Madera County does not publish a countywide ban on artificial turf for the unincorporated areas. California Civil Code § 4735 protects a homeowner's right to install synthetic grass against HOA bans. Note that the state's drought-landscaping protection in Government Code § 53087.7 covers living plants, not artificial turf.
Artificial turf (synthetic grass) is not banned countywide in unincorporated Madera County, and there is no published County artificial-turf ordinance. Whether and where it can be installed is mainly a matter of parcel zoning, any project or design conditions, and—within a homeowners association—state HOA protections. California Civil Code Section 4735 prohibits a common-interest-development association from enacting or enforcing any governing-document provision that prohibits, or has the effect of prohibiting, the use of artificial turf or any other synthetic surface that resembles grass on a homeowner's own separate-interest property. So inside an HOA in unincorporated Madera County, the association cannot flatly ban synthetic grass on a homeowner's lot. It is important to distinguish two different state protections: Government Code Section 53087.7 stops local governments from banning drought-tolerant landscaping, but that statute is limited to living plant material and expressly does not include synthetic grass or artificial turf—so the local-government anti-ban protection does not extend to artificial turf. Because turf products vary, owners should still check any County building, drainage, or stormwater requirements (for example, ensuring proper drainage so runoff does not flow onto neighbors), and confirm zoning or design-review conditions for larger installations. Artificial turf can reduce outdoor water use, which aligns with state conservation goals, but it does not by itself satisfy fire-clearance duties, and surrounding vegetation must still meet weed-abatement and defensible-space rules.
There is no County artificial-turf ban to violate. Issues arise only from drainage/stormwater problems, runoff onto neighbors, or installing in conflict with zoning or design conditions. Within an HOA, an attempt to ban synthetic grass on a homeowner's lot is unenforceable under Civil Code § 4735.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
madera-county-ca
Madera County Animal Services investigates animal cruelty and neglect; warning signs include caged animals with little room, lack of weather protection, and ...
madera-county-ca
Madera County Animal Services materials do not publish a specific wildlife-feeding ban for unincorporated areas. In Madera's foothills and Sierra communities...
madera-county-ca
Unincorporated Madera County has no separate park-hours ordinance, but its minors' curfew (Chapter 9.85) bars anyone under 18 from being in a public place, w...
madera-county-ca
Unincorporated Madera County has no general light-trespass ordinance limiting light spilling onto neighboring property. The only codified containment require...
madera-county-ca
Unincorporated Madera County has not adopted a countywide dark-sky or outdoor lighting ordinance. The only codified lighting controls are sign-illumination l...
madera-county-ca
Unincorporated Madera County has no garage-sale-specific sign ordinance. Temporary yard or garage-sale signs fall under the general Chapter 18.90 sign rules:...
See how Madera County's artificial turf rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.