Outdoor music in unincorporated Sacramento County is held to the Chapter 6.68 exterior noise standards, with the residential limit reduced 5 dBA because it is music. After 10 p.m. the effective cap at a neighbor's property is roughly 45 dBA, so evening outdoor sound is tightly limited.
Sacramento County does not have a stand-alone outdoor-entertainment noise law for unincorporated areas; outdoor music is regulated under the exterior noise standards in County Code Chapter 6.68. The baseline residential limits are 55 dBA from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. and 50 dBA from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m., measured at the affected neighboring property. Because the ordinance reduces each limit by 5 dBA for noise consisting of music (or speech, or tonal/impulsive sound), outdoor music faces effective caps of about 50 dBA in the daytime and about 45 dBA after 10 p.m. This applies to backyard speakers, live bands, outdoor weddings, pool-party sound systems and similar events at residences and venues in communities such as Fair Oaks, Orangevale and Vineyard. The nighttime drop combined with the music penalty means evening outdoor music is the most likely to draw complaints. EMD handles habitual or mechanical sources and can verify levels with a sound meter at the property line, while one-off and late-night party noise is generally referred to the Sheriff's non-emergency dispatch. Event organizers planning amplified outdoor music should manage speaker placement and volume so the sound stays below the adjusted limit at the nearest property line, particularly as the 10 p.m. threshold approaches.
Outdoor music exceeding the music-adjusted exterior limits (about 50 dBA day / 45 dBA night at the affected property) violates Chapter 6.68; daytime habitual sources are investigated by EMD with a sound meter, while late-evening event and party noise is typically handled by the Sheriff after 10 p.m.
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