Unincorporated Riverside County imposes no general permit to prune trees on your own private property. Trimming within the public right-of-way (street trees) requires authorization, and fire-safety abatement may require limbing-up vegetation for defensible space. Native trees above 5,000 ft elevation are separately protected by Ordinance 559.
For ordinary maintenance pruning of trees on your own residential lot, unincorporated Riverside County does not require a permit, and homeowners are generally free to trim their own trees. Two limits apply. First, trees growing in the public right-of-way or on public land cannot be removed or substantially altered without county authorization, similar to street-tree protections elsewhere; routine homeowner pruning of street trees is restricted. Second, fire-safety obligations can require trimming. Under County Ordinances 695 and 772 and California Public Resources Code 4291, owners in fire-hazard areas must maintain defensible space, which includes creating vertical and horizontal separation between grass, shrubs, and tree canopies and removing dead limbs and ladder fuels within up to 100 feet of structures. Separately, Ordinance 559 protects living native trees on parcels larger than one-half acre located above 5,000 feet in elevation; removal (not routine trimming) of such native trees requires a county permit. Oak trees are addressed by the County's Oak Tree Management Guidelines, which protect oaks during development and discourage heavy pruning that damages the protected dripline zone. Homeowners performing significant work near oaks or native trees, or any work in the right-of-way, should confirm requirements with the Planning Department before cutting.
Unauthorized removal or damage to right-of-way or protected native/oak trees can trigger county enforcement, replacement requirements, and penalties. Failing to clear fire-hazard limbs and ladder fuels after a Notice to Abate can lead to county abatement billed to the owner.
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