Unincorporated San Benito County allows home occupations in every residential and agricultural zone (AR, AP, R, RT, RR, R-1, and RM) with no permit required, as long as the business is fully contained in the home and stays incidental to the residence. A larger 'rural home enterprise' with employees is allowed only in agricultural zones with an administrative use permit.
San Benito County Code Section 25.08.004 governs home occupations and rural home enterprises in the unincorporated county. A HOME OCCUPATION is 'the operation of a business in a dwelling by an occupant as an accessory use,' and it is allowed by right in the AR, AP, R, RT, RR, R-1, and RM zoning districts, including where overlaid by a combining zone (unless the combining zone would prohibit the use). No permit is required for a home occupation. The use must be operated entirely inside the primary dwelling or an accessory dwelling unit, the dwelling must be the operator's primary residence, and no non-resident may work on site - though any number of resident occupants may. Home occupations may not generate pedestrian or vehicular traffic beyond that normal to the district, may not store materials or supplies outdoors, and may not produce noise, vibration, smoke, odor, lighting, or other effects detectable at the property line that would identify the premises as non-residential. Certain uses are barred outright, including animal hospitals, vehicle repair, vehicle dealerships, day care centers, and massage parlors. For a more intensive operation, the county provides a separate 'RURAL HOME ENTERPRISE' category - a business run in a dwelling or accessory structure with a limited number of non-resident employees. Rural home enterprises are allowed only in the AR, AP, R, and RT zones and require an administrative use permit (a conditional use permit for certain expansions).
Operating a home business that exceeds the home-occupation limits - for example by employing non-residents, storing materials outdoors, or generating non-residential traffic or nuisance effects - is subject to code-enforcement procedures under Title 1 of the County Code.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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San Benito County Animal Care & Services investigates animal cruelty and neglect, which often underlies hoarding. California Penal Code Section 597 makes it ...
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We found no San Benito County ordinance that specifically bans feeding wild animals in unincorporated areas. Wildlife is primarily managed under California D...
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Cats are not required to be licensed in unincorporated San Benito County, but they must have a current rabies vaccination. There is no cat leash law. Like do...
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Backyard composting is allowed in unincorporated San Benito County and is encouraged by California's statewide organics law, SB 1383. That law requires resid...
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Unincorporated San Benito County has no specific ordinance banning or expressly authorizing residential artificial turf. Installations must meet general zoni...
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Unincorporated San Benito County does not require or prohibit native-plant landscaping for private yards, but its Water Efficiency Landscape Ordinance (follo...
See how San Benito County's zoning restrictions rules stack up against other locations.
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