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Moving to Tulare, 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 Tulare across 15 categories and 94 specific rules we track.

25 Permissive50 Moderate19 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.

Construction Hours

Few Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code does NOT contain a dedicated construction-hours ordinance setting permissible weekday or Sunday hours (unlike many California cities that limit construction to 7 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays). Chapter 6.40 (Noise) covers policy, definitions, special restrictions, schools/hospitals/churches, and amplified sound, but no construction-specific schedule. Construction noise that disturbs neighbors is cited under § 7.28.030 (nuisance) and Chapter 6.40 special restrictions (§ 6.40.030). Tulare County General Plan Noise Element provides countywide guidance but is policy, not enforceable code.

Codified construction hours: NoneEnforcement basis: Tulare M.C. § 7.28.030 + § 6.40.030 + permit conditions

Leaf Blower Rules

Few Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code does NOT contain a leaf-blower-specific ordinance restricting hours, decibel level, or gasoline-engine use. Unlike many coastal California cities (e.g., Palo Alto, Beverly Hills), Tulare's Chapter 6.40 (Noise) does not single out powered landscape equipment. Leaf-blower noise complaints are evaluated under Tulare M.C. § 7.28.030 (general nuisance — loud or unusual noise disturbing reasonable persons). California has banned the sale of new gas-powered small off-road engines (SORE) including leaf blowers via AB 1346 / CARB regulations effective 2024, but use of pre-existing equipment remains legal statewide.

City leaf-blower ordinance: NoneEnforcement basis: Tulare M.C. § 7.28.030 general nuisance

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 6.12.210 (Animal nuisances prohibited) makes it unlawful for any owner to permit an animal to obstruct the reasonable and comfortable use of property in any neighborhood or community by chasing vehicles, molesting passersby, barking, howling, or making other noise. Any violation is expressly declared to be a public nuisance. This complements the general nuisance declaration in § 7.28.030 and the Tulare Animal Ordinance in Chapter 6.12.

Primary citation: Tulare M.C. § 6.12.210 (Animal nuisances)Test: Obstructs reasonable comfortable use of property

Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code §6.40.071 caps amplified sound at 70 dBA at the property line of any affected property between 6 AM and 10 PM. Sound amplification at city parks and city facilities is measured within 100 feet of the source and may not exceed 85 dBA; permitted Chapter 8.70 parade/community events share the 85 dBA ceiling.

Daytime amplified cap: 70 dBA at property line, 6 AM–10 PM (§6.40.071)City park / facility cap: 85 dBA measured ≤100 ft from source

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 6.40.071 sets specific decibel limits on amplified sound. Amplified sound on property shall not exceed 70 decibels between 6:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. (implicitly prohibited or further restricted outside those hours). Activities permitted under Chapter 8.70 (parades, community events) may reach 85 decibels. Sound from amplification equipment at city parks and facilities, measured within 100 feet of the source, shall not exceed 85 decibels. Failure of an event sponsor to enforce these limits can trigger forced curtailment by Tulare Police, citation, or forfeiture of facility-use deposits. Amplified-sound permits are issued under § 6.40.050.

Daytime cap: 70 dB on property, 6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.Event cap: 85 dB for Chapter 8.70 events and city park/facility events

Outdoor Music

Some Restrictions

Outdoor amplified music is regulated by Tulare Municipal Code §6.40.071: a 70 dBA limit at the property line of any affected property between 6 AM and 10 PM. City parks and city facilities have an 85 dBA cap measured within 100 feet of the source. Parades and permitted community events run under Chapter 8.70 and share the 85 dBA ceiling.

Private-property cap: 70 dBA at property line, 6 AM–10 PMPark / facility cap: 85 dBA within 100 ft of source

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Aircraft-in-flight noise is preempted by federal law (City of Burbank v. Lockheed Air Terminal, 411 U.S. 624). Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 6.40 cannot regulate flight operations at Mefford Field (KTLR). Airport-proprietor noise-compatibility planning runs through the FAA Part 150 process and Caltrans Aeronautics' Airport Noise Program (Cal. Pub. Util. Code Div. 9 / 21 CCR §§ 5000 et seq.).

Local airport: Mefford Field (KTLR), city-owned, ~30,000 annual operationsPreemption: Federal — City of Burbank v. Lockheed (1973)

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 6.40 (Noise) does NOT contain a typical daytime/nighttime exterior decibel table for residential property. General loud-noise complaints are enforced under Tulare M.C. § 7.28.030, which declares it a nuisance to operate any device, instrument, vehicle, or machinery that creates loud or unusual noise disturbing reasonable persons of normal sensitivity. Chapter 6.40 itself focuses on policy (§ 6.40.010), definitions (§ 6.40.020), special restrictions (§ 6.40.030), schools/hospitals/churches (§ 6.40.040), and amplified sound (§§ 6.40.050, 6.40.071). State law (Cal. Civil Code § 3479) backstops as a private nuisance.

Primary citation: Tulare M.C. § 7.28.030 (nuisance) + Chapter 6.40Quiet-hours decibel table: None codified

Vehicle Noise

Some Restrictions

Motor-vehicle noise on public streets is preempted by California Vehicle Code §§27150–27159 (mufflers) and §23130 (vehicle noise limits). California Air Resources Board / CHP enforce a 95 dBA aftermarket-exhaust limit. Tulare's Chapter 6.40 can address parked-vehicle stereos, idling, and off-road vehicles on private property.

Muffler requirement: Cal. Veh. Code §27150Exhaust modification: Cal. Veh. Code §27151 (no amplification above stock)

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Industrial and commercial noise is regulated by Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 6.40 (Noise), the Title 10 zoning performance standards, and the general nuisance ordinance at Chapter 7.28. Agricultural processing — dairy parlors, packing houses, gins — is largely shielded from nuisance suits by California's Right-to-Farm Act (Civ. Code §3482.5).

Primary code: Tulare MC Chapter 6.40 (Noise), §6.40.070 standardsBackstop: Chapter 7.28 nuisance; Title 10 zoning performance standards

🏠 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.

Occupancy Limits

Some Restrictions

Tulare has no STR-specific occupancy cap. Maximum occupancy defaults to the California Building Code (Title 24, Part 2) and California Fire Code (Title 24, Part 9) — generally two persons per bedroom plus one additional person, or based on the actual sleeping-area square footage (70 sq ft for the first occupant, 50 sq ft per additional occupant under CBC Section 1208). The defunct Tulare County draft STR ordinance had proposed limiting rental to 'habitable interior spaces in permitted dwellings,' barring garages, tents, treehouses, yurts, camper trailers, and RVs — that standard already follows from CBC habitability rules even without a dedicated STR chapter.

STR-specific occupancy cap: NoneHabitability standard: California Building Code (Title 24 Part 2)

Taxes & Fees

Some Restrictions

The City of Tulare has no dedicated short-term rental ordinance, but any rental of 30 consecutive days or less is a transient occupancy and triggers state-default tax/business-license duties. Tulare County's draft STR ordinance was voted down 3-2 in February 2025, so the existing County Transient Occupancy Tax (10% of rent) framework remains the operative model for unincorporated comparables; inside the City limits, operators must obtain a city business license under Tulare Municipal Code Title 5 (Business Licenses and Regulations) and Hosts on Airbnb/Vrbo are responsible for state sales/use tax and any applicable TOT collection. Confirm the current city TOT rate and registration form with the City of Tulare Finance Department before listing.

City STR ordinance: None adopted as of 2026City business license: Required under Tulare Municipal Code Title 5

Registration Rules

Few Restrictions

Tulare does not maintain a separate STR registry. Hosts register by applying for a Business Tax Certificate under Tulare Municipal Code Title 5 with the City Finance Department. Tulare County's transient occupancy tax (TOT) is 10% (Tulare County Ordinance Code) and applies to vacation rentals in unincorporated areas, while City of Tulare hotels and lodging operators are taxed under the city's own TOT chapter in Title 3. Beginning Jan 1, 2026, California SB 346 requires hosting platforms to collect and remit TOT directly to local governments where authorized.

STR registry: None — only the general city business license registryCity TOT: City of Tulare Municipal Code Title 3 transient occupancy tax (hotels/motels/lodging)

Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Tulare imposes no annual day cap on extended home-share arrangements or long-term hosted stays. Because there is no STR ordinance, hosts may rent rooms or entire dwellings for as many nights as desired, subject only to the general business license requirement (Tulare Municipal Code Title 5) and California state landlord-tenant law (AB 1482 rent cap / just-cause eviction, Civ. Code §§ 1946.2 and 1947.12) once a guest stays long enough to acquire tenant status. Stays of 30 days or more are not subject to transient occupancy tax under Tulare County's TOT framework.

Annual home-share day cap: None30+ day stays: Exempt from TOT; tenant protections may apply

Permit Requirements

Few Restrictions

The City of Tulare has not adopted a stand-alone short-term rental (STR) permit ordinance. STR operators must instead obtain a general business license under Tulare Municipal Code Title 5 (Business Licenses and Regulations) and comply with Title 10 Zoning. Tulare County's draft STR ordinance, which would have applied countywide including unincorporated areas, was rejected by the Board of Supervisors 3-2 in 2024. Statewide, California SB 346 (effective Jan 1, 2026) requires platforms like Airbnb and VRBO to share host data with local governments and to collect transient occupancy tax (TOT) on the host's behalf.

STR-specific permit: None — city has not adopted a dedicated STR ordinanceRequired license: Business Tax Certificate under Tulare Municipal Code Title 5

Insurance Requirements

Few Restrictions

Tulare does not require short-term rental operators to carry a minimum liability policy. There is no STR ordinance and no insurance-floor requirement in Title 5 (Business Licenses) of the Tulare Municipal Code. By default, operators rely on platform-provided coverage (Airbnb AirCover up to $1M host liability; Vrbo Liability Insurance up to $1M) or their own homeowner/landlord policy. The Tulare County draft STR ordinance (rejected 2025) had proposed a $1,000,000 general-liability requirement, signaling the regional benchmark even though it never passed.

City insurance mandate: NoneState insurance mandate: None for STRs

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Few Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code does not impose a primary-residence requirement on short-term rental operators. Because the city has no STR-specific ordinance, non-owner-occupied (whole-home, investor-owned) STRs are not categorically banned. The rejected Tulare County draft STR ordinance would have allowed both hosted and unhosted rentals so long as the dwelling was a 'permitted dwelling' with 'habitable interior spaces' — but that countywide ordinance was voted down 3-2 in 2024 and never took effect. California has no statewide primary-residence rule for STRs.

Primary-residence rule: None in Tulare Municipal CodeWhole-home STRs: Permitted, subject to business license and zoning

Noise Rules

Some Restrictions

Tulare has no STR-specific quiet-hours rule, so the citywide noise standards under Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 6.40 apply to Airbnb/Vrbo guests just as they do to any other resident. Amplified sound at a guest property may not exceed 70 dB at the property line of any affected area between 6:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. (Tulare M.C. § 6.40.071); after 10:00 p.m. and before 6:00 a.m., lower nighttime levels apply. Hosts should write the citywide quiet-hours rule into the house manual to keep guests inside the law.

Code citation: Tulare M.C. § 6.40.071Day amplified-sound cap: 70 dB at property line, 6 a.m.–10 p.m.

Host Presence Rule

Few Restrictions

The City of Tulare does not require the host to be present during a short-term rental stay. Both hosted ('home-share') and unhosted (whole-home) rentals are allowed because there is no STR-specific ordinance in Title 5 (Business Licenses) or Title 10 (Zoning) of the Tulare Municipal Code. Tulare County's rejected 2024 draft STR ordinance would have allowed both hosted and unhosted rentals subject to occupancy caps tied to bedroom count.

Host presence required: NoHosted (home-share) rentals: Allowed under general business license

Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

Tulare imposes no STR-specific parking ratio. Off-street parking falls back to the citywide residential zoning standards in Tulare Municipal Code Title 10 (Zoning), which generally require two off-street covered spaces per single-family dwelling. Guests may park on the public street subject to Title 10 Vehicle Code provisions (72-hour limit, no parking on lawns, no blocking sidewalks/driveways) and any posted residential parking-permit restrictions. The rejected County draft STR ordinance contemplated one off-street guest space per bedroom — a useful host benchmark even though it never took effect.

STR-specific parking ratio: None (use Title 10 SFR standard)Standard SFR requirement: Typically 2 enclosed spaces per dwelling

Night Caps

Few Restrictions

Tulare imposes no annual cap on the number of nights a property may be rented short-term. Neither the Tulare Municipal Code nor any California state statute caps STR nights; the Tulare County draft ordinance that would have considered tighter limits was rejected 3-2 in February 2025. Hosts may rent year-round subject only to zoning use (Title 10), the general business license (Title 5), nuisance (§ 7.28.030), noise (Chapter 6.40), and any state TOT registration requirement once stays cross the 30-day transient threshold.

Annual night cap (city): NoneAnnual night cap (state): None

🔥 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.

Wildfire Zones

Few Restrictions

The City of Tulare sits on the San Joaquin Valley floor in a Local Responsibility Area (LRA) and is not mapped as a Moderate, High, or Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone (FHSZ) in CAL FIRE's 2025 LRA FHSZ rollout. As a result, the state Public Resources Code § 4291 100-foot defensible-space rule, Government Code § 51182 vegetation-clearance requirements, and Chapter 7A of the California Building Code (wildland-urban interface ignition-resistant construction) do not directly apply inside city limits.

FHSZ designation: None — City of Tulare not in CAL FIRE FHSZResponsibility area: Local Responsibility Area (LRA)

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 3.12 (Outdoor Burning) regulates all open burning. Open burning of yard waste, trash and construction debris is prohibited; only contained recreational fires (3-foot fire bowl, clean wood/charcoal) and approved cooking are allowed. The city is also inside the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District where SJVAPCD Rules 4103 (Open Burning) and 4901 (Wood-Burning Devices) layer additional restrictions and require Air District burn permits for any agricultural or hazard-reduction burn.

City code: TMC Ch. 3.12 — Outdoor BurningFire code: 2022 CFC §307 adopted via TMC § 3.08.010

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Ch. 3.12 (Outdoor Burning) permits residential fire pits, chimineas and outdoor fireplaces only if the fire area is 3 feet or less in diameter, fuel is clean dry wood or charcoal, and the device sits at least 10 feet from any structure or combustible material (exception for outdoor fireplaces at one- and two-family dwellings). Fires must be constantly attended by a non-impaired adult.

Code section: TMC Ch. 3.12; § 3.08.010 (adopts CFC)Max fire area: 3 ft diameter

Brush Clearance

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 3.22 (HAZARD/WEED ABATEMENT) makes it the duty of every property owner to keep parcels free of dry weeds, brush, rubbish and other fire hazards. The Tulare Fire Department's Prevention Bureau inspects city parcels annually, posts notice, and may abate at owner expense (lien) if not corrected. The city is not in a CAL FIRE Fire Hazard Severity Zone, so PRC 4291's 100-foot defensible-space rule does not directly apply, but TMC Ch. 3.22 is the local equivalent.

Code chapter: TMC Ch. 3.22 — HAZARD/WEED ABATEMENTInspection lead: Tulare Fire Prevention Bureau / Code Enforcement

Fireworks

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 3.08.080 allows the sale and discharge of California State Fire Marshal-classified 'Safe and Sane' fireworks on private property only during the Independence Day window. Permit applications for sales booths must be filed with the Fire Marshal by 5:00 p.m. May 1. All bottle rockets, sky rockets, firecrackers, M-80s and aerial fireworks remain illegal under TMC § 3.08.040 and Cal. Health & Safety Code § 12500 et seq.

Code sections: TMC § 3.08.080 (Safe and Sane); § 3.08.040 (Dangerous)State law: Cal. Health & Safety Code §§ 12500–12727

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Tulare does not maintain a stand-alone propane ordinance. By TMC § 3.08.010, the city adopts the California Fire Code (Title 24 Part 9), whose Chapter 61 (Liquefied Petroleum Gases) and NFPA 58 (LP-Gas Code) control container size, location, setbacks and permitting. Residential portable cylinders up to 5 lb may be stored indoors per CFC § 6109.4; larger tanks (any LP-gas exceeding 125 gal aggregate water capacity) require a Tulare Fire Department operational permit per CFC § 105.5.30.

Local adoption: TMC § 3.08.010 (adopts CFC + amendments)Governing code: California Fire Code Ch. 61; NFPA 58 (CA LP Gas Code)

🚗 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.

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Off-street parking and driveway standards are set in Tulare Municipal Code Title 10 Zoning. Chapter 10.192 establishes the number of required parking spaces by use, and zoning development standards govern driveway dimensions, surfacing, and location.

Parking quantity standard: Tulare Mun. Code § 10.192.040Permit authority: Community Development / Engineering (curb cut)

Abandoned Vehicles

Some Restrictions

Tulare uses Municipal Code § 9.48.160 together with California Vehicle Code §§ 22651, 22658, and 22660 to tow vehicles parked or abandoned for more than 72 hours on public streets. Inoperable vehicles on private property visible from the street are abated as a nuisance.

Street trigger: 72 consecutive hours (§ 9.48.160)Move-the-clock: At least 1/10 mile (Cal. Veh. Code § 22651(k))

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Tulare regulates on-street stopping, standing, and parking under Municipal Code Chapter 9.48 (Title 9 Traffic). The chapter governs commercial-vehicle limits, alley stops, state-highway parking, and removal of long-stay vehicles, layered on top of the California Vehicle Code.

Local chapter: Tulare Mun. Code Ch. 9.48 (Title 9 Traffic)72-hour rule: § 9.48.160 + Cal. Veh. Code § 22651(k)

Overnight Parking

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare does not have a citywide nightly parking ban, but Municipal Code § 9.48.120 bans large commercial vehicles in residential districts and § 9.48.160 enforces a 72-hour street-parking limit that is actively used against RVs and trailers parked overnight on residential streets.

RV street limit: 72 consecutive hours (§ 9.48.160)Commercial vehicles >2 tons: Banned in residential districts (§ 9.48.120)

EV Charging

Few Restrictions

California Government Code § 65850.7 (AB 1236) requires every city, including Tulare, to provide expedited, streamlined permitting for residential and commercial EV charging stations. Installations also follow the California Electrical Code and CALGreen Title 24 Part 11.

State law: Cal. Gov. Code § 65850.7 (AB 1236)New-construction EV: CALGreen § 4.106.4 (homes), § 5.106.5.3 (multifamily/non-res)

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

Tulare regulates recreational vehicle (RV), trailer, and boat parking on public streets and rights-of-way under Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 9.48 (Standing, Stopping, Parking) within Title 9 (Traffic). The general 72-hour rule under Cal. Vehicle Code § 22651(k) applies — any vehicle, RV, trailer, or boat left in the same spot on a public street for more than 72 consecutive hours may be cited and towed. Tulare's existing RV-on-residential-street restrictions were the subject of a March 21, 2023 City Council hearing in which residents asked the Council to temporarily lift them so flood-displaced family members from Porterville, Corcoran, and Springville could shelter in driveway-parked trailers; staff explained the rule was adopted because RVs and trailers in neighborhoods pose a traffic hazard. On-private-property storage (driveways, side yards, rear yards) is the typical compliant location, subject to Title 10 zoning screening rules at §§ 10.16.160 / 10.18.160 (fences and walls) for visibility from the street.

Primary code: TMC Ch. 9.48 (Standing, Stopping, Parking), Title 9 Traffic72-hour rule: Cal. Veh. Code § 22651(k) — towable after 72 hrs on public street

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 9.48.120 (Commercial vehicle parking restrictions / Large trucks — Parking in residential district) makes it unlawful to leave or park any commercial vehicle of more than two-ton capacity — including trucks, truck trailers, trailers, or tractors — whether attended or unattended, in any residential district as established under the Tulare zoning code. The rule applies on public streets and rights-of-way in any R-zone. State law (Cal. Veh. Code § 22507.5) lets the City further restrict commercial vehicles and trailers between 2:00 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. citywide once entry signs are posted, and § 22507 authorizes additional posted restrictions on any street. Commercial vehicles parked in a residential district in violation of § 9.48.120 are subject to citation and tow.

Primary code: TMC § 9.48.120 (Commercial vehicle parking restrictions)Weight threshold: More than 2-ton capacity (trucks, trailers, tractors)

🧱 Fence RegulationsFull fence regulations guide →

Planning to put up a fence? Height limits, material restrictions, and permit requirements differ by city - and sometimes by which side of the property the fence sits on.

Approved Materials

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 10.16.160 specifies that front-yard fences must have a see-through top foot (wrought iron or similar). Masonry fences over 3 feet require engineered footings and a building permit; any fence over 7 feet requires engineered post footings and a permit regardless of material.

Front-yard top foot: Must be see-through (e.g., wrought iron)Masonry permit trigger: Over 3 ft tall

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 10.16.160 caps fences at 4 feet in the required front yard (and street-side yard of corner lots) and 7 feet in side/rear yards. Walls taller than 7 feet require Planning Commission approval, typically only granted to mitigate noise impacts identified in the Tulare General Plan.

Front yard max: 4 ft (top 1 ft see-through)Side/rear max: 7 ft

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 10.16.160 sets a 5-foot minimum pool fence height; California Health & Safety Code § 115922 (Swimming Pool Safety Act) imposes the stricter standard of a 60-inch barrier plus at least two of seven approved drowning-prevention safety features for any new or remodeled residential pool or spa.

Local minimum height: 5 ft (Tulare § 10.16.160)State minimum height: 60 in (Cal. H&S Code § 115922)

Neighbor Fence Rules

Some Restrictions

Tulare does not have a city-level shared-fence ordinance — California Civil Code § 841 (the Good Neighbor Fence Act) governs. Adjoining owners are presumed to share equally in the reasonable cost of building, maintaining, or replacing a boundary fence, after 30 days' written notice.

Cost sharing rule: Equal split presumed (Civ. Code § 841)Required notice: 30 days prior, in writing

Retaining Walls

Some Restrictions

Tulare follows the California Building Code: retaining walls 4 feet or less in height (measured from the bottom of the footing to the top of the wall) are exempt from a building permit — unless they support a surcharge or impound Class I, II, or III-A liquids. Walls over 4 feet require engineered plans and a building permit.

Permit-exempt height: ≤ 4 ft (footing to top of wall)Surcharge exception: Any height — permit required

🐔 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.

Animal Hoarding

Heavy Restrictions

Animal hoarding is prosecuted under California Penal Code § 597 (animal cruelty) — neither Tulare nor California sets a specific numeric threshold. Hoarding is charged whenever overcrowding compromises animal welfare, nutrition, or veterinary care. Tulare Municipal Code § 6.12.210 (animal nuisances) provides local civil/abatement enforcement; Cal. Penal Code § 597 provides criminal sanctions (misdemeanor or felony 'wobbler').

Controlling statute: Cal. Penal Code § 597 (animal cruelty)Numeric threshold: None — based on welfare impact, not count

Wildlife Feeding

Some Restrictions

Tulare has no city-specific wildlife-feeding ordinance. State law controls: 14 CCR § 251.1 prohibits harassing wildlife (which CDFW interprets to include feeding that disrupts normal behavior), and 14 CCR § 251.3 specifically prohibits feeding big-game mammals (deer, bear, elk). Local enforcement may proceed under Tulare Municipal Code § 6.12.210 (animal nuisances) or § 7.28 (general nuisance) if feeding attracts rodents or creates a public-health problem.

Local ordinance: None city-specific; falls under § 6.12.210 nuisance + state lawState harassment rule: 14 CCR § 251.1 — feeding can constitute prohibited harassment

Chickens & Livestock

Some Restrictions

Tulare regulates animal keeping under Title 6 Chapter 6.12 (Tulare Animal Ordinance) and Title 10 zoning. Livestock at large is prohibited (§ 6.12), and animals must not become a public nuisance (§ 6.12.210). Commercial agricultural operations are exempted under Cal. Civ. Code § 3482.5 (Right to Farm) — important in dairy-heavy Tulare County.

Animal ordinance: Tulare Municipal Code Ch. 6.12Nuisance section: § 6.12.210 (2+ residents must complain, or 1 if only resident within 300 ft)

Breed Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Tulare does NOT ban or restrict any dog breed. California Food & Ag. Code § 31683 prohibits cities and counties from declaring any breed (including pit bulls) 'potentially dangerous' or 'vicious' based on breed alone — those determinations must rest on individual dog behavior under Cal. Food & Ag. Code §§ 31602–31683. The same statute does, however, permit breed-specific mandatory spay/neuter and breeding programs. Tulare Muni Code §§ 6.12.380 et seq. adopt a citywide spay/neuter framework: all dogs and cats in Tulare must be altered unless the owner obtains an 'Unaltered Animal Certification' under § 6.12.410. Licensing is conditioned on proof of spay/neuter or a valid unaltered certificate.

Breed Ban?: No — Cal. Food & Ag. Code § 31683 preempts breed-specific dangerous/vicious declarationsCitywide Spay/Neuter: Required for all dogs and cats — TMC § 6.12.380 et seq.

Beekeeping

Some Restrictions

Beekeeping in Tulare is governed primarily by Tulare County's apiary code (Chapter 5, Agriculture) administered by the Tulare County Agricultural Commissioner, plus California Food & Agricultural Code Division 13 (Bee Management). Apiaries must be registered, identified, and sited to allow pesticide-notification coordination — Tulare County is a top-50 US ag county with extensive crop spraying.

Registration: Required with Tulare County Ag Commissioner (Cal. Food & Ag Code Div. 13)Bee clearance: Required to move hives into county; contact Pesticide Division 559-713-3770

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Exotic pet ownership in Tulare is governed primarily by California Code of Regulations Title 14 § 671, which lists hundreds of 'Restricted Species' that cannot be possessed without a permit from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW). CDFW does not issue permits for private pet possession. Tulare Municipal Code § 6.12.050 incorporates the state definition by reference: an 'exotic animal' is any wild animal the California Fish and Game Commission has declared prohibited.

Controlling law: 14 CCR § 671 (CA Restricted Species list)Local definition: Tulare Mun. Code § 6.12.050 — adopts state Fish & Game definition

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 6.12.310 prohibits any dog from straying off the owner's property unless restrained by a leash or lead not exceeding eight feet. Off-leash dogs are 'at large' and subject to impoundment. Narrow exceptions cover peace-officer/SAR dogs, sanctioned obedience or competition events, livestock-herding dogs working ranch operations (a Central Valley ag-area carve-out), hunters' dogs while hunting, and dogs inside a designated leash-free park or enclosure. The 8-foot cap matches the typical California standard and is shorter than retractable leashes set beyond 8 feet, which technically violate the code.

Code Citation: Tulare Muni Code § 6.12.310 — Dogs at largeMax Leash Length: 8 feet

🌿 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.

Artificial Turf

Few Restrictions

Tulare permits artificial turf in residential yards. There is no Tulare Municipal Code prohibition on synthetic grass, and California Civil Code § 4735 (as amended by AB 349, 2015) voids HOA rules that prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting artificial turf or synthetic surfaces that resemble grass. Installation must still comply with TMC Ch. 10.196 landscape standards and TMC § 7.28 nuisance rules.

Local rule: No city prohibition — artificial turf allowedHOA preemption: Cal. Civ. Code § 4735(a)(3) (AB 349, 2015)

Water Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 7.32 imposes mandatory year-round outdoor watering restrictions tied to a stage-based conservation framework. Odd-numbered addresses water Tuesday and Saturday; even-numbered addresses water Wednesday and Sunday. Irrigation between 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. is always prohibited (§ 7.32.050). Tulare sits in the Kaweah Subbasin, designated critical-overdraft under SGMA, making compliance unusually aggressive.

Citation: TMC §§ 7.32.050, 7.32.060Odd addresses: Tuesday, Saturday

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 7.28.030 declares overgrown weeds, dry grasses, and unmaintained lawns a public nuisance. Code Enforcement administratively cites properties with tall weeds or problem vegetation in front or rear yards; Tulare County's Hazard Abatement Program (operative county-wide) uses a 3-inch maintenance benchmark.

Citation: TMC § 7.28.030 (Declaration of nuisance)County trigger: 3 inches (Tulare County Hazard Abatement)

Tree Trimming

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 8.32 governs street trees and city-maintained landscaping. § 8.32.060 (Street tree and plant maintenance) authorizes the Director of Public Works to require property owners to prune or remove privately planted material interfering with street tree health. § 8.52.020 requires a permit to remove or destroy a heritage tree on private or public property within the city.

Street tree rules: TMC § 8.32.060Heritage tree permit: TMC § 8.52.020

Weed Ordinances

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare treats weeds as a fire hazard and public nuisance under TMC § 7.28.030. The city issues abatement notices through Code Enforcement; unaddressed parcels are abated by city contractors with costs liened. Tulare County's parallel Hazard Abatement Program under County Code Part 4 Ch. 11 governs unincorporated parcels and uses a 3-inch weed-height trigger before each fire season.

City code: TMC § 7.28.030County code: Tulare County Code § 4-11

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Tulare has no local prohibition on residential rainwater harvesting. California broadly authorizes capture under the Rainwater Capture Act of 2012 (Water Code §§ 10573–10574); barrels and cisterns up to 5,000 gallons that capture rainwater from rooftops are exempt from State Water Board permitting. Graywater systems are governed by California Plumbing Code (Title 24 Part 5) Chapter 16A, with no-permit Tier 1 clothes-washer-to-landscape systems allowed.

State authority: Water Code §§ 10573–10574 (Rainwater Capture Act)Local restriction: None — rainwater harvesting permitted

Native Plants

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 10.196 (Landscaping) implements California's Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance (MWELO, 23 CCR § 490 et seq.) for new and substantially renovated landscapes. Residential projects ≥ 500 sq ft of new landscape area and non-residential ≥ 500 sq ft must submit a Landscape Documentation Package with a Water Efficient Landscape Worksheet showing the Estimated Total Water Use does not exceed the Maximum Applied Water Allowance. Native and low-water plants are strongly favored.

City citation: TMC Chapter 10.196State framework: MWELO — 23 CCR §§ 490–495

💼 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

Tulare cannot prohibit cottage food operations in residential dwellings. California's Homemade Food Act (AB 1616, codified at Cal. Health & Safety Code § 113758) requires every city and county to treat cottage food operations as a permitted residential use. Tulare residents can produce non-potentially hazardous foods at home for sale within state-set sales caps after registering or being permitted by the Tulare County environmental health department.

Statute: Cal. Health & Safety Code § 113758 (AB 1616)Class A sales cap: $75,000 gross annual

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Home occupations in Tulare must stay invisible from the street. Under Chapter 10.124 standards and the residential-character requirement, on-premise advertising signs identifying a home-based business are not permitted on dwellings or yards in R-A, R-1, R-2 or R-3 zones. The only outward indicator allowed is the address numbers required by the Tulare Building/Fire code.

Permitted on-site advertising sign: None — home occupations must not change residential characterCode basis: Tulare Code Ch. 10.124 (Home Occupation Permits)

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Tulare's home occupation rules (Municipal Code Ch. 10.124) require the business to stay clearly incidental to residential use. That means employees on-site are limited to the residents of the home, customer and client visits to the dwelling must be minimal, and the business cannot generate traffic or parking demand greater than what is normal for a residence in the neighborhood.

Non-resident employees: Not allowed — operator must be a resident of the homeCustomer visits: Limited; cannot exceed normal residential traffic

Zoning Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Tulare allows home-based businesses in residential zones (R-A, R-1, R-2, R-3) only after the City Planning Department issues a Home Occupation Permit under Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 10.124. A separate Business Tax Certificate (business license) is also required under Title 5 of the Municipal Code before any trade, profession, or occupation may be conducted within city limits.

Governing chapter: Tulare Code Chapter 10.124 (Home Occupation Permits)Permitted in R-A zone: Yes, subject to Ch. 10.124 (Code § 10.28.020)

Home Daycare

Few Restrictions

Tulare cannot prohibit, zone out, or impose a business license fee on a small or large family daycare home. Under Cal. Health & Safety Code §§ 1597.45 and 1597.455 (as amended by SB 234, 2019), family daycare homes are a residential use by right in every Tulare residential zone. Operators are licensed by the California Department of Social Services, not by the City of Tulare.

Statutes: Cal. HSC §§ 1596.70 et seq.; 1597.30 et seq.; 1597.45 (preemption); 1597.455 (no license fee)Small family daycare: Up to 8 children, including operator's own under 10

🏊 Swimming Pools & SpasFull swimming pools & spas guide →

Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.

Hot Tub Rules

Some Restrictions

Hot tubs and spas in Tulare are 'swimming pools' under Cal. Health & Safety Code § 115921 and normally require the same 60-inch enclosure as a pool. BUT Cal. HSC § 115925 exempts 'hot tubs or spas with locking safety covers that comply with the ASTM International F1346 standard' from the Swimming Pool Safety Act's fencing/alarm requirements. A building permit is still required for electrical and structural work.

Spa = pool: Yes, if water >18 in (HSC § 115921)Cover exemption: ASTM F1346 locking cover (HSC § 115925)

Above-Ground Pools

Some Restrictions

Above-ground pools holding water more than 18 inches deep are 'swimming pools' under Cal. Health & Safety Code § 115921 and must be enclosed per Tulare Code §§ 10.16.160 / 10.18.160. A narrow exemption applies under the California Residential Code: prefabricated above-ground pools serving a Group R-3 home, holding under 5,000 gallons AND less than 24 inches deep, do not require a building permit (but zoning setbacks still apply).

Threshold for 'pool': >18 inches of water (HSC § 115921)Permit exemption: Prefab, <5,000 gal, <24 in deep, R-3 home

Safety Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare follows the California Swimming Pool Safety Act. New construction or remodels at single-family homes must install at least TWO of seven approved drowning-prevention features under Cal. Health & Safety Code § 115922, plus anti-entrapment suction outlets under § 115928. Drowning is the leading cause of unintentional death for California children ages 1–4.

Features required: At least 2 of 7 (HSC § 115922)Anti-entrapment: ANSI/APSP-16 grates required (HSC § 115928)

Pool Permits

Some Restrictions

Building permits required for in-ground and most above-ground pools and spas through the Tulare Community Development Department. Construction must comply with the California Building Code (Title 24) and the Swimming Pool Safety Act (Cal. Health & Safety Code § 115920 et seq.). No pool may be filled with water until the enclosing fence is inspected and approved per Tulare Code §§ 10.16.160 / 10.18.160.

Permit issuer: Tulare Community Development — Building DivisionState authority: Cal. Health & Safety Code § 115920 et seq.

Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare Code §§ 10.16.160 / 10.18.160 require every swimming pool to be entirely enclosed by structures, fences, or walls complying with the California Swimming Pool Safety Act. Pool fences must be at least 5 feet tall (state law requires 60 inches) with no openings larger than 4 inches, and gates must self-close and self-latch.

Minimum fence height: 60 inches (5 feet)Max opening size: 4 inches (no 4" sphere can pass)

🏗️ Accessory StructuresFull accessory structures guide →

Thinking about an ADU, shed, or garage conversion? Local rules on accessory structures have changed rapidly in recent years, especially in California.

ADU Rules

Few Restrictions

Tulare allows one accessory dwelling unit (ADU) per single-family parcel in R-1, R-M, and R-H zones under TMC § 10.60.030, plus one junior ADU under § 10.60.040. The city mirrors state law: minimum 4 ft side/rear setbacks, no local development standard (lot coverage, FAR, open space, minimum lot size) may block an ADU up to 800 sq ft. Detached ADUs may be up to 16 ft tall; attached ADUs may match the primary dwelling height up to 25 ft. Conversions of existing space are exempt from setback rules under Gov. Code § 65852.2.

Code section: TMC § 10.60.030 (ADUs) and § 10.60.040 (JADUs)Allowed zones: R-1, R-M, R-H (single-family + multi-family residential)

ADU Owner Occupancy

Few Restrictions

Tulare cannot require owner-occupancy for an ADU permitted between January 1, 2020 and January 1, 2025 — TMC § 10.60.030 states 'Owner occupancy shall not be required, and no land use agreement requiring owner occupancy shall be recorded or enforced on properties containing accessory dwelling units.' This mirrors Cal. Gov. Code § 65852.2(a)(7). Junior ADUs (JADUs) under TMC § 10.60.040 do require owner-occupancy of either the primary dwelling or the JADU per Gov. Code § 65852.22(a)(2).

Standard ADU: No owner-occupancy required (TMC § 10.60.030)Effective dates: Permits Jan 1, 2020 – present (AB 881, AB 976)

Tiny Homes

Some Restrictions

Tulare does not have a tiny-home-specific ordinance. Tiny homes on foundations are regulated under Appendix AQ of the 2022 California Residential Code (CRC), Title 24 Part 2.5 — which defines a tiny house as a dwelling 400 sq ft or less excluding lofts. Such a unit can be permitted only as an ADU under Gov. Code § 65852.2 (subject to local ministerial review) or as a primary dwelling meeting full CRC requirements. Movable/wheeled tiny homes (THOWs) are treated as recreational vehicles under Health & Safety Code § 18010 and may not be used as permanent dwellings outside a permitted RV park.

State standard: 2022 CRC Appendix AQ (Tiny Houses)Max tiny-house size: 400 sq ft excluding lofts

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Carports in Tulare are regulated under TMC § 10.32.060 (Development Standards) and Chapter 10.204 (Accessory Structures). Single-family dwellings must have a minimum of two covered parking spaces, each at least 9 ft wide and 20 ft deep — a carport satisfies this 'covered' requirement. Carports must be set back at least 10 ft from any dwelling on the lot. Where a carport opens onto a public street, a 20-ft driveway apron is required between the structure and the street. All parking surfaces (including the carport pad and driveway) must be asphalt concrete, chip seal, or comparable all-weather surfacing.

Minimum parking space: 9 ft wide x 20 ft deep, coveredCarport-to-dwelling distance: 10 ft minimum (TMC § 10.32.060)

ADU Permits

Few Restrictions

ADU applications in Tulare are reviewed ministerially (no public hearing, no discretionary review) per Cal. Gov. Code § 65852.2(b), with a 60-day approval clock. Apply through the Community Development Department (Planning Division) plus a building permit through TMC Title 15 (California Building Code, 2022 edition). Standards in TMC § 10.60.030 cover setbacks, size, and number of units; the building permit covers structural, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical code compliance.

Review type: Ministerial — no hearing, no discretion (Gov. Code § 65852.2(b))Approval deadline: 60 days from complete application

Garage Conversions

Few Restrictions

Converting an existing garage to an Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) in Tulare is governed primarily by California Government Code § 65852.2, which preempts most restrictive local rules. The city must ministerially approve a garage-conversion ADU on any lot with an existing or proposed single-family dwelling. The local agency cannot require replacement of off-street parking spaces lost to the conversion, and existing structures converted to ADUs are exempt from local setback requirements. Tulare Municipal Code Ch. 10.204 (Accessory Structures) implements these state mandates locally.

Governing statute: Cal. Gov. Code § 65852.2 (ADU law)Approval type: Ministerial — 60-day deadline

ADU Rental Restrictions

Some Restrictions

California law (Gov. Code § 65852.2(a)(6)) prohibits renting an ADU for less than 31 days, effectively banning short-term/vacation rentals (Airbnb, VRBO) of any ADU permitted after January 1, 2020. Tulare's TMC § 10.60.030 incorporates this limitation by reference to state law. Long-term rentals (31 days or longer) are permitted and the ADU cannot be sold separately from the primary dwelling (with limited SB 9 / qualified nonprofit exceptions).

Minimum rental term: 31 days (Gov. Code § 65852.2(a)(6))Short-term rentals: Prohibited statewide for permitted ADUs

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Per Cal. Gov. Code § 65852.2(f)(3), Tulare cannot charge impact fees on any ADU under 750 sq ft. For ADUs 750 sq ft and larger, impact fees must be 'proportional in size' to the primary dwelling — typically computed as ADU sq ft divided by primary dwelling sq ft, then multiplied by the standard SFR impact fee. Standard building permit, plan check, school facility fees, and utility connection fees still apply.

ADUs under 750 sq ft: Zero impact fees (Gov. Code § 65852.2(f)(3))ADUs 750+ sq ft: Proportional to primary dwelling sq ft

Shed Rules

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 10.204 (Accessory Structures) governs sheds. One-story detached tool/storage sheds, playhouses and similar structures with a floor area not greater than 120 square feet are exempt from building permits, though zoning rules still apply. Residential accessory structures may be located within 3 feet of the rear property line and within 10 feet of any street-side yard property line; front setbacks must match the underlying zoning district. The minimum distance between any structure used for human habitation and a detached shed, garage, or carport is 10 feet (TMC § 10.32.060).

Permit-exempt size: 120 sq ft or less (one-story detached tool/storage shed)Rear setback: 3 ft minimum (TMC § 10.204.040)

🌍 Environmental RulesFull environmental rules guide →

Flood Zones

Some Restrictions

Tulare participates in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). Tulare Municipal Code § 10.48.060 (Provisions for Flood Hazard Reduction) imposes construction standards on properties in Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs) shown on the current FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs). Most of the city is mapped Zone X (low/moderate risk), but pockets along drainage swales and near the historical lakebed carry AE/A designations.

Local code: Tulare Mun. Code § 10.48.060 (Provisions for Flood Hazard Reduction)NFIP participation: Yes — City and County participate

Coastal Development

Few Restrictions

Tulare has no local coastal development ordinance because the city is located in the inland Central Valley, more than 150 miles from the Pacific Ocean, and is entirely outside the statutory California Coastal Zone defined by Pub. Resources Code § 30103. The California Coastal Act and California Coastal Commission permitting jurisdiction do not apply to any property in Tulare.

Coastal zone status: Outside California Coastal Zone (Pub. Res. Code § 30103)Distance from Pacific: ~150 miles inland (Central Valley)

Grading & Drainage

Some Restrictions

Grading in Tulare is governed by California Building Code Appendix J, adopted citywide through Title 15 building regulations, plus stormwater conveyance/quality requirements under Chapter 7.64. Grading permits are issued through the Building Department; drainage must not obstruct natural watercourses or discharge concentrated flows onto adjacent property without an approved drainage facility.

Grading code: Cal. Building Code Appendix J (adopted via Title 15)Permit threshold: Typically >50 cubic yards cut/fill (CBC § J103)

Erosion Control

Some Restrictions

Tulare regulates construction-site erosion through two overlapping frameworks: (1) Municipal Code § 7.64.150 BMP requirements for any activity that may discharge pollutants (including sediment) to the storm drain, and (2) California Building Code Appendix J (Grading), adopted by reference in Title 15, which sets cut/fill, setback, and erosion-control standards for grading permits.

Local code: Tulare Mun. Code § 7.64.150 (BMPs for pollutant reduction)Grading standard: Cal. Building Code Appendix J (Title 24 Part 2)

Stormwater Management

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 7.64 (Surface Water Management), specifically § 7.64.150 (Reduction of Pollutants in Surface Water), prohibits illicit discharges to the City's storm drain system and requires Best Management Practices (BMPs) for any activity that may release pollutants. The City is a regulated small MS4 under the State Water Board's Phase II General Permit (Order 2013-0001-DWQ), implementing the federal Clean Water Act NPDES program.

Code section: Tulare Mun. Code § 7.64.150 (Reduction of Pollutants in Surface Water)Chapter: Ch. 7.64 Surface Water Management

🪧 Sign RegulationsFull sign regulations guide →

Garage Sale Signs

Some Restrictions

Tulare regulates yard and garage sales themselves under Municipal Code § 6.12.300, and the Finance Department at City Hall (411 E. Kern Ave.) issues yard sale applications. Sale signs are treated as temporary signs under Chapter 10.188; they cannot be posted on utility poles, traffic signs, or in the public right-of-way, and must be removed when the sale ends.

Yard sale code: Tulare Municipal Code § 6.12.300 (Swap meets and yard sales)Application: Yard Sale Application — Finance Department, 411 E. Kern Ave.

Political Signs

Few Restrictions

Tulare's old political-sign rule at Municipal Code § 10.188.050(J) imposed time limits the City stopped enforcing after Reed v. Town of Gilbert (2015), and staff began rewriting Chapter 10.188 to be content-neutral. In practice political signs on private residential property are treated like other temporary signs, and on highway frontage Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 5405.3 controls.

Code chapter: Tulare Municipal Code Ch. 10.188 (Signs); § 10.188.050(J) unenforcedState highway rule: Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 5405.3 — 90 days before / 10 days after election, ≤ 32 sq ft

Holiday Displays

Few Restrictions

Tulare's Municipal Code does not single out residential holiday lights or seasonal displays for regulation. They fall under the general temporary-sign / miscellaneous-sign provisions of Chapter 10.188 and the public-nuisance rules at § 7.28.030, plus the noise standards in Ch. 6.40 if amplified music is used.

Operative chapters: Ch. 10.188 Signs; § 7.28.030 Nuisance; Ch. 6.40 NoiseTime limits: No holiday-specific deadlines in Tulare Municipal Code

🗑️ Trash & RecyclingFull trash & recycling guide →

Yard Waste Collection

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare's green organics cart is mandatory and now takes BOTH yard trimmings and food waste together under SB 1383 (TMC Ch. 7.17). Grass, leaves, plant debris, and untreated wood go in the green cart — but branches over 4 inches in diameter or 4 feet in length are NOT allowed.

Cart: GREEN organics cart — weekly service (mandatory)Accepted: Food waste, food-soiled paper, grass, leaves, plant debris, untreated/unpainted wood

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

Tulare residents can request bulky-item pickup of furniture, mattresses, appliances, e-waste, and tires through the City's Solid Waste Division at (559) 684-4325. Hazardous waste, hot water heaters with chemicals, paint, and similar items are not accepted curbside and must go to Tulare County Solid Waste facilities.

How to request: Call City Solid Waste at (559) 684-4325 to scheduleAccepted bulky: Appliances, mattresses, couches, e-waste, tires, area rugs, bagged trash

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 7.16.030 makes garbage, recycling, organics, and street-sweeping service compulsory for every dwelling, apartment, and place of business. Service is provided through the City's Department of Public Utilities — you cannot opt out, self-haul as your primary disposal method, or refuse to pay.

Authority: Tulare Municipal Code § 7.16.030 (compulsory service); § 7.16.150 (fees)Cart system: Three carts: black (trash), blue (recycling), green (organics) — weekly service

Bin Placement Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code § 7.16.080 requires garbage, recycling, and organics carts to be placed at the curb or gutter by 6:00 a.m. on the day of collection and removed the same day. Carts cannot be left in alleyways for service, and § 7.28.030 prohibits storing carts in front yards when not set out for collection.

Set-out deadline: By 6:00 a.m. on collection day (TMC § 7.16.080)Removal deadline: Same day as collection — empty carts must be off the curb/gutter (TMC § 7.16.080)

Recycling Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 7.17 implements California's SB 1383 mandate. Every single-family home, multifamily building, and business in Tulare must subscribe to recycling AND organics collection and source-separate organics, recyclables, and landfill trash. As of 1/1/2022 it is illegal statewide to put organics or recyclables in the trash cart.

Authority: TMC Chapter 7.17 (Mandatory Recycling and Organic Waste Disposal Reduction)State law: SB 1383 — Cal. Pub. Res. Code § 42652 et seq.; AB 341; AB 1826

Illegal Dumping

Heavy Restrictions

Dumping waste on public or private property anywhere in Tulare is prosecuted under Cal. Penal Code § 374.3, with mandatory fines starting at $250 and reaching $10,000 for commercial-quantity dumping. The City layers TMC § 7.28.030 nuisance abatement on top, allowing the City to remove the waste and charge it back to the property.

Primary statute: Cal. Penal Code § 374.3 (illegal dumping)Standard fine: $250–$1,000 first conviction; $500–$1,500 second; $750–$3,000 third+

🚁 Drone RulesFull drone rules guide →

Commercial Drones

Some Restrictions

Tulare imposes no city-issued commercial UAS permit. Commercial drone operations (real estate photography, agricultural surveying, infrastructure inspection, weddings, etc.) require a Remote Pilot Certificate under 14 CFR Part 107, drone registration via FAA DroneZone, and compliance with operating limits (400 ft AGL, daylight or twilight with anti-collision lighting, visual line of sight, max 100 mph). Commercial pilots needing to fly over people, at night, or beyond visual line of sight must obtain a Part 107 waiver. Operations in Tulare County agricultural areas may also need to coordinate with crop-duster operations and the FAA Class G airspace surrounding Mefford Field.

Federal authority: 14 CFR Part 107Remote Pilot Cert.: Required for all commercial ops

Recreational Drones

Few Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code contains no dedicated chapter regulating recreational unmanned aircraft systems (drones / UAS). Operations are governed primarily by federal rules: FAA 14 CFR Part 107 (commercial) and 49 U.S.C. 44809 (Exception for Limited Recreational Operations), which requires TRUST certificate completion, registration of drones >0.55 lb, line-of-sight flight, max 400 ft AGL outside controlled airspace, no flight over people/moving vehicles without waiver, and yielding to manned aircraft. California is a NON-preemption state, so a city could regulate take-off/landing on city property, but Tulare has not done so by ordinance. California Civil Code 1708.8 (anti-paparazzi) creates civil liability for using a drone to capture images of private activity over another person's land.

Local drone ordinance: None in Tulare M.C.Federal authority: FAA 14 CFR Part 107 + 49 U.S.C. 44809

Park Drone Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Chapter 8.36 (City Park and Trail Ordinance) governs conduct in city parks but does NOT contain an express prohibition on operating, launching, or landing drones. Park Services / Parks & Recreation can impose reasonable conditions on activities that disturb other park users or damage facilities, and Tulare M.C. § 7.28.030 (nuisance) can be invoked for drone use that creates a disturbance. Federal law (FAA) controls the airspace itself, so the city cannot regulate flight altitude or routes — only take-off and landing on city-owned property and ground-conduct in parks. California state parks and California Department of Fish & Wildlife lands have separate posted orders that may prohibit UAS.

Park ordinance: Tulare M.C. Chapter 8.36 (City Park and Trail)Express drone ban: Not in Chapter 8.36

🌳 Tree ProtectionFull tree protection guide →

Tree Removal Permits

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Ch 8.52 (Preservation of Heritage Trees) makes it unlawful to destroy or remove any heritage tree on public OR private property within city limits without a permit. Parkway/street trees in the public right-of-way are separately governed by Ch 8.32 and also require a permit before removal. Permits are issued by the Parks and Recreation Department at 830 S. Blackstone St.

Code citations: Tulare Municipal Code §§ 8.52.020, 8.52.030; Ch 8.32 (Street Trees)Permitting agency: City of Tulare Parks and Recreation Department, 830 S. Blackstone St.

Protected Tree Species

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare protects 'heritage trees' citywide under Municipal Code Ch 8.52, with Valley Oak (Quercus lobata) explicitly identified by the Parks Department as the marquee protected species — Tulare County itself was founded in 1852 at the historic 'Charter Oak.' State law adds background protection for native oak woodlands under the California Oak Woodlands Conservation Act (Cal. Pub. Resources Code §§ 21083.4, 21080.5) and CEQA review for oak removal in some contexts.

Primary local protection: Tulare Municipal Code Ch 8.52 (Preservation of Heritage Trees)Featured species: Valley Oak (Quercus lobata) — referenced in Parks Department heritage tree forms

Tree Replacement Requirements

Some Restrictions

Tulare's Street Tree Ordinance (Ch 8.32) allows the City to require replacement of any parkway tree that is removed, using a species from the approved City Street Tree Master Plan, planted from a 15-gallon container and spaced per City standards (generally ~35 feet on center). New residential construction must plant street trees per § 8.32.170. The Landscaping chapter (Ch 10.196) also imposes tree-installation standards on new commercial and multifamily projects.

Replacement stock size: Minimum 15-gallon container per § 8.32.170Spacing: Generally 35 feet on center, case-by-case (§ 8.32.170)

Parkway Planting

Some Restrictions

Tulare Municipal Code Ch 8.32 governs street trees in the parkway strip (between sidewalk and curb). Property owners are responsible for maintaining adjacent parkway trees, and ALL damage caused by a parkway tree (to the owner's property, sewer laterals, or water service lines) is the property owner's responsibility. New plantings must come from the City Street Tree Master Plan species list, be installed from 15-gallon containers, staked to city standards, and spaced generally 35 feet apart. Permits are required to plant, prune (beyond ISA standards), or remove parkway trees.

Maintenance responsibility: Abutting property owner (Tulare Code § 8.32.060)Damage liability: Property owner responsible for ALL damage caused by parkway tree to property, sewer laterals, water lines

Heritage & Protected Trees

Heavy Restrictions

Tulare maintains a dedicated Heritage Tree Preservation Ordinance (Ch 8.52) that protects designated trees — most notably Valley Oaks (Quercus lobata) — on both public and private property citywide. Property owners must preserve and maintain heritage trees, use ISA pruning standards, and obtain a permit before any removal or destruction. Building permits adjacent to heritage trees trigger additional protection requirements.

Primary citation: Tulare Municipal Code Ch 8.52 (§§ 8.52.020, 8.52.070, 8.52.100, 8.52.110)Featured protected species: Valley Oak (Quercus lobata)

Overall: What to Expect in Tulare

Tulare has 94 ordinances on file across 15 categories. Of these, 25 are rated permissive, 50 moderate, and 19 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Tulare 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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