Chapter 12.20 (Parks) and the Park Rules and Regulations adopted by Parks & Recreation. The rules cover general use of city property and prohibit activities that endanger park users. Drone flight is not separately licensed for city parks, but operators must comply with FAA 49 U.S.C. 44809, avoid disturbing wildlife, and may not interfere with permitted special events. Adjacent state and federal lands - including Folsom Lake State Recreation Area - prohibit drones except where the District Superintendent allows them under 14 CCR section 4351.
Recreational Drones
Some RestrictionsRocklin has no standalone recreational-drone chapter in the municipal code. Hobbyist flight is regulated by the FAA under 49 U.S.C. 44809 (Exception for Limited Recreational Operations) and by California Public Utilities Code 21403, which makes flight lawful above federal minimum altitudes. Operators must register their drone with the FAA, pass The Recreational UAS Safety Test (TRUST), stay below 400 ft AGL in uncontrolled (Class G) airspace, fly within visual line of sight, and avoid Rocklin Police, fire, or other public-safety operations.
Commercial Drones
Some RestrictionsAnyone flying a drone in Rocklin for compensation, real-estate marketing, mapping, inspection, or other non-hobby purpose must hold an FAA Remote Pilot Certificate under 14 CFR Part 107. Rocklin does not separately license commercial drone operators, but commercial filming on city property generally requires coordination with Parks & Recreation or the City Manager. California Public Utilities Code 21403 governs altitude, and Civil Code 1708.8 creates privacy liability. LAANC authorization is required for any flight in controlled airspace shelves around Lincoln Regional or McClellan.
🌳 Tree ProtectionFull tree protection guide →
Parkway Planting
Some RestrictionsRocklin Muni. Code Title 12 Ch. 12.08 (Trees) governs all trees in the public right-of-way, including parkway strips between curb and sidewalk. Section 12.08.130 prohibits planting any tree in the city right-of-way contrary to the chapter, paving or filling around a street tree without written city manager authorization, and pouring deleterious material on or around any street tree. Property owners must trim trees overhanging the sidewalk to 8 feet clearance and trees overhanging the street to 14 feet.
Tree Replacement Requirements
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Muni. Code Ch. 17.77 imposes mitigation for every regulated oak removed from a residential developed lot. Healthy non-heritage oaks (6-24" DBH) require planting TWO five-gallon native oak trees per removed tree, OR an in-lieu fee per tree. Heritage oaks (24"+ DBH) require FIVE five-gallon native oaks per removed tree, OR a higher in-lieu fee. Replacement trees must be native species (typically Interior Live Oak, Blue Oak, or Valley Oak).
Protected Tree Species
Some RestrictionsRocklin's tree protection ordinance (Ch. 17.77) protects only oak trees - specifically native species of the genus Quercus, including Interior Live Oak (Quercus wislizeni), Blue Oak (Quercus douglasii), and Valley Oak (Quercus lobata). The City of Rocklin has no general 'heritage tree' protection covering non-oak species on private property; conifers, fruit trees, and ornamental species are not regulated for removal. Street trees of any species in the public right-of-way ARE regulated under Title 12 Ch. 12.08.
Tree Removal Permits
Heavy RestrictionsRocklin Municipal Code Chapter 17.77 (Oak Tree Preservation) requires a city-issued permit before removing ANY oak tree six inches or larger in diameter, measured 4.5 feet above the root crown. Non-oak species and oaks under 6" DBH are exempt, as is pruning. Permits are free, but healthy trees on developed lots generally cannot be removed without mitigation, and a certified arborist report is required to remove a tree based on poor health.
Heritage & Protected Trees
Heavy RestrictionsUnder Rocklin Muni. Code Ch. 17.77, a 'heritage tree' is any oak measuring 24 inches or larger in diameter at 4.5 feet above the root crown. Heritage oaks may be removed only with a Planning Division permit AND enhanced mitigation: planting five 5-gallon native oaks for each heritage tree removed, OR paying an in-lieu fee per tree into the City's Oak Tree Preservation Fund. The replacement ratio is more than double the standard healthy-oak rate (2:1).
Overall: What to Expect in Rocklin
Rocklin has 99 ordinances on file across 15 categories. Of these, 16 are rated permissive, 57 moderate, and 26 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Rocklin 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.