Unincorporated Santa Cruz County has no numeric lawn-height limit. Tall grass and weeds are regulated only as a wildfire fuel hazard: under California Public Resources Code 4291 (via the County Fire Code) and CAL FIRE, owners in State Responsibility Areas must keep grass and flashy fuels managed within 100 feet of structures. Aesthetic height rules do not apply.
There is no county ordinance setting a maximum grass or lawn height (such as a 6- or 12-inch limit) for the unincorporated areas. Instead, grass and weed height matter only where it creates a fire hazard. Most of the unincorporated County sits in a State Responsibility Area or Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone, where California Public Resources Code 4291 requires 100 feet of defensible space around each structure. CAL FIRE guidance calls for keeping annual grasses mowed to roughly 4 inches and removing dead and dying grass within the defensible-space zones, especially Zone 1 (0 to 30 feet). The County adopts the California Fire Code (Santa Cruz County Code Title 7, Chapter 7.92) and supports the State defensible-space guidelines through its 'Living with Fire in Santa Cruz County' program. The County stresses that defensible space is 'separating and reducing fuel within 100 feet of a structure,' not clearing all vegetation to bare soil, and that clearing to bare soil can violate the Erosion Control Ordinance (16.22). So a homeowner with naturally tall meadow grass far from any home is generally not violating any height rule, but tall dry grass next to a house can trigger a fire-hazard abatement notice.
Failure to maintain defensible space under PRC 4291 can result in CAL FIRE/County inspection notices, abatement orders, and citations; the County may abate uncorrected hazards and bill the owner. There is no separate fine for grass height alone.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Santa Cruz County, CA
SCCC 9.36.010 defines the curb colors used in unincorporated Santa Cruz County: red means no stopping/standing/parking, green a 20-minute limit, yellow a 30-...
Santa Cruz County, CA
In unincorporated Santa Cruz County, SCCC 9.36.010 sets curb-color loading rules: yellow curbs are commercial loading zones limited to 30 minutes, white curb...
Santa Cruz County, CA
In county-owned off-street lots, SCCC 9.36.070(16) limits parking in spaces marked 'electric vehicle charging only' to a maximum of three hours. Statewide, C...
Santa Cruz County, CA
SCCC 9.70.610(C) bars parking a vehicle more than six feet tall, including loaded sideboards or trailer contents, within 100 feet of any County-maintained ro...
Santa Cruz County, CA
Beyond height, fences in unincorporated Santa Cruz County must preserve sight distance at driveways and intersections, keep corner sight clearance triangles ...
Santa Cruz County, CA
Retaining walls in unincorporated Santa Cruz County fall under the same yard height rules as fences (SCCC 13.10.525) and are measured the same way. A buildin...
See how Santa Cruz County's grass height limits rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.