A home occupation in unincorporated Ventura County requires a Zoning Clearance from the Planning Division plus a Business Tax Certificate. Standards under Non-Coastal Zoning Ordinance Sec. 8107-1.2 limit client hours to 9 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays and a maximum of six clients per day, with a neighbor-waiver option to expand those limits.
To operate a home occupation in the unincorporated county, an applicant must obtain a Home Occupation Zoning Clearance from the RMA Planning Division and a Business Tax Certificate from the Tax Collector's Business License Bureau. Applications can be submitted at the Planning counter or through the Citizen Access web portal; Planning counter staff approve or disapprove based on compliance with the Non-Coastal Zoning Ordinance standards. Under NCZO Sec. 8107-1.2, hours of operation for clients are limited to 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, though business activity may continue beyond those hours when clients are not present. The maximum number of clients per day is six, with no overlapping visits. The ordinance provides a waiver mechanism: an operator who obtains a signed waiver from the owners (or lessees) of the three closest occupied dwellings in both directions on the same side of the street and the seven closest occupied dwellings on the opposite side may increase the limits to a maximum of ten clients per day, allow more than one client on site at a time, allow clients until 9:00 p.m., and allow clients on Saturdays. The Planning Director may modify the waiver requirement for unique circumstances. All other home occupation standards (no outside employees, no outdoor display, no signage, one commercial vehicle up to 14,000 pounds, no highly toxic materials) continue to apply. Food businesses must first obtain Environmental Health approval under the cottage food law.
Operating without a Zoning Clearance or Business Tax Certificate, exceeding six clients per day, or operating outside permitted hours without a waiver violates NCZO Sec. 8107-1.2 and can lead to code enforcement and revocation of the clearance.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Ojai, CA
Ojai enforces strict decibel limits to protect the peaceful valley environment. Residential noise standards are among the more restrictive in Ventura County.
Ojai, CA
Ojai's noise ordinance prohibits racing engines, unnecessary idling for more than 10 minutes, and intentional tire screeching. CA Vehicle Code §27007 (95 dBA...
Ojai, CA
Ojai regulates noise under OMC Chapter 7-6, incorporating Ventura County noise standards. Residential nighttime noise must not exceed 45 dBA at the property ...
Ojai, CA
Amplified music in Ojai is governed by the general noise ordinance (OMC Chapter 7-6). Outdoor amplified music requires a special event permit if audible beyo...
Ojai, CA
Nuisance barking violates Ojai's noise ordinance (OMC Title 5, Chapter 11). Police may charge property owners for law enforcement costs after the first respo...
Ojai, CA
CVC §22651 limits vehicles to 72 hours on public streets. Ojai enforces parking through the Ventura County Sheriff's Department. The small downtown area has ...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Ventura County.
See how other cities in Ventura County handle home occupation permits.
See how Ojai's home occupation permits rules stack up against other locations.
Quick Compare
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.