San Bernardino County's Development Code does not ban artificial turf and actively directs that natural turf be minimized to save water. Synthetic turf is an accepted water-saving alternative for unincorporated properties, though large landscape projects must still meet the Code's water-efficient design and stormwater standards.
San Bernardino County's Development Code Chapter 83.10 (Landscaping Standards) does not prohibit artificial or synthetic turf, and its overall thrust favors reducing water-intensive landscaping. The Code directs that natural 'turf areas shall be used in response to functional needs of the project, not solely for aesthetic purposes,' that turf comply with the project's water budget (MAWA), that warm-season turf be encouraged where natural turf is installed, and that turf not be placed on slopes greater than 25 percent. By minimizing natural turf and the irrigation it requires, the Code's framework supports synthetic turf as a low-water substitute. The Chapter's design standards also list alternative permeable hardscape materials, such as decomposed granite, pea gravel, and mulch, for functional activity areas. Where a landscape project is large enough to require a landscape documentation package (homeowner-installed residential landscapes of 5,000 square feet or more, or developer-installed and commercial landscapes of 2,500 square feet or more), the project must still meet the Code's water-efficient design, stormwater, and runoff requirements, so artificial turf should be installed over a permeable base that allows infiltration rather than creating runoff. Smaller residential installations generally fall below the documentation thresholds. The County does not impose color, pile-height, or product-specific standards on synthetic turf in the Development Code, but homeowners should confirm any setback or drainage requirements and check whether a local HOA imposes its own rules.
There is no County penalty for installing artificial turf itself. Compliance issues would arise only if a permitted landscape project fails to meet the Code's water-efficiency, stormwater, or runoff requirements, in which case the County can require the project to be corrected to comply with Chapter 83.10.
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