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Moving to Tustin, 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 Tustin across 18 categories and 100 specific rules we track.

14 Permissive65 Moderate21 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 Tustin sets numeric noise limits in Chapter 6 (Noise Control) of the Tustin City Code. In residential zones (Noise Zone 1) the exterior limit drops from 55 dB(A) during the day (7 a.m.-10 p.m.) to 50 dB(A) at night (10 p.m.-7 a.m.). Exceeding it by escalating amounts is a misdemeanor public nuisance.

Residential day limit: 55 dB(A), 7 a.m.-10 p.m. (Sec. 4614)Residential night limit: 50 dB(A), 10 p.m.-7 a.m. (Sec. 4614)

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Tustin City Code Section 4616(2) prohibits construction, demolition, alteration, repair, excavation, grading and paving between 6 p.m. and 7 a.m. Monday-Friday, between 5 p.m. and 9 a.m. on Saturdays, and during all hours on Sundays and city-observed federal holidays. The Building Official or Public Works Director may grant a written temporary exception for urgent necessity.

Weekday hours allowed: 7 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon-Fri (Sec. 4616(2))Saturday hours allowed: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. (Sec. 4616(2))

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Tustin formally adopted Orange County's Barking Dog Ordinance by reference into the Tustin City Code (Animals chapter), so OC Animal Care enforces it inside the city. A dog is a barking-dog nuisance with 30+ minutes of incessant barking, or 60+ minutes of accumulated intermittent barking, in a 24-hour period. Civil fines escalate with repeat citations.

Incessant barking: 30+ min in 24 hoursIntermittent barking: 60+ min accumulated in 24 hours

Outdoor Music

Some Restrictions

Outdoor music in Tustin is held to the Section 4614 exterior limits reduced 5 dB(A) because it is music. Permitted outdoor gatherings, public dances, shows and entertainment events run under a city permit (Tustin City Code Art. 3, Ch. 2) are exempt from the decibel standards under Section 4617(b). Other venues are bound by their zone's limits.

Standard: Sec. 4614 limits minus 5 dB(A) for musicPermitted events: Exempt with city permit (Sec. 4617(b))

Leaf Blower Rules

Some Restrictions

Tustin City Code Section 4616(4) restricts 'property maintenance equipment' (mechanical/leaf blowers, lawn vacuums, parking-lot sweepers). In residential zones such equipment may run only 7 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Friday and 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, and is banned Sundays and city-observed federal holidays. Commercial/industrial zones allow 7 a.m.-10 p.m. weekdays and 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Saturday.

Residential hours: 7 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon-Fri; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. SatCommercial/industrial hours: 7 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon-Fri; 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat

Industrial Noise

Some Restrictions

Industrial property in Tustin (Noise Zone 3) is capped at 70 dB(A) at any time under Section 4614, but fixed noise sources such as compressors, fans, generators and HVAC must still not push a quieter neighboring zone over its own limit. Tustin Legacy mixes uses, so a Zone 5 mixed-use ceiling of 60 dB(A) may apply at sensitive boundaries.

Industrial (Zone 3): 70 dB(A) any time (Sec. 4614)Receiving-property rule: Must meet neighbor's zone limit

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Amplified sound in Tustin is governed by the city's Chapter 6 decibel limits, which are reduced 5 dB(A) when the noise is music or speech. Section 4616(1) separately bans radios, instruments, phonographs, loudspeakers and sound amplifiers used to cast sound onto public streets for commercial advertising above the Section 4614/4615 limits.

Standard: Sec. 4614/4615 limits minus 5 dB(A) for musicResidential night ceiling (music): 45 dB(A)

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Aircraft-in-flight noise is federally preempted: the FAA and pilot-in-command have sole jurisdiction over flight paths, so Tustin cannot regulate overflights. Section 4617(j) of the Tustin City Code exempts activity preempted by state or federal law. Former MCAS Tustin closed in 1999; nearby John Wayne Airport has an 11 p.m.-7 a.m. jet curfew set by the County.

Jurisdiction: FAA / pilot-in-command (federal)City code: Preempted activity exempt (Sec. 4617(j))

Vehicle Noise

Some Restrictions

Tustin's noise chapter does not set vehicle-specific decibel limits; loud exhaust and muffler enforcement on public roads is controlled by the California Vehicle Code (Secs. 27150-27151), which preempts local muffler rules. Stationary or property-based vehicle noise (idling, repairs) still falls under Tustin City Code Section 4614's zone limits.

On-road exhaust: California Vehicle Code 27150/27151 (state, preempts local)Passenger-car limit: 95 dB(A) SAE test (CVC 27151)

Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

Tustin City Code Section 4614 sets exterior dB(A) limits by noise zone: residential 55 day / 50 night, commercial 60 any time, industrial 70 any time, special uses (schools/hospitals/churches) 55, and mixed-use 60. Section 4615 adds interior limits of 55 day / 45 night. Music, speech, impact and simple-tone noise cut every limit by 5 dB(A).

Residential (Zone 1): 55 dB(A) day / 50 dB(A) nightCommercial (Zone 2): 60 dB(A) any time

🏠 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

There is no short-term rental registry in Tustin because STRs are banned. The only registration in this space is the Transient Occupancy Tax registration required of lawful hotel and motel operators, not of vacation-rental hosts. No host can register a residential STR with the City.

STR host registry: None — STRs prohibitedOnly lodging registration: TOT registration for hotels/motels (Finance Dept.)

Permit Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

The City of Tustin does not issue short-term rental permits. STRs are prohibited citywide: any residential rental of fewer than 30 days is classified as a hotel or motel use, which is not allowed in residential districts. There is no application, license, or approval pathway for a legal STR.

STR permit available: No — Tustin issues noneSTR status: Prohibited citywide

Taxes & Fees

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin charges a 13% Transient Occupancy Tax on hotel and motel stays of 30 consecutive days or less. Because short-term rentals are prohibited, there is no separate STR fee schedule; the 13% TOT applies to lawful hotels and motels, not to banned residential vacation rentals.

TOT rate: 13% of rent (per City Finance Dept.)Applies to: Hotel/motel stays of 30 consecutive days or less

Host Presence Rule

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin has no host-presence rule because it allows no short-term rentals — hosted or unhosted. There is no 'host must be on-site' condition and no unhosted-night allowance, since the City prohibits all sub-30-day residential rentals regardless of whether the owner is present.

Host-presence requirement: None — no hosted STR allowedUnhosted-night cap: Not applicable (no STR permitted)

Occupancy Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin sets no short-term rental occupancy limits because STRs are banned. There is no per-guest cap or guests-per-bedroom rule for vacation rentals. The only lawful residential occupancy rules are the general housing and building code standards that apply to all dwellings, plus the 30-day minimum rental term.

STR guest cap: None — STRs prohibitedGuests-per-bedroom rule: Not applicable (no legal STR)

Night Caps

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin has no annual night cap for short-term rentals because STRs are prohibited entirely. There is no allowed number of rental nights per year. The effective limit is zero sub-30-day nights; the minimum lawful residential rental term is 30 calendar days.

Annual night cap: None — all STR nights prohibitedPermitted STR nights/year: 0 (sub-30-day rentals banned)

Parking Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin has no short-term rental parking requirement because STRs are prohibited. There is no on-site guest-parking mandate for vacation rentals. The City's general residential parking and zoning standards apply to all homes, and the only lawful residential rental term is 30 days or more.

STR parking mandate: None — STRs prohibitedOn-site guest parking rule: Not applicable (no legal STR)

Noise Rules

Heavy Restrictions

There are no short-term rental noise standards in Tustin because STRs are banned. Guests and residents alike are subject to the City's general noise ordinance. There is no STR-specific quiet-hours condition, good-neighbor policy mandate, or noise-monitoring requirement for vacation rentals.

STR-specific noise rule: None — STRs prohibitedApplicable noise law: Tustin City Code general noise provisions (Art. 6, Public Welfare)

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin has no primary-residence STR rule because all short-term rentals are prohibited — for primary homes, second homes, and investment properties alike. There is no carve-out allowing owner-occupants to host. The ban applies regardless of whether the owner lives in the dwelling.

Primary-residence-only rule: None — all STRs bannedOwner-occupied home-share: Still prohibited if under 30 days

Insurance Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin imposes no short-term rental insurance requirement because STRs are prohibited and there is no permit to attach insurance conditions to. There is no liability-coverage minimum or proof-of-insurance mandate for vacation rentals, since no lawful STR exists in the City.

STR insurance mandate: None — STRs prohibitedLiability-coverage minimum: Not set (no STR permit)

🔥 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.

Brush Clearance

Some Restrictions

Brush clearance and weed abatement in Tustin are administered through the Orange County Fire Authority (OCFA) under the California Fire Code. OCFA's standard is roughly 100 feet of defensible space around structures. Most of flat, urban Tustin has little wildland fuel, but foothill and eastern edge properties near fire hazard zones must maintain defensible space.

Enforcing agency: Orange County Fire Authority (OCFA)Defensible space: ~100 ft, 360° around structures (OCFA)

Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

All fireworks are illegal in the City of Tustin, including state-classified "Safe and Sane" fireworks. There is no legal window to buy or discharge fireworks anywhere in the city. The City of Tustin offers a public Fourth of July fireworks display as a legal alternative.

All fireworks: Illegal, including Safe and SanePenalty range: Infraction to felony, per firework type

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Tustin has no city-specific fire pit ordinance; backyard fire pits and portable outdoor fireplaces are governed by the California Fire Code as adopted and enforced by the Orange County Fire Authority (OCFA). Keep fires a safe distance from structures, attended at all times, and have extinguishing equipment ready.

City ordinance: None specific; OCFA enforces CA Fire CodeRecreational fire: Min. 25 ft from structures (CFC 307.4.2)

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Open burning of yard waste, leaves, brush, and trash is effectively prohibited in Tustin. South Coast AQMD Rule 444 regulates open burning across Orange County, and routine residential trash/yard-waste burning is not allowed. Recreational and cooking fires are treated separately and are exempt from the open-burn rule.

Trash/yard-waste burning: Not allowed (no routine residential burn)Governing rule: South Coast AQMD Rule 444

Backyard Fires

Some Restrictions

Recreational backyard fires (fire pits, chimineas) are allowed in Tustin under the California Fire Code enforced by OCFA, but waste/trash burning is prohibited by South Coast AQMD. Keep recreational fires at least 25 feet from structures, attended at all times, and ready a fire extinguisher or hose. No city-specific backyard-fire ordinance was found.

Recreational fires: Allowed; min. 25 ft from structuresWaste burning: Prohibited in backyard fires

Smoke Detectors

Some Restrictions

Smoke alarm requirements in Tustin follow California state law (the California Building/Residential Code and Health & Safety Code), enforced locally through the City's adopted building codes and the Orange County Fire Authority. Alarms are required in each bedroom, outside sleeping areas, and on every level; carbon monoxide alarms are also required in dwellings with fuel-burning appliances or attached garages.

Governing law: CA codes adopted by City; OCFA fireSmoke alarms: Each bedroom, outside sleeping areas, each level

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Residential propane (LP-gas) storage in Tustin follows the California Fire Code's Liquefied Petroleum Gases provisions, enforced by the Orange County Fire Authority. Small barbecue cylinders are limited (generally 20 lb or less per container without a permit), must be stored outdoors and upright, and never kept indoors, in a garage, or under a grill.

Governing code: CA Fire Code Ch. 61 (LP-gas), via OCFACylinder limit: Generally 20 lb per container, residential

Wildfire Zones

Some Restrictions

Per the City of Tustin, CAL FIRE's 2025 maps designate portions of the city as Very High, High, and Moderate Fire Hazard Severity Zones (released March 24, 2025). Most of Tustin is flat urban land, but the eastern/foothill edge near the Tustin hills carries elevated hazard and stricter building and vegetation requirements.

FHSZ in Tustin: Yes: Very High, High, Moderate portionsMap released: March 24, 2025 (CAL FIRE / OSFM)

🚗 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.

Overnight Parking

Some Restrictions

Tustin has no citywide overnight parking ban — only streets inside a Preferential Permit Parking district restrict parking from 2 a.m. to 6 a.m. daily, where a virtual permit tied to your license plate is required. The first household permit is $25, escalating to $100, plus 75 free guest-day permits each six months.

Citywide overnight ban: None — permit districts onlyRestricted hours: 2 a.m.-6 a.m., 7 days/week (permit streets)

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Tustin City Code 5340(d) restricts commercial vehicle parking, a violation carrying a $51 fine. In Preferential Permit Parking districts, large commercial and work trucks cannot get permits, while smaller work trucks under 6,000 lbs GVWR can. California Vehicle Code 22507.5 lets cities restrict commercial vehicles of 10,000 lbs or more in residential districts.

City commercial-vehicle code: Tustin City Code 5340(d); $51 finePermit district weight cutoff: Under 6,000 lbs GVWR eligible; larger not

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

Tustin has no special citywide RV/boat street ban, so a registered, operable recreational vehicle, boat trailer, or RV may sit on a public street under the general 72-hour rule (Tustin City Code 5330(e)). But in any Preferential Permit Parking district, oversized vehicles like RVs and vehicles with trailers cannot get a permit and may not park 2 a.m.-6 a.m.

Citywide RV/boat street ban: None — falls under 72-hour rule72-hour storage rule: Tustin City Code 5330(e); $51 fine

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

General on-street parking in Tustin follows the California Vehicle Code, but the city adds posted time-limit zones (24-minute green curb up to 12-hour) and a Preferential Permit Parking Program that bans 2 a.m.-6 a.m. parking on permitted streets except by permit. The Tustin Police Department Traffic Unit enforces.

Curb-distance rule: Within 18 inches (CVC 22502(a))Local time-limit zones: Tustin City Code 5331(a)-(g): 24 min to 12 hr

Loading Zones

Some Restrictions

Tustin marks loading and limited-stop zones with painted curbs under Tustin City Code 5332: yellow curb is for loading and unloading passengers, and white curb allows a 3-minute stop to load passengers or mail. Parking in an alley and other loading-related stops are also regulated, each a $51 violation.

Yellow curb: Loading/unloading passengers — TCC 5332(b)(1)(b)White curb: 3-minute passenger/mail stop — TCC 5332(b)(1)(c)

Abandoned Vehicles

Some Restrictions

A vehicle left on a Tustin public street and not moved is treated under the 72-hour rule and the city's street-storage section (Tustin City Code 5330(e)). Abandoned, wrecked, or inoperative vehicles, including those on private property, are abated under Tustin City Code Chapter 5 (Article 4, Health and Sanitation) using a notice-of-intention-to-abate process.

Street move rule: 72 hours (per CA Vehicle Code, enforced by Tustin PD)Street-storage code: Tustin City Code 5330(e); $51 fine

Oversized Vehicle Parking

Some Restrictions

Tustin does not impose a blanket municipal-code height/length street ban on oversized vehicles, but in Preferential Permit Parking districts oversized vehicles — RVs, vehicles with trailers, and large commercial/work trucks — cannot receive permits and must use off-street storage. California Vehicle Code 22507.5 supplies the underlying authority to restrict large vehicles overnight.

Citywide size ban: None in traffic codePermit-district eligibility: Oversized vehicles NOT eligible for permits

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

It is illegal in Tustin to stop or park in front of any public or private driveway under California Vehicle Code 22500(e), and blocking a sidewalk or driveway is a citable Tustin parking offense. The city's Good Neighbor Policy also urges residents to use their own driveways and garages for parking rather than the street.

Blocking driveway: Prohibited — CVC 22500(e); $51Blocking sidewalk: Prohibited — CVC 22500(f); $51

EV Charging

Few Restrictions

Tustin handles residential EV charging through Building & Safety permits, not parking citations. A Level 2 (240V) home charger needs an electrical permit and inspection; a Level 1 charger on an existing outlet needs none. Reserved public EV charging stalls are protected by California Vehicle Code 22511, which only EVs actively charging may use.

Level 1 (existing outlet): No permit requiredLevel 2 / new circuit: Building & Safety electrical permit + inspection

Curb Color Rules

Some Restrictions

Tustin enforces painted curb colors under Tustin City Code 5332 — red curb means no stopping, yellow is a loading zone, white is a 3-minute passenger/mail stop, and green is a 24-minute limited zone. Street-sweeping no-parking violations are cited under Tustin City Code 5334, the city's single most-cited parking offense.

Red curb: No stopping — TCC 5332(b)(1)(a)Green curb: 24-minute limit — TCC 5331(a)

🧱 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

Tustin requires a building permit and a zoning yard-setback verification to build any fence or wall over 3 feet in height above finished grade, and a permit for retaining walls 2 feet and over. Permits are usually issued over the counter, and walls over 6 feet may need engineering details.

Permit threshold - fences/walls: Over 3 ft above finished gradePermit threshold - retaining walls: 2 ft and over above finished grade

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

In the City of Tustin, fences, hedges and walls may not exceed 6 feet 8 inches in height. In a required front yard setback, nothing over 3 feet is allowed unless a Variance or special zoning district permits it. Taller heights need a Variance or Conditional Use Permit.

Max fence/wall/hedge height: 6 ft 8 in (6'-8")Front yard setback limit: 3 ft max (over 3 ft needs Variance)

Material Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Citywide, barbed and razor wire are not allowed in Tustin per the Cultural Resources District design guidelines. Within Old Town, chain link, plain concrete block, poured-in-place concrete and slump stone are deemed inappropriate; natural materials like wood, stone and stucco are favored.

Barbed/razor wire: Not allowed anywhere in the CityChain link (Old Town): Not historically compatible / inappropriate

Neighbor Fence Rules

Some Restrictions

Tustin requires the neighboring owner's written approval/consent for any wall or fence proposed on the property line between two properties. California's Good Neighbor Fence Act (Civil Code 841) presumes adjoining owners share boundary-fence costs equally after 30 days' written notice.

Property-line fence/wall: Neighbor's written consent required (City)Cost sharing: Presumed equal under CA Civil Code 841

Retaining Walls

Some Restrictions

In Tustin, retaining walls 2 feet and over in height above finished grade require a building permit - a lower threshold than the 3-foot trigger for ordinary fences. The City has a standard CMU wall detail; walls that vary from it, or that are over 6 feet, may need engineering calculations by a registered engineer.

Permit threshold: Retaining walls 2 ft and over (above grade)Standard CMU wall max: 6'-0" (per City standard detail)

Fence Requirements

Some Restrictions

Tustin requires permitted fences/walls over 3 feet to meet plan-submittal, setback-verification, construction and inspection standards. Swimming pools, spas and hot tubs must be enclosed by a safety barrier under the City's pool rules and California's Swimming Pool Safety Act.

Plans: Two plot plans w/ setbacks, height, color, materialsFooting inspection: Before concrete poured, steel in place

Approved Materials

Few Restrictions

Outside Old Town, Tustin permits a broad range of fence materials - wood, mesh, metal, chain, brick, stake, plastic, masonry, rock, stucco and concrete - subject to height, setback and permit rules. Barbed/razor wire is banned citywide, and historic-district fences should use natural materials like wood, stone and stucco.

Allowed (general): Wood, mesh, metal, chain, brick, stake, plasticWalls: Stucco, masonry, rock or concrete

🐔 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.

Beekeeping

Some Restrictions

Tustin allows beekeeping but limits a parcel to one beehive or colony, and no occupied hive may sit within 100 feet of any adjacent residential structure, street or highway (TCC Sec. 4221(a)(4)). Hives that disturb neighbors or create a nuisance are prohibited under TCC Sec. 4224.

Hives allowed: Max 1 beehive/colony per parcel (Sec. 4221(a)(4))Hive setback: Min 100 ft from any adjacent residence, street or highway

Dog Leash Laws

Some Restrictions

Tustin contracts animal control to OC Animal Care and adopts Orange County's animal ordinances by reference (TCC Sec. 4201). Under the adopted county code, dogs on public property must be restrained by a chain or leash no longer than six feet. Tustin's own code separately bans dogs from city parks and school grounds unless they are service dogs.

Leash length (public property): Max 6 feet (OC Sec. 4-1-45, adopted)Animal control provider: OC Animal Care (county), per TCC Sec. 4201

Chickens & Livestock

Some Restrictions

Tustin allows backyard hens but caps total birds, fowl and small animals at ten per parcel (TCC Sec. 4221(a)(2)). Crowing birds are banned except roosters, which are only permitted on large lots in the Cultural Resources Overlay District. Coops must be set back at least 50 feet from neighboring residences and birds may not run at large.

Bird/small-animal cap: Max 10 combined per parcel (TCC Sec. 4221(a)(2))Hen-only limit: None separately stated; counts toward the 10

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Tustin's animal code contains no breed-specific ban or pit bull restriction. The City adopts Orange County's animal ordinances (TCC Sec. 4201), which regulate dangerous and vicious dogs by behavior, not breed. California Food & Agricultural Code Sec. 31683 also bars cities from declaring a specific breed dangerous, so any dangerous-dog action turns on the individual animal's conduct.

Breed-specific ban: None in Tustin City CodeDangerous-dog basis: Behavior, not breed

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin bans keeping wild animals within the City (TCC Sec. 4223). The code defines wild animals broadly but exempts a short list, including hamsters, guinea pigs, turtles, salamanders, chameleons, and nonpoisonous reptiles up to six feet long and no more than three in number. California also separately restricts many exotic species.

Wild animals: Prohibited in the City (TCC Sec. 4223)Nonpoisonous reptiles: Allowed up to 6 ft long, max 3 in number

Livestock

Heavy Restrictions

Keeping horses, cattle, swine, sheep or goats inside Tustin is unlawful except in the R-A (Residential Agricultural) District and, where authorized, Planned Community districts (TCC Sec. 4222). Even in those districts a use permit is required. Roosters and commercial animal-keeping are also tightly restricted by zoning.

Where allowed: R-A District and authorized PC Districts onlyUse permit: Required to keep livestock (TCC Sec. 4222)

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Tustin limits each parcel to no more than three dogs and three common house cats, or any combination, excluding animals under three months old (TCC Sec. 4221(a)(1)). Keeping four or more dogs or four or more cats over four months makes a property a kennel under the adopted county definition, requiring a permit.

Dog limit: Max 3 dogs per parcel (TCC Sec. 4221(a)(1))Cat limit: Max 3 common house cats per parcel

Cat Rules

Few Restrictions

Tustin caps each parcel at three common house cats, excluding kittens under three months (TCC Sec. 4221(a)(1)). There is no cat leash or licensing mandate in the City code, but four or more cats over four months makes a property a kennel requiring a permit, and cats must not become a nuisance under TCC Sec. 4224.

Cat limit: Max 3 common house cats per parcel (Sec. 4221(a)(1))Kittens under 3 months: Not counted

Wildlife Feeding

Some Restrictions

Tustin's animal code does not contain a standalone ordinance specifically banning the feeding of coyotes or other wildlife. The City instead provides coyote-safety guidance and relies on its general nuisance and wild-animal provisions (TCC Sec. 4223-4224). Intentional feeding that draws wildlife or creates a nuisance can be addressed under those rules.

Dedicated feeding ban: None located in Tustin City CodeApplicable rules: Nuisance (Sec. 4224); wild animals (Sec. 4223)

Animal Hoarding

Some Restrictions

Tustin has no ordinance using the term 'animal hoarding,' but it controls excessive animals through firm numeric caps - three dogs, three cats and ten small animals per parcel (TCC Sec. 4221) - plus a kennel-permit requirement and a nuisance/sanitation rule (TCC Sec. 4224). Keeping animals in unsanitary, peace-disturbing conditions is prohibited and enforced by OC Animal Care.

Dedicated hoarding law: None by name in Tustin City CodeNumeric caps: 3 dogs, 3 cats, 10 small animals (Sec. 4221)

🌿 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.

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Heavy Restrictions

Removing a tree in a public parkway, median, street or right-of-way without prior written approval of the Manager of Field Services is unlawful (Sec. 7303). The City removes blighted, diseased or unsafe public trees and replaces them; a healthy public tree is removed only if it has damaged adjacent property or is unsafe (Sec. 7306).

Public tree removal permit: Prior written approval of Manager of Field Services (Sec. 7303)City removes public trees: If blighted, diseased, or unsafe; then replaces (Sec. 7306a)

Water Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin runs its own water utility and imposes permanent restrictions under City Code Sec. 4953: irrigation 4 days/week (Apr-Oct) or 3 days/week (Nov-Mar), no watering 8 a.m.-4 p.m., no runoff onto pavement, no washing paved areas, and no irrigating within 48 hours of measurable rain. Fines start at $100.

Summer schedule (Apr-Oct): 4 days/week: Sun, Tue, Thu, Sat (Sec. 4953A)Winter schedule (Nov-Mar): 3 days/week: Tue, Thu, Sat (Sec. 4953A)

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Tustin sets no numeric grass-height limit. Instead, City Code Section 5502(m)(1) requires all landscaping to be kept free of 'dead, decayed, overgrown or discarded plant material.' Overgrown vegetation is a public nuisance enforced by Code Enforcement under the Property Maintenance chapter.

Numeric height limit: None published in City CodeGoverning section: Tustin City Code Sec. 5502(m)(1)

Tree Trimming

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin claims full jurisdiction over trees in parkways, medians, streets and other public property (Sec. 7301). No person may trim or cut any tree or shrub in a public parkway, median, street or right-of-way without prior written approval of the City's Manager of Field Services (Sec. 7303). Abutting owners must water and maintain parkway trees (Sec. 7304).

Governing chapter: Art. 7, Ch. 3 - Trees and Shrubs (Sec. 7301-7309)Permit to trim street/parkway tree: Prior written approval of Manager of Field Services (Sec. 7303)

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Tustin treats overgrown, dead, or decayed vegetation as a property-maintenance nuisance under City Code Sec. 5502, not as a separate weed-height ordinance. A code enforcement officer may issue a notice and order to abate (Sec. 5503); if the owner fails to act, the City abates and charges all costs back as a special assessment (Sec. 5505, 5508).

Governing chapter: Art. 5, Ch. 5 - Property Maintenance & Nuisance AbatementWeed/overgrowth standard: Sec. 5502(m)(1) - no numeric height

Composting

Some Restrictions

Under California SB 1383, Tustin requires residents to keep organic waste out of the trash. CR&R provides a three-cart system, and food scraps and yard trimmings (grass, leaves, branches) go in the green cart, which CR&R turns into compost. The City's landscape guidelines also require compost and mulch on regulated landscape installations.

Legal basis: California SB 1383 (effective Jan 1, 2022)Hauler: CR&R Environmental Services

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Tustin has no ordinance banning rainwater harvesting; it actively encourages on-site capture. The Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance (Ord. 1465) gives projects that meet their entire landscape water need with captured rainwater or graywater a streamlined path, and its guidelines recommend swales, basins and drywells to capture stormwater and dry-weather runoff.

City prohibition: None - rainwater capture encouragedState authority: CA Rainwater Capture Act of 2012 (no water-right permit)

Native Plants

Few Restrictions

Tustin encourages low-water and native plants and discourages invasives. The Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance Guidelines push water-conserving plant selection, bar high-water-use plants (plant factor 0.7-1.0) in street medians, and discourage species on the California Invasive Plant Council list. HOAs may not ban water-efficient plants as a group.

Native/low-water plants: Encouraged; very-low-water hydrozone factor 0.1Plant factor scale: 0-0.1 very low, up to 0.7-1.0 high (WUCOLS)

Artificial Turf

Some Restrictions

Tustin allows synthetic turf in front and visible side yards but regulates its look and quality under the Synthetic Turf Standards (Ord. 1398, July 2015). Turf must emulate real grass, be cut-pile polyethylene or polypropylene, professionally installed with drainage and a weed barrier, and combined with natural plants. Plastic or nylon carpet is prohibited.

Governing standard: Synthetic Turf Standards, Ord. 1398 (July 2015)Where it applies: Front yards and visible side yards

💼 Home BusinessFull home business guide →

Working from home is common, but running a business from home often requires permits and must comply with zoning restrictions on customer traffic and signage.

Zoning Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Tustin permits home occupations as a secondary use carried on wholly within a dwelling by a resident. The use must not alter the home's residential appearance, employ non-residents on site, display merchandise, or generate excess traffic. Restrictions are set in Tustin City Code Sections 9271gg and 9297.

Use type: Secondary use, wholly within dwellingCode sections: Tustin City Code 9271gg and 9297

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin's home-occupation rules prohibit any exterior display tied to a home business. The home occupation must not alter the residential appearance of the premises, which effectively bars exterior business signs at a residence. Commercial signage is governed by Tustin City Code Chapter 4 (Sign Regulations).

Exterior display: Prohibited for home occupationsResidential appearance: Must not be altered (no business signs)

Home Occupation Permits

Some Restrictions

Tustin requires home-based businesses to obtain a city business license and complete a Home Occupation Questionnaire reviewed for zoning compliance. The questionnaire confirms the business meets the home-occupation standards of Tustin City Code Section 9297 before a license is issued.

License: City business license requiredForm: Home Occupation Questionnaire (supplemental)

Cottage Food Operations

Some Restrictions

Tustin cannot ban cottage food operations in homes. Under California's Homemade Food Act (HSC 113758, AB 1616), cities must allow registered Class A or permitted Class B home food operations as a residential use, subject only to reasonable local standards. Orange County Environmental Health registers/permits the operation; the home business also needs a Tustin business license.

Governing law: CA Homemade Food Act, HSC 113758 (AB 1616)City may ban?: No - must allow as residential use

Home Daycare

Few Restrictions

Tustin cannot zone out family daycare homes. Under California law (HSC 1597.30 et seq.; SB 234), small (up to 8 children) and large (up to 14 children) family daycare homes are a permitted residential use in any zone allowing single-family dwellings. State licensing is through the California Department of Social Services; no city use permit may be required.

Governing law: HSC 1597.30 et seq.; SB 234 (2020)Small home: Up to 8 children

🏊 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 Tustin requires a building permit and concurrent planning design review to construct any in-ground or above-ground swimming pool, spa, or hot tub. Submit a completed application, fees, and three copies of a plot plan showing setbacks, equipment, fencing, and the pool-safety features selected under the Swimming Pool Safety Act.

Permit required: Building permit + planning design reviewPlot plans: Three (3) copies

Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

The City of Tustin enforces California's Swimming Pool Safety Act. New or remodeled pools/spas at single-family homes must have a permanent enclosure feature plus at least one more drowning-prevention feature. Enclosures must be at least 60 inches high with self-closing, self-latching gates that open away from the pool.

Governing law: Swimming Pool Safety Act (HSC 115920-115929)Minimum enclosure height: 60 inches (HSC 115923(b))

Safety Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Tustin adopts the Swimming Pool Safety Act and adds local rules. New single-family pools/spas must use a permanent enclosure plus one more drowning-prevention feature, install anti-entrapment suction outlets, and pass building-official inspection. Tustin withholds approval to fill the pool until all safety items and a gunite report are complete.

Anti-entrapment grates: ANSI/APSP-16 standard required (HSC 115928)Remodel upgrade: Existing outlets upgraded on remodel (HSC 115928.5)

Above-Ground Pools

Some Restrictions

Tustin's pool definition expressly includes above-ground pools that hold water more than 18 inches deep. They require the same building permit, design review, setbacks, and Swimming Pool Safety Act barrier features as in-ground pools. Pools must sit at least five feet from any side or rear lot line.

Pool definition: Water over 18 inches deep (HSC 115921)Above-ground included: Yes - same permit & safety rules

Hot Tub Rules

Some Restrictions

Tustin treats spas and hot tubs as 'swimming pools' under its definition, so they require a building permit, design review, and Swimming Pool Safety Act features when water is over 18 inches deep. The clean-up bond is reduced to $1,500 for spa/hot tub construction. Equipment must sit in the rear/side yard and be screened.

Spa/hot tub = pool: If water over 18 inches deep (HSC 115921)Permit: Building permit + design review

🏗️ 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

Tustin permits ADUs and JADUs under City Code Section 9279, adopted by Ordinance No. 1517 (Dec. 2021) to match California state law. A single-family lot may add one ADU plus one JADU. Detached ADUs allow studio/1-bedroom up to 850 sq ft and 1,200 sq ft for two or more bedrooms.

Code Section / Ordinance: Tustin City Code 9279; Ordinance No. 1517 (Dec. 2021)Max ADU size: 850 sq ft (studio/1BR); 1,200 sq ft (2+ BR); 220 sq ft minimum

Shed Rules

Some Restrictions

In Tustin's R-1 single-family district, detached accessory buildings such as sheds are governed by zoning standards in City Code Section 9223, which allow a maximum height of 25 feet with minimum 1-foot side and rear setbacks (5 feet on an alley). A building permit is generally required once a shed exceeds the California 120-square-foot exemption.

Zoning section: Tustin City Code 9223 (R-1 accessory buildings)Max accessory height: 25 feet (per reported R-1 standards)

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Tustin allows garages to be converted into living space, most commonly as an ADU or JADU under City Code Section 9279. Single-family homes must keep two enclosed garage spaces (Section 9263), so converting a garage usually requires replacement covered parking unless the unit qualifies for a state ADU parking exemption.

ADU pathway: Converted ADU / JADU under Tustin City Code 9279Single-family parking: 2 enclosed garage spaces (4 or fewer BR); 3 (5+ BR) - Sec. 9263(g)

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Tustin's off-street parking standards (City Code Section 9263) require single-family homes to provide two spaces within a fully enclosed garage, so a carport alone does not satisfy required parking for a single-family residence. Carport and garage interior dimensions and driveway widths are set in Sections 9266-9268.

Parking code: Tustin City Code 9263-9268 (off-street parking)Required single-family parking: 2 spaces in a fully enclosed garage (4 or fewer BR)

Tiny Homes

Some Restrictions

Tustin has no separate tiny-home ordinance. A permanent tiny house on a foundation is treated as an ADU under City Code Section 9279 (Ordinance No. 1517), with a 220-square-foot minimum and detached ADUs up to 850 or 1,200 square feet. Tiny homes on wheels are recreational vehicles and cannot be used as permanent dwellings.

Tiny-home pathway: Permitted as an ADU under Tustin City Code 9279Minimum size: 220 sq ft (city ADU minimum)

🍖 Outdoor CookingFull outdoor cooking guide →

🪧 Sign RegulationsFull sign regulations guide →

🏚️ Property MaintenanceFull property maintenance guide →

Garage Sale Rules

Few Restrictions

Tustin requires no permit for a garage sale. Residents may hold up to 4 garage sales per year, each lasting a maximum of 3 consecutive days, and may sell only their own merchandise. Sign rules limit size, placement, and timing.

Permit: Not requiredFrequency: Up to 4 per year

Property Blight

Some Restrictions

The City of Tustin enforces property maintenance standards citywide, having adopted the International Property Maintenance Code. The Code Enforcement Division addresses blight, deteriorated structures, accumulated debris, and unsafe conditions, which the Tustin City Code declares public nuisances subject to abatement.

Jurisdiction: City of Tustin (Orange County)Property maintenance code: International Property Maintenance Code adopted by the City

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Tustin requires all residential and commercial trash containers to be shielded from public view, within a building or behind a wall at least 6 feet high. Containers may be placed at the curb no earlier than 24 hours before collection and must be removed within 24 hours after collection.

Screening required: Behind a wall at least 6 feet high or inside a buildingApplies to: Both residential and commercial containers

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Some Restrictions

Tustin treats unsecured or unsafe vacant structures as public nuisances under the City Code, abatable by the City. Vacant lots and parcels must meet the City's general property maintenance standards. The City has not published a separate numeric vacant-lot standard distinct from its property maintenance code.

Jurisdiction: City of Tustin Code EnforcementUnsecured vacant building: Deemed unsafe; declared a public nuisance

Weeds & Overgrown Grass

Some Restrictions

Tustin requires properties to be kept in a clean, well-kept condition under its property maintenance standards and nuisance authority, which cover overgrown vegetation and weeds. The City has not published a specific numeric grass-height limit that could be verified from a primary source.

Jurisdiction: City of Tustin Code EnforcementStandard: Property kept clean and well-kept; nuisance vegetation abatable

💡 Outdoor LightingFull outdoor lighting guide →

🗑️ Trash & RecyclingFull trash & recycling guide →

Recycling Requirements

Some Restrictions

Tustin's three-cart program includes a blue recycling cart for clean recyclables such as paper, cardboard, aluminum, and glass. Recycling is part of the City's mandatory franchised service with CR&R, consistent with California's commercial and multifamily recycling mandates (AB 341).

Recycling cart: Blue cart, collected weeklyAccepted: Clean paper, cardboard, aluminum, glass

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

The City of Tustin contracts exclusively with CR&R Incorporated for trash and recycling. Service is mandatory citywide under the City Code, with weekly collection using a three-cart system (black trash, blue recycling, green organics). Collection day is set by neighborhood, with one-day delays after major holidays.

Franchised hauler: CR&R Incorporated (exclusive)Service mandatory: Yes - occupied properties must subscribe (cited City Code 4312)

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

Carts must be at the curb by 7 a.m. on collection day, placed about 1 foot apart and at least 3 feet from any obstruction, with handles and wheels facing away from the street. Containers may go out no earlier than 24 hours before collection and must be removed within 24 hours after.

At curb by: 7 a.m. on collection dayEarliest set out: No earlier than 24 hours before collection

Bulk Item Disposal

Few Restrictions

Single-family residents get up to 4 free bulky-item collections per calendar year from CR&R, with up to 4 items per pickup. Items include appliances, furniture, mattresses, barbeques, bicycles, tires, and tools. Schedule by calling CR&R; multifamily residents arrange pickups through their property manager.

Free pickups: Up to 4 per calendar year (single-family)Items per pickup: Up to 4 items

Mandatory Organics Recycling

Some Restrictions

Under California SB 1383, Tustin residents separate organic waste into the green cart. Since July 1, 2021, food scraps go in the green cart along with yard trimmings. With about 80,000 residents, Tustin is well above the 70,000 rural-exemption threshold, so the organics mandate fully applies.

Authority: California SB 1383 (CalRecycle)Local start: Food scraps in green cart since July 1, 2021

🌙 Curfew LawsFull curfew laws guide →

📐 Building Setbacks & ZoningFull building setbacks & zoning guide →

🌳 Tree ProtectionFull tree protection guide →

Overall: What to Expect in Tustin

Tustin has 100 ordinances on file across 18 categories. Of these, 14 are rated permissive, 65 moderate, and 21 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Tustin 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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