A home occupation in unincorporated Tulare County must comply with the home-occupation standards of the County Zoning Ordinance (No. 352). The use must be incidental and secondary to the residence, limit non-resident employees and household-incompatible equipment, and avoid commercial signage. Compliance and any required clearance are handled by the RMA Planning Division.
Home occupations are governed by Tulare County's Zoning Ordinance (Ordinance No. 352), administered by the Resource Management Agency Planning Division for the unincorporated area. The ordinance allows a home business only as an accessory use that stays clearly incidental and secondary to the dwelling and does not change the residential character of the property. The County's general zoning regulations set the operating limits typical of a home occupation: employment of help limited to members of the resident family (no general non-resident employees on site), no use of materials or mechanical equipment beyond what is recognized as part of normal household or hobby uses, and no sales of products or services not produced on the premises. Uses that would generate customer traffic, outdoor storage, noise, or commercial signage inconsistent with a residence are not permitted as home occupations and instead require a different zone or a discretionary entitlement such as a special use permit. Whether a separate home-occupation clearance, zone clearance, or business-tax certificate is required depends on the specific activity and zone, so applicants should confirm the current process with the RMA Permit Center / Planning counter before operating. Note that state-protected uses (such as licensed family day care and registered cottage food operations) have their own statutory rules that override ordinary home-occupation limits.
Operating a home occupation that violates the County's standards β hiring non-resident employees on site, using industrial equipment, drawing significant traffic, or posting commercial signs β can trigger RMA code-compliance enforcement, notices of violation, and orders to stop the use or obtain the proper permit.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Visalia, CA
Visalia prohibits storing inoperative, abandoned, wrecked, or dismantled vehicles on public or private property for more than 10 days unless screened from view.
Visalia, CA
Visalia requires all front-yard residential parking to be on an impervious surface like pavement or concrete, and prohibits vehicle repairs on driveways.
Visalia, CA
Visalia has no blanket citywide overnight parking ban, but Visalia Municipal Code 10.16.190 authorizes the City Manager to post 'all-night parking prohibited...
Visalia, CA
Visalia zoning permits standard residential fence materials (wood, vinyl, masonry, ornamental metal, chain link). Barbed wire, razor wire and electrified fen...
Visalia, CA
Visalia adopts the California Swimming Pool Safety Act and VMC 15.40.040, which require private residential swimming pools and spas to be enclosed by a 60-in...
Visalia, CA
Fences and walls may be placed on residential property lines, but anything taller than 3 feet must sit outside the required front-yard setback and the street...
See how Visalia's home occupation permits rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.