Unincorporated Santa Barbara County has no ordinance banning or restricting gas-powered leaf blowers. The well-known leaf-blower ban (a 1997 ordinance) applies inside the City of Santa Barbara only. In unincorporated areas, leaf-blower use is allowed, subject to general nighttime noise limits.
There is a common misconception that Santa Barbara has banned gas-powered leaf blowers countywide. In fact, the prohibition is a City of Santa Barbara ordinance adopted in 1997 (City Municipal Code), and it does not extend to the unincorporated areas governed by the County. According to the Santa Barbara County Air Pollution Control District, the county does not have authority over or plans to regulate this type of equipment, and unincorporated communities such as Orcutt, Montecito, the Eastern Goleta Valley, Isla Vista and Mission Canyon do not currently have a gas-powered leaf-blower ban in the County Code. As a result, leaf blowers are generally allowed in unincorporated Santa Barbara County. The only County limit that touches landscaping noise is the nighttime restriction in Chapter 40 (Nighttime Noise Restrictions), and even that chapter is centered on loud amplified noise broadcast outdoors rather than gardening equipment; running noisy equipment late at night could still draw a nuisance complaint. Statewide, newer gas-powered leaf blowers sold in California must meet zero-emission small off-road engine rules, but that is an air-quality sales restriction, not a local use ban. Residents should confirm their specific community's status, since some incorporated cities in the county do restrict leaf blowers.
Because there is no County leaf-blower ordinance for unincorporated areas, ordinary daytime leaf-blower use is not itself a code violation. Excessive noise late at night could be addressed as a nuisance or under the Chapter 40 nighttime restrictions.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Santa Maria, CA
Santa Maria sells residential parking permits at the Finance Department, 206 East Cook Street. Residents and businesses may purchase up to 5 parking permits ...
Santa Maria, CA
Santa Maria has no city-wide overnight curfew on ordinary cars parked on residential streets. The 72-hour rule applies to all vehicles, and Section 7-5.18 im...
Santa Maria, CA
Vehicles in Santa Maria driveways must not block sidewalks or extend into the public right-of-way. Driveway modifications require permits from the Public Wor...
Santa Maria, CA
Santa Maria zoning permits standard residential fence materials (wood, vinyl, masonry, ornamental metal, chain link). Barbed wire, razor wire and electrified...
Santa Maria, CA
California Civil Code §841 (the Good Neighbor Fence Act) presumes that adjoining landowners share equally in the cost of constructing, maintaining or replaci...
Santa Maria, CA
Santa Maria's corner-cutback rules (SMMC §12-27.03) require that nothing — fence, wall, accessory structure, or landscape material — exceed 3 feet within sig...
See how Santa Maria's leaf blower rules rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.