Redlands has no published fixed lawn-grass height number in its city code. Instead, overgrown vegetation is regulated through Municipal Code Chapter 8.40 (Abatement of Weeds and Rubbish), which treats fire-prone and nuisance vegetation as a condition the city can order abated rather than enforcing a turf-height limit.
The City of Redlands does not publish a specific maximum lawn-grass height (such as a stated number of inches) in its municipal code. Routine ornamental turf height is not the focus of city enforcement. Instead, the controlling rule is Municipal Code Chapter 8.40, 'Abatement of Weeds and Rubbish,' which lets the city declare overgrown weeds, dry brush, and rubbish a public nuisance and order them removed. Enforcement is complaint- and inspection-driven. In the city's designated high fire hazard areas, Community Risk Reduction (Fire) personnel conduct weed abatement inspections twice a year and direct owners to clear vegetation that can create a fire hazard. Outside those areas, Code Enforcement addresses tall weeds, dead vegetation, and rubbish as nuisances. When the director finds a nuisance, the owner is notified and given a reasonable abatement period of at least ten days for conditions not involving a dangerous building. If the owner does not comply, the city performs the work and bills the owner. Because the standard is nuisance- and fire-hazard-based rather than a hard height number, owners should keep yards and vacant parcels free of dry weeds and accumulated debris rather than relying on a fixed inch limit. This differs from cities that set an explicit weed-height ceiling.
Failure to abate weeds or rubbish after notice allows the city to perform the work and assess the cost against the property; emergency hazards may be abated immediately without notice.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Redlands regulates park use and hours under Municipal Code Chapter 12.44 (Parks), which includes a 'Park Hours' provision (12.44.250). A separate juvenile cu...
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Redlands controls light trespass through zoning glare standards rather than a numeric foot-candle limit. The clearest example is C-3 district section 18.92.2...
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Redlands has no comprehensive dark-sky ordinance, but its zoning code requires lighting to be controlled so it does not create glare or hazardous interferenc...
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Garage and yard sale signs in Redlands fall under the temporary-sign rules of Sign Code Chapter 15.36. Temporary signs go on private property with the owner'...
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Political and other noncommercial signs in Redlands are regulated as temporary noncommercial signs on private property under RMC Chapter 15.36 (Sign Code), A...
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Redlands has no separate 'tiny home' ordinance. A permanent tiny house on a foundation is regulated as a dwelling or ADU under California state ADU law; a ti...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in San Bernardino County.
See how other cities in San Bernardino County handle grass height limits.
See how Redlands's grass height limits rules stack up against other locations.
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