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Moving to Santa Barbara, 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 Santa Barbara across 19 categories and 102 specific rules we track.

10 Permissive62 Moderate30 Strict

🔊 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 Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara's own noise ordinance (SBMC Chapter 9.16) bars any noise disturbance plainly audible 50 feet from the source. Radios, TVs, music players and instruments cannot create a disturbance audible across a residential or commercial property line between 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.

Governing code: City of Santa Barbara Municipal Code Ch. 9.16Core standard: Plainly audible 50 ft from source (SBMC 9.16.020)

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

In the City of Santa Barbara, construction is allowed 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. daily under SBMC 9.16.040. Building, demolishing, excavating or repairing between 8:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. is unlawful if it exceeds the ambient noise level by 5 dBA at the nearest residential property line, unless the Chief Building Official grants a special permit.

Governing section: City of Santa Barbara SBMC 9.16.040Allowed construction hours: 7:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. daily (City Noise packet)

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Under City of Santa Barbara Municipal Code Section 9.16.030(A)(3), it is unlawful to keep or harbor any animal or bird that frequently or for long duration howls, barks, meows or squawks so as to create a noise disturbance audible by a person of ordinary sensitivity across a residential or commercial real property line.

Governing section: City SBMC 9.16.030(A)(3)Trigger: Frequent or long-duration howling, barking, meowing, squawking

Leaf Blower Rules

Heavy Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara bans gasoline-powered leaf blowers citywide (SBMC 9.16.060, voter Measure D97 of 1997). All other leaf blowers must meet a 65-decibel ANSI noise standard, and may not be used within 250 feet of a residential zone before 9:00 a.m. or after 5:00 p.m. Monday-Saturday, or at any time on Sundays or national holidays.

Gas blowers: Banned citywide (SBMC 9.16.060, Measure D97, 1997)Hours near homes: 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Mon-Sat, none Sun/holidays (9.16.050)

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

City of Santa Barbara Municipal Code Section 9.16.080 limits amplified sound to music or the human voice and caps it at 60 dB(A) measured outdoors at the property line and 45 dB(A) inside a neighboring residence. Loudspeakers cannot create a disturbance across a residential property line between 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. under Section 9.16.030(A)(2).

Governing section: City SBMC 9.16.080 (Sound Amplification)What may be amplified: Only music or the human voice

Vehicle Noise

Some Restrictions

City of Santa Barbara Municipal Code Section 9.16.070 limits motor-vehicle horns to a sound level of 60 dB(A) at 200 feet. Broader vehicle exhaust and muffler noise is controlled by California state law (Vehicle Code 27150-27151), which applies citywide, and standard car radios heard only by occupants are exempt from the City's amplified-sound rules.

Horn limit: 60 dB(A) at 200 ft (City SBMC 9.16.070)Car radio: Exempt if heard only by occupants (9.16.090)

Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara uses a 50-foot 'plainly audible' standard for general noise (SBMC 9.16.020) plus specific decibel caps: 60 dB(A) outdoor / 45 dB(A) indoor for amplified sound (9.16.080), 53 dB(A) at a residential line for exterior mechanical equipment, 60 dB(A) CNEL for residential-area mechanical equipment, and 5 dBA over ambient for night construction.

General standard: Plainly audible 50 ft from source (SBMC 9.16.020)Amplified sound: 60 dB(A) outdoor / 45 dB(A) indoor (9.16.080)

Outdoor Music

Some Restrictions

Outdoor music in the City of Santa Barbara must meet the noise code's 50-foot 'plainly audible' rule (SBMC 9.16.020) and the 60 dB(A)-at-the-property-line amplified-sound cap (9.16.080). Loudspeakers cannot disturb a residential property line between 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. City-, County- and school-sponsored events on their own property are exempt under permit conditions.

Everyday standard: Plainly audible 50 ft / 60 dB(A) at property lineWhat may be amplified: Only music or the human voice (9.16.080)

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

In the City of Santa Barbara, exterior mechanical equipment may not exceed 53 dB(A) at a residential property line (SBMC 9.16.070(D)), and equipment near residential, institutional or park parcels is capped at 60 dB(A) CNEL. Non-electric mechanical equipment can't run outdoors before 7:00 a.m. or after 7:00 p.m. on weekdays, with tighter weekend hours.

Equipment dB limit: 53 dB(A) at residential property line (SBMC 9.16.070D)Residential-area limit: 60 dB(A) CNEL near residential/institutional/park parcels

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Aircraft noise is regulated by the federal government, not the City of Santa Barbara — federal law (City of Burbank v. Lockheed) preempts local in-flight noise rules. The City's only aircraft provision, SBMC 9.16.030/9.16.040 (historic), declares supersonic 'sonic booms' over the city a public nuisance and makes causing one unlawful.

Who regulates: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), not the cityFederal basis: Noise Control Act of 1972; City of Burbank v. Lockheed (1973)

🏠 Short-Term RentalsFull short-term rentals guide →

If you plan to rent out your home on Airbnb or VRBO - even occasionally - you need to know the local STR rules before listing.

Registration Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Every Santa Barbara STR operator must hold a City business tax certificate and register with the City Finance Department's Accounts Receivable office within 30 days of starting operations to remit Transient Occupancy Tax and the TBID assessment. Coastal-zone rentals use business tax schedule 37-02 and non-coastal use 37-01. A Zoning Clearance documenting the change of use is also required.

Business Tax Certificate: Required for all STR operatorsCoastal Schedule: 37-02 Vacation Rental Coastal

Taxes & Fees

Heavy Restrictions

Santa Barbara levies a 12% Transient Occupancy Tax on every short-term rental stay of 30 days or less, of which 10% is unrestricted revenue and 2% is restricted to Creeks Restoration and Water Quality Improvement (Measure B). A separate 2% Tourism Business Improvement District (TBID) assessment also applies. Operators collect these and remit monthly to the City by the 10th.

TOT Rate: 12% of gross rents (SBMC Title 4.08)TOT Allocation: 10% unrestricted; 2% Measure B creeks restoration

Occupancy Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Because Santa Barbara regulates STRs as hotels, occupancy and building standards follow hotel and Building Code rules rather than a fixed nightly guest cap. The City notes that a dwelling with six or more sleeping rooms, or ten or more occupants, changing from permanent to short-term occupancy constitutes a change in occupancy classification that can trigger fire partitions and Building Code requirements.

Occupancy Framework: Hotel and Building Code standards, not a fixed guest capSleeping Unit: Each bedroom counts as one sleeping unit

Parking Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Santa Barbara applies hotel parking standards to short-term rentals: one space per guestroom or sleeping unit, or the residential housing-type requirement, whichever is greater, with each bedroom counted as a sleeping unit. Parking cannot back out onto the street, so an onsite turnaround is required. A unit converted to an STR also loses eligibility for the Residential Parking Program.

Parking Standard: 1 space per guestroom/sleeping unit, or residential requirement, whichever is greaterSleeping Unit: Each bedroom counts as a sleeping unit

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

Santa Barbara does not impose a separate STR-specific noise ordinance; short-term rentals are subject to the City's general noise regulations and nuisance rules. Noise, parking, littering, traffic, and 'party house' impacts are core reasons the City restricts STRs in residential zones, and noise-related complaints are a primary trigger for the City Attorney's STR enforcement program, especially in the coastal zone.

STR-Specific Noise Limit: None; general City noise/nuisance rules applyCited Nuisances: Noise, parking, littering, traffic, 'party houses'

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Heavy Restrictions

Santa Barbara's current code does not offer a primary-residence 'home share' permit; STRs are treated as commercial hotel uses and are barred from single-unit and two-unit residential zones regardless of whether the host lives there. A proposed program would add a 'home share' category requiring the unit to be the primary residence of the owner or host, but it is not yet adopted.

Current Home-Share Permit: None adoptedOwner-Occupancy Exception: Does not exempt STR from residential-zone ban

Host Presence Rule

Heavy Restrictions

Current Santa Barbara code has no host-presence requirement because STRs are treated as commercial hotels, not hosted home shares, and are barred from residential zones. The City's proposed 'home share' concept would require the owner or designated host to be physically present, and a key open policy question is whether to allow any non-hosted home shares at all.

Current Host-Presence Rule: None in adopted codeReason: STRs regulated as hotels, not hosted home shares

Night Caps

Heavy Restrictions

Santa Barbara does not use an annual night cap; instead it sets a 30-day stay threshold that defines what counts as transient. Any rental of 30 consecutive days or less (less than 30 days in the coastal zone) is a short-term, hotel-style use, and such use is permanently prohibited in residential zones rather than allowed for a limited number of nights per year.

Annual Night Cap: None; controlled by 30-day threshold and use banSTR Threshold (Inland): 30 consecutive days or less (SBMC Title 30)

Insurance Requirements

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara's published STR materials do not impose a specific liability-insurance minimum for short-term rentals, because STRs are regulated as hotel uses through zoning and tax rather than a stand-alone STR license. Operators are instead subject to hotel-use, Building Code, and tax requirements; no City-mandated insurance dollar amount could be confirmed from the City's sources.

City Insurance Minimum: None confirmed in City's published STR materialsRegulatory Model: Hotel use via zoning/tax, not a standalone STR license

Permit Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara treats short-term rentals as 'Hotels and Similar Uses' and strictly prohibits them in single-unit residential zones. An STR is only allowed in zones where a hotel may be permitted, requires a change-of-use approval and Zoning Clearance, and in the coastal zone needs a Coastal Development Permit. This is a city rule, distinct from Santa Barbara County's separate ordinance.

Legal Treatment: STRs classified as 'Hotels and Similar Uses'Code Basis: SBMC Title 28 (Coastal) / Title 30 (Inland)

🔥 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 Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara bans all fireworks. Under the City Fire Code (Municipal Code Ch. 8.04, adopting Fire Code Section 5601.1.3), the manufacturing, possession, storage, sale, use, and handling of fireworks are prohibited citywide, including state-approved 'Safe and Sane' fireworks.

All fireworks: Prohibited citywideCity code section: Fire Code 5601.1.3 (MC Ch. 8.04)

Brush Clearance

Heavy Restrictions

Properties in Santa Barbara's High Fire Hazard Areas must maintain defensible space by clearing flammable vegetation 30 to 150 feet around structures, depending on the fire zone, under the City Fire Code (Municipal Code Ch. 8.04, Section 4907). Roadside clearance of 10 feet on each side is also required.

Extreme Foothill Zone: 150 ft defensible spaceFoothill Zone: 100 ft defensible space

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

The City Fire Code (Municipal Code Ch. 8.04, amended Section 308.1.4.1) limits propane appliances. LP-gas burners with a container over 25 pounds (5 gallons) water capacity may not be placed on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction, except at one- and two-family dwellings.

Balcony limit: No LP container > 25 lb on combustible balconiesClearance: 10 ft from combustible construction

Backyard Fires

Heavy Restrictions

In Santa Barbara's High Fire Hazard Areas, outdoor fires require a permit from the fire code official and are banned during high winds, when unattended, or during a Red Flag Warning (City Fire Code Section 4909.9). Open burning offensive due to smoke is prohibited citywide.

HFHA outdoor fires: Permit required (Sec. 4909.9)High winds / unattended: Fires prohibited

Smoke Detectors

Some Restrictions

Smoke alarm requirements in Santa Barbara follow California law. State Health and Safety Code Sections 13113.7 and 13113.8 require State Fire Marshal-listed smoke alarms in every dwelling and an operable alarm in every single-family home that is sold, with a written compliance statement to the buyer.

Governing law: CA Health & Safety Code 13113.7 / 13113.8At sale: Operable, SFM-listed alarm required

Wildfire Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Santa Barbara's foothills are mapped as High and Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones / Wildland-Urban Interface. The City Fire Code (Municipal Code Ch. 8.04) defines four zones - Coastal Interior, Coastal, Foothill, and Extreme Foothill - each with escalating defensible space and construction requirements.

Zones: Coastal Interior, Coastal, Foothill, Extreme FoothillWUI = HFHA: Interchangeable per Fire Code 4902

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Outdoor fireplaces, fire pits, and barbecues are regulated by the City Fire Code (Municipal Code Ch. 8.04). In High Fire Hazard Areas they must sit at least 30 feet from grass, brush, or forested areas, be kept in safe condition, and have an approved spark arrester, screen, or door over openings.

Clearance (High Fire Hazard Area): 30 ft from grass/brush/treesOpenings: Approved spark arrester, screen, or door

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Open burning of household and yard waste is not allowed in Santa Barbara. The City Fire Code prohibits open burning that is offensive due to smoke, and the Santa Barbara County Air Pollution Control District (APCD) bans residential waste burning district-wide. Any allowed burning requires a permit.

Residential waste burning: Prohibited (county-wide APCD)Offensive-smoke burning: Prohibited (Fire Code 307.1.2)

🚗 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 Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara restricts on-street parking of recreational vehicles, trailers, and oversized rigs. SBMC 10.44.200 bans recreational vehicles from parking between midnight and 6:00 a.m. in a defined coastal area south of US-101, and trailers/semi-trailers may not stay on a street longer than two hours.

RV overnight coastal ban: Midnight-6 a.m. south of US-101, Castillo St to Bird Refuge (10.44.200)Trailer/bus street limit: 2 hours max without Chief of Police authorization (10.44.200)

Overnight Parking

Some Restrictions

Santa Barbara has no blanket citywide overnight street-parking ban, but its Municipal Code creates targeted overnight restrictions: recreational vehicles are banned midnight-6 a.m. in the coastal zone (SBMC 10.44.200), and no vehicle may sit on a street more than 72 consecutive hours (SBMC 10.44.060).

Citywide overnight ban: None; no blanket 2-6 a.m. rule72-hour street limit: No vehicle >72 consecutive hours (10.44.060)

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Santa Barbara's Municipal Code tightly limits commercial-vehicle street parking. Trucks over 3/4-ton capacity, trailers, semi-trailers, and buses may not stay on a street longer than two hours (SBMC 10.44.200), and oversized commercial vehicles must leave the public right-of-way unless actively loading or permitted (SBMC 10.44.220).

Truck/trailer/bus street limit: 2 hours max (trucks >3/4 ton) (10.44.200)Active delivery exemption: Up to 30 min, then permit required (10.44.220 bulletin)

Abandoned Vehicles

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara treats abandoned, wrecked, dismantled, or inoperative vehicles as public nuisances under SBMC Chapter 10.58, an abatement ordinance adopted under California Vehicle Code Section 22660. The City Administrator can abate and remove such vehicles after a 10-day notice and hearing process.

Abandoned-vehicle chapter: SBMC Ch. 10.58 (nuisance abatement)State authority: California Vehicle Code Section 22660

Oversized Vehicle Parking

Heavy Restrictions

Santa Barbara has a distinctive oversized-vehicle ordinance, SBMC 10.44.220(B), adopted by the City Council on November 15, 2016. Any vehicle exceeding 25 feet long, 80 inches wide, or 82 inches high is banned from the public right-of-way unless an exemption or a Downtown Parking permit applies. Violations are $48.

Ordinance: SBMC 10.44.220(B), adopted Nov. 15, 2016Oversized definition: >25 ft long OR >80 in wide OR >82 in high

EV Charging

Few Restrictions

Santa Barbara operates 40+ public Level-2 EV chargers in City lots and garages and expedites EV-charger permits under SBMC Chapter 22.93. Enforcement of who may occupy an EV stall is governed by California Vehicle Code 22511, not a separate city parking-stall ordinance; the City does apply an idle fee at its own chargers.

Public chargers: 40+ Level-2 ChargePoint stations in City lots/garagesPermit expediting: SBMC Ch. 22.93 (Gov. Code 65850.7)

Loading Zones

Some Restrictions

Santa Barbara's loading-zone rules are in SBMC Chapter 10.48. Yellow curbs are freight loading zones limited to 30 minutes for commercial vehicles (7 a.m.-6 p.m. except Sunday), and white curbs are passenger loading zones limited to three minutes. No more than half a block's curb may be reserved for loading.

Yellow loading zone: Freight loading; commercial 30 min, 7 a.m.-6 p.m. except Sun (10.48.060)Unattended limit (yellow): Commercial vehicle max 10 min unattended (10.48.060)

Curb Color Rules

Some Restrictions

Colored curb markings in Santa Barbara are defined and controlled by SBMC 10.48.041: red (no stopping), yellow (loading), white (passenger loading), green (15-minute), and blue (disabled). Only the City may paint or change curb markings; the Transportation Engineer and Public Works set and install them.

Curb-color authority: SBMC 10.48.041 (City-controlled markings)Red: No stopping anytime except per Vehicle Code

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Blocking a driveway or parking on a sidewalk in Santa Barbara is enforced primarily under the California Vehicle Code, which the City's red-curb rule (SBMC 10.48.041) expressly incorporates. The City's own parking-use rules in SBMC 10.44.040 cover related prohibitions like parking to display a vehicle for sale or to repair it on the street.

Blocking driveway/sidewalk: Enforced under CVC 22500 (state law)Red curb: No stopping anytime except per Vehicle Code (10.48.041)

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Santa Barbara's own Municipal Code Title 10 governs on-street parking, layering posted time limits, colored curbs, and street-sweeping enforcement on top of the California Vehicle Code. Posted limits are set by the Transportation Engineer under SBMC 10.48.020, and Parking Enforcement patrols permit areas for overtime and missing permits.

Posted time limits: Set block-by-block by Transportation Engineer (10.48.020)Green curb: 15-min max, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. except Sunday (10.48.041)

🧱 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.

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Residential fences and walls not over 3.5 feet high are exempt from a building permit. Residential retaining and non-retaining walls not over 4 feet (footing to top) are exempt unless supporting a surcharge or impounding flammable liquids. Taller fences and walls need a permit, and front-yard fences over 3.5 feet trigger design review.

Fence/wall permit exempt: Not over 3.5 ft highRetaining/other wall exempt: Not over 4 ft (footing to top)

Neighbor Fence Rules

Some Restrictions

The City Zoning Ordinance sets height and location limits but does not assign cost-sharing for shared fences. Cost and maintenance of a boundary fence are governed by California's Good Neighbor Fence Law, Civil Code 841, which presumes adjoining owners share equal benefit and equal responsibility, with 30 days' written notice required before incurring costs.

Governing law: California Civil Code 841 (state, not city)Cost presumption: Equal benefit; equal responsibility

Retaining Walls

Some Restrictions

Residential retaining walls not over 4 feet (footing to top) are permit-exempt unless they support a surcharge or impound flammable liquids. Where a fence sits on a retaining wall, the part of the wall above finished grade counts toward fence height. Retaining walls 6 feet or taller trigger Single Family Design Board review.

Permit exempt: Not over 4 ft (footing to top)Permit required: If supporting surcharge or flammable liquids

Fence Requirements

Some Restrictions

No fence, screen, wall or hedge over 3.5 feet may stand in a driveway visibility triangle: 10 ft along the driveway and 10 ft back from the front lot line where a sidewalk and parkway exist, or 20 ft and 10 ft where none exist. Corner-lot intersection sight distances are evaluated by Public Works case-by-case.

Visibility triangle limit: 3.5 ft max in the triangleWith sidewalk/parkway: 10 ft x 10 ft triangle

Material Restrictions

Some Restrictions

The Fence Guidelines set height and location but defer the exact material, color, width and style to design-review boards. Front-yard fences, walls and gates over 3.5 feet go to the Single Family Design Board; duplex and multi-family fences go to the Architectural Board of Review; historic-district fences require Historic Landmarks Commission approval.

Guidelines scope: Set height/location, defer material/color/styleSingle-family front yard: SFDB review over 3.5 ft (SBMC 22.69.020.C.8)

Approved Materials

Some Restrictions

Decorative elements up to 9 by 9 inches may exceed the fence height limit by up to 12 inches if spaced at least 6 feet on-center. Guardrails may rise above the limit only to the minimum required by the California Building Code and must be predominantly transparent. Entryway arbors must attach to a fence and be substantially open.

Decorative element size: Up to 9 in x 9 inDecorative height bonus: Up to 12 in above limit, 6 ft on-center

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

In residential zones, fences and walls within 10 feet of a front lot line are limited to 3.5 feet; screens and hedges to 8 feet. Within front setbacks (10-35 ft) and interior setbacks (5-15 ft), fences, screens, walls and hedges are limited to 8 feet. Administrative exceptions can add 4-6 feet.

Within 10 ft of front lot line: Fences/walls 3.5 ft; screens/hedges 8 ftFront setbacks (10-35 ft): 8 ft max

🐔 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.

Chickens & Livestock

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara allows residents to keep chickens and other fowl, with numeric limits that scale by zoning. Roosters are banned citywide. Coops must be kept clean and set back from neighboring dwellings, schools, parks, and hospitals.

Pet exemption: 2 or fewer fowl kept as petsLimit (denser residential zones): Up to 15 chickens/fowl

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Exotic-pet ownership in the City of Santa Barbara is governed primarily by California state law, which bans possessing many wild and exotic species without a state permit. Ferrets, hedgehogs, sugar gliders, and most monkeys are illegal to keep as pets statewide, including within the City.

Primary authority: California state law (CDFW)Key statute: Fish & Game Code 2118

Livestock

Heavy Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara restricts livestock to large lots. Cows, hogs, sheep, goats, and other hoofed animals (except horses) require a lot of at least 1.5 acres, with a 35-foot setback. Horses are limited by lot size under the zoning code, capped at five per lot.

Min. lot for hoofed animals: 1.5 acres (except horses)Hoofed-animal setback: 35 ft from property line/dwelling

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara requires licensing for dogs over four months old and for unaltered cats. The City runs its own Animal Control through the Police Department and licenses via PetData, while stray sheltering is handled at the County Animal Shelter.

Dog license: Required over 4 months oldCat license: Required for unaltered cats over 4 months

Cat Rules

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara requires a license for each unaltered cat over four months old, obtained from the City. There is no leash requirement for cats. Reduced license fees encourage spaying and neutering, and general nuisance rules apply to all animals.

Cat license: Required for unaltered cats over 4 monthsIssued by: City of Santa Barbara

Wildlife Feeding

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara does not publish a dedicated wildlife-feeding ban in its general animal regulations, but feeding wild animals can create a public nuisance and is discouraged. California state law restricts feeding big-game and predatory wildlife, and residents are directed to the County and wildlife groups for injured animals.

Dedicated City feeding ban: Not published in animal codeNuisance angle: Feeding can be abated as nuisance

Animal Hoarding

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara addresses animal hoarding through its care-and-keeping and nuisance provisions plus California's anti-cruelty law. Keeping animals in unsanitary, overcrowded conditions or neglecting their care can trigger enforcement by the Police Department's Animal Control unit.

Dedicated hoarding ordinance: None - handled by other rulesCity tools: Sanitation, nuisance, kennel limits

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara does not ban any dog breed. Like all California cities, it regulates dangerous dogs by behavior, not breed. Chapter 6.22 lets the City declare an individual dog potentially dangerous or vicious after a hearing, with conditions such as muzzling, secure enclosure, or insurance.

Breed-specific ban: None - prohibited by CA lawGoverning standard: Behavior-based (not breed)

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara requires dogs in streets and public places to be on a leash no longer than six feet and under immediate control of the handler. The Police Department's Animal Control unit enforces the rule. Limited off-leash areas exist at posted parks and beaches.

Maximum leash length: 6 feet (public places)Enforcing agency: Santa Barbara Police Dept. Animal Control

Beekeeping

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara regulates beekeeping under its Title 6 animal control code. Statewide, anyone keeping honeybees must register their apiary annually with the Santa Barbara County Agricultural Commissioner under California Food and Agricultural Code Section 29040, regardless of the number of hives.

City regulation: Municipal Code Title 6 (animal keeping)State registration: Required - CA Food & Ag Code 29040

🌿 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 Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara has no fixed numeric lawn-height limit for ordinary front-yard grass. Height rules apply through wildfire defensible-space requirements in the high fire hazard area, where dry grass and weeds must be cleared, and through general nuisance abatement for hazardous overgrowth.

Citywide lawn-height limit: None published for ordinary yardsZone 1 ground covers: Not more than 12 inches in height (fire zone)

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Heavy Restrictions

Removing a protected tree in the City of Santa Barbara requires a permit. Street, setback, specimen, and historic trees are reviewed by the Parks and Recreation Commission or a design review body, and removing one without a permit triggers fines up to $5,000 based on trunk size.

Minor permit covers: Removal of 1-3 protected treesDecision timeline: Vote within 60 days, 10-day appeal

Weed Ordinances

Heavy Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara requires property owners in its high fire hazard area to clear weeds, dry grass, and flammable brush as defensible space. Required clearance ranges from 30-50 feet in coastal zones up to 150 feet in the Extreme Foothill Zone under City Ordinance #5920.

Coastal Zone clearance: 50 to 70 feet from structureFoothill Zone clearance: 100 feet from structure

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara encourages rainwater capture and graywater reuse, offering Creeks Division rebates for rain barrels, rain gardens, and downspout disconnects, plus a laundry-to-landscape graywater rebate. Simple systems follow the California Graywater Code, while complex graywater systems require a City permit.

Rain barrel / rain garden: Creeks Division rebates availableSimple graywater (laundry-to-landscape): No plumbing permit if to code

Native Plants

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara's Water Efficient Landscape Standards push new and substantially redeveloped landscapes toward low-water and native plants, requiring residential plans to hit roughly 80% low-water plants or a 0.5 ETAF. In high fire hazard areas, plant choices must also be fire-resistant.

Governing standard: WELS, SBMC 14.23.005 (Ord. 6101)Residential target: ~80% low-water plants or 0.5 ETAF

Artificial Turf

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara does not reward artificial turf as a water-saving measure. Its Sustainable Lawn Replacement Rebate explicitly excludes artificial turf, and the City's Water Efficient Landscape Standards count synthetic turf as a non-pervious surface rather than as qualifying low-water landscape.

Lawn rebate eligibility: Artificial turf NOT eligibleLawn rebate rate: $2.00/sq ft (living water-wise plants)

Composting

Some Restrictions

California's SB 1383 requires organic-waste recycling, but the City of Santa Barbara meets it differently. Residents are not given separate kitchen-compost carts; food scraps go in the trash and are sorted out at the County ReSource Center, while yard waste uses a dedicated green cart through hauler MarBorg Industries.

State driver: California SB 1383 organics recyclingFood scraps: Placed in trash, sorted at ReSource Center

Water Restrictions

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara's Water Regulations (SBMC Chapter 14.20) keep certain rules in force at all times, even outside a drought, prohibiting wasteful runoff, requiring leaks to be fixed within 72 hours of notice, and barring irrigation during and within 48 hours after measurable rainfall.

Governing code: SBMC Chapter 14.20 (Water Regulations)Runoff: Significant runoff off-property prohibited

Tree Trimming

Heavy Restrictions

In the City of Santa Barbara, only City staff may trim, plant, or remove street trees in the parkway or right-of-way. Significantly pruning a protected tree, including setback trees and designated specimen or historic trees, requires a City permit, and unpermitted work carries escalating fines.

Street trees: Trimmed only by City staffProtected trees: Street, setback, specimen, historic, parking-lot

💼 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.

Cottage Food Operations

Few Restrictions

Santa Barbara expressly allows cottage food operations as a home occupation. The City permits one full-time-equivalent cottage food employee, kitchen equipment that keeps residential character, and direct sales of cottage food. Operations must register as Class A or Class B under California Health & Safety Code 114365 et seq.

Allowed: Yes - explicit home occupation accommodationEmployees: Residents + 1 full-time-equivalent CFO employee

Home Occupation Permits

Few Restrictions

Santa Barbara uses a no-fee Home Occupation Affidavit (self-certification) rather than a discretionary permit. You submit the affidavit online through the Accela Citizen Access portal and separately obtain a City Business License before conducting business. No employees beyond residents, and up to two clients at a time, no more than four visits per day.

Permit type: Self-certified affidavit (no discretionary permit)Affidavit fee: $0 - no fee to submit

Home Daycare

Few Restrictions

State-licensed family day care homes are allowed in Santa Barbara's residential zones. The legacy City code permitted small family day care homes by right and required a Performance Standard Permit for large homes (Chapter 28.93). Under California SB 234 (2019, HSC 1597.46), both small and large family daycare are now a residential use by right, preempting that local permit and spacing scheme.

Small family daycare: By-right residential use in R-1 and similar zonesLarge family daycare: By right under state law (SB 234 / HSC 1597.46)

Zoning Restrictions

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara allows home occupations as an accessory use to a residence when they stay compatible with the neighborhood. Activities must occur entirely within the home, garage, or accessory building, keep the residential appearance, and follow the home-occupation standards in SBMC 30.185.200 (formerly 28.04.020).

Use type: Accessory use to a residenceCode section: SBMC 30.185.200 (legacy 28.04.020 / 28.04.385)

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Home occupations in Santa Barbara must not generate traffic, parking demand or deliveries beyond what is normal for a residence; significant customer visits can disqualify the use.

Standard: No traffic beyond residentialParking: No added demand

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Santa Barbara effectively prohibits home-business signage. The City's home occupation rules require that the residential appearance be maintained with 'no exterior indication of the home occupation,' and no exterior display or display windows are allowed - leaving no room for a business sign at the home.

Business sign: Not permitted at the residenceStandard: No exterior indication of the home occupation

🏊 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 Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara Building & Safety Division requires a building permit before constructing or remodeling any private swimming pool or spa. Plans must show plumbing, electrical, and barrier details and meet California Building Code Section 3109 plus City pool ordinance #5919. No water may be added before final safeguard approval.

Permit required: Yes - City Building & Safety building permitGoverning code: CBC Section 3109 + CRC Appendix V; City Ord. #5919

Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Santa Barbara requires a protective enclosure around residential pools and spas. The City's pool handout adopts the California enclosure standard: a minimum 60-inch (5-foot) barrier, no more than 2 inches of ground clearance, no openings passing a 4-inch sphere, and self-closing, self-latching gates that open away from the pool.

Minimum barrier height: 60 inches (5 feet)Max ground gap: 2 inches under the enclosure

Safety Rules

Heavy Restrictions

When the City issues a permit to build or remodel a residential pool or spa, the City's pool handout requires at least two of the seven state drowning-prevention safety features under Health & Safety Code 115922 - such as a compliant enclosure, ASTM mesh fencing, a safety pool cover, door exit alarms, self-latching house doors, or a pool alarm.

Rule: At least 2 of 7 drowning-prevention features (HSC 115922)Applies to: New pools/spas and remodels at single-family homes

Hot Tub Rules

Some Restrictions

Hot tubs and spas need a City permit and generally follow the same pool barrier and safety rules. However, the City's handout adopts a key state exception: per HSC 115925, hot tubs and spas with a locking safety cover compliant with ASTM F1346 are exempt from the two-of-seven drowning-prevention features.

Permit: Required for spas/hot tubsCover exception: ASTM F1346 locking safety cover exempts the 2-of-7 features

Above-Ground Pools

Some Restrictions

Santa Barbara's pool ordinance does not exempt above-ground pools. A building permit is required, and the same barrier and two-of-seven safety-feature rules under CBC 3109 and HSC 115922-115923 apply. The protective enclosure requirement covers the entire pool, built-in spa, portable spa, or yard.

Permit: Required - no above-ground exemption in City handoutBarrier coverage: Entire pool, built-in spa, portable spa, or yard

🏗️ 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.

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara allows an existing garage to be converted into an ADU or JADU under Municipal Code 30.185.040. No setback is required to convert legally permitted floor area, and the garage parking spaces that are removed need not be replaced. Converted garage doors must be replaced with matching wall, windows, or doors.

Code section: Municipal Code 30.185.040Setback for conversion: None required (existing legal floor area)

Shed Rules

Some Restrictions

In the City of Santa Barbara, work or storage sheds for non-commercial use are a permitted accessory use in residential zones. Accessory buildings may not exceed 30 feet and two stories, must meet zone setbacks (with limited encroachments allowed), and are subject to floor-area caps that scale with lot size.

Status: Permitted accessory use in residential zonesMax accessory-building height: 30 ft and 2 stories

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

In the City of Santa Barbara, a private garage, carport, or parking space is a permitted accessory use in residential zones. Covered parking must meet zone setbacks (street-facing covered parking generally set back 20 feet) and counts toward the lot's combined covered-parking-and-accessory-building floor-area cap.

Status: Permitted accessory use (garage/carport/parking)Street-facing covered parking setback: 20 feet front

Tiny Homes

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara has no separate 'tiny home' zoning category. A permanently founded small dwelling is regulated as an ADU under Municipal Code 30.185.040, which sets a 150 sq ft efficiency-unit minimum and requires an approved permanent foundation. Tiny homes on wheels (RVs) cannot be used as permanent dwellings.

Tiny-home zoning category: None; regulated as an ADUMinimum unit size: 150 sq ft (efficiency)

ADU Rules

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara permits accessory dwelling units (ADUs) and junior ADUs (JADUs) ministerially in residential zones under Municipal Code Section 30.185.040, implementing California ADU law. Detached ADUs may reach 850 to 1,200 sq ft depending on lot size; JADUs are capped at 500 sq ft. Coastal-zone ADUs also need coastal review.

Code section: Municipal Code 30.185.040 (Ord. 6103, 2023)Detached ADU max size: 850-1,200 sq ft by lot size/bedrooms

🍖 Outdoor CookingFull outdoor cooking guide →

🌍 Environmental RulesFull environmental rules guide →

🪧 Sign RegulationsFull sign regulations guide →

🏚️ Property MaintenanceFull property maintenance guide →

Property Blight

Some Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara enforces property-maintenance standards through its Community Development Code Compliance program and Administrative Code Enforcement Procedures. Officers act on blight conditions such as illegally stored trash, debris, boats and vehicles in setbacks or front yards, abandoned vehicles, and substandard buildings, using notices of violation, administrative citations, or City Attorney referral.

Enforcing agency: City Community Development Code Compliance DivisionCitation authority: SBMC Chapter 1.25, Administrative Code Enforcement Procedures

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Since July 1, 2025, City of Santa Barbara residents wheel MarBorg carts to the curb for service. Carts must be placed curbside by 6:00 a.m. on the service day (no earlier than the night before) and returned to a storage location on the property by noon the next day. Carts come in 35, 64 and 96 gallon sizes.

Curbside deadline: By 6:00 a.m. on service day; out no earlier than the night beforeReturn deadline: Back to on-property storage by noon the following day

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Heavy Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara adopts the California Fire Code in SBMC Chapter 8.04 and requires owners of property in High Fire Hazard Areas to maintain defensible space and clear hazardous vegetation. Owners must keep flammable vegetation cleared 10 feet on each side of improved roads, and defensible-space distances range from 30 to 150 feet by fire zone.

Governing city code: SBMC Chapter 8.04 (adopted California Fire Code)Road clearance: 10 feet of flammable-vegetation clearance each side of improved roads

Weeds & Overgrown Grass

Some Restrictions

Santa Barbara Municipal Code Chapter 8.20 (Vegetation Obstructing Public Places) requires owners to maintain trees, hedges, shrubs, vines and plants so they don't obstruct sidewalks or streets, and declares overgrown grass, weeds and rubbish on sidewalks a public nuisance. In High Fire Hazard Areas, dead grasses and weeds must also be cleared under the City fire code.

Governing city chapter: SBMC Chapter 8.20, Vegetation Obstructing Public PlacesPublic nuisance: Grass, weeds, rubbish on sidewalks between property line and curb

Garage Sale Rules

Few Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara treats residential garage and yard sales as an exempt temporary use under its Zoning Ordinance, so no permit is required when limits are met. Exempt garage sales are limited to no more than four events per twelve-month period, each lasting a maximum of three consecutive days.

Permit needed: No, if within the zoning exemption limitsFrequency limit: No more than 4 events per 12-month period

💡 Outdoor LightingFull outdoor lighting guide →

🗑️ Trash & RecyclingFull trash & recycling guide →

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

City of Santa Barbara residents must place MarBorg carts curbside by 6:00 a.m. on the service day (no earlier than the night before), keep at least 12 inches of clearance between carts and obstacles, orient handles toward the house with lids opening to the street, and return carts to on-property storage by noon the next day.

Out by: 6:00 a.m. on service day, no earlier than the night beforeSpacing: At least 12 inches between carts and around obstacles

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Heavy Restrictions

The City of Santa Barbara requires all single-family (1-4 unit) and multi-family (5+ unit) residential properties to subscribe to trash, recycling and yard waste service through franchised hauler MarBorg Industries. Since July 1, 2025, carts must be wheeled curbside by 6:00 a.m. on the scheduled service day.

Franchised hauler: MarBorg Industries (City franchise agreement)Mandatory service: All 1-4 unit and 5+ unit residential properties must subscribe

Bulk Item Disposal

Few Restrictions

All City of Santa Barbara residences are eligible for four (4) bulky item pickups each calendar year through franchised hauler MarBorg Industries. MarBorg also offers free curbside household battery collection, free sharps containers, and a year-round household hazardous waste collection center at UCSB for City residents.

Bulky pickups: 4 per residence per calendar yearProvider: MarBorg Industries (City franchise)

Recycling Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

All City of Santa Barbara residential properties must subscribe to recycling service, and unlimited recycling and yard-waste carts are provided at no extra charge. Under California's AB 341, businesses generating 4+ cubic yards of waste and multi-unit buildings of 5+ units must subscribe to recycling service. Recycling carts are blue to meet SB-1383 color rules.

Residential recycling: Required; unlimited recycling/yard-waste carts at no extra charge (single-family)Recycling cart color: Blue (SB-1383 statewide color standard)

Mandatory Organics Recycling

Heavy Restrictions

Santa Barbara has a population over 70,000 and is NOT rural-exempt from SB-1383. The City takes a distinctive approach: single-family residents put food waste in the trash cart, which is processed for organics recovery at the County ReSource Center. Commercial customers must subscribe to dedicated foodscraps (organics) service, and large food generators must arrange edible food recovery.

Rural exemption: Not exempt - City population exceeds 70,000Single-family food waste: Allowed in trash; recovered at County ReSource Center for SB-1383

🌙 Curfew LawsFull curfew laws guide →

📐 Building Setbacks & ZoningFull building setbacks & zoning guide →

🌳 Tree ProtectionFull tree protection guide →

Overall: What to Expect in Santa Barbara

Santa Barbara has 102 ordinances on file across 19 categories. Of these, 10 are rated permissive, 62 moderate, and 30 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Santa Barbara 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.

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